Rent The Graduate (1967)

3.8 of 5 from 423 ratings
1h 41min
Rent The Graduate Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
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Synopsis:
Deep in the suburbs of Pasadena, a bored, confused and alienated twenty-one year old graduate named Benjamin Braddock (Dustin Hoffman) awkwardly drifts from moment to moment, in constant turmoil over his lack of direction and the uncertain, impending future. Driven by a desire for experience and desperate to avoid the corporate, deluded and mediocre world of his affluent parents, Benjamin succumbs to the advances of an older woman and begins an affair with the persuasive and enigmatic Mrs. Robinson (Anne Bancroft) the wife of one of his father's business partners. But what starts as a farcical fling becomes painfully complicated when Ben finds himself falling in love with her daughter.
Actors:
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Directors:
Producers:
Lawrence Turman
Writers:
Calder Willingham, Buck Henry, Charles Webb
Others:
Catherine Deneuve, Sam O'Steen, Robert Surtees
Studio:
Studio Canal (Optimum)
Genres:
Classics, Comedy, Drama, Romance
Collections:
10 Films to Watch if You Like: Licorice Pizza, A Brief History of Film Weddings: Part 2, Award Winners, BAFTA Nominations Competition 2024, Brando: A Centenary Celebration, Cinema Paradiso's 2023 Centenary Club: Part 1, Films & TV by topic, Films to Watch if You Like Toy Story, Films to Watch If You Like..., Getting to Know..., Getting to Know: Audrey Hepburn, Getting to Know: Doris Day, Getting to Know: Renée Zellweger, inema Paradiso's 2023 Centenary Club: Part 2, Introducing the EGOT Crowd, Oscar's Two-Time Club, Remembering Alan Arkin, The Biggest Oscar Snubs: Part 1, The Instant Expert's Guide, The Instant Expert's Guide to Ron Howard, The Instant Expert's Guide to Sidney Lumet, The Instant Expert's Guide to Wes Anderson, The Instant Expert's Guide to: Mel Brooks, Top 10 Screen Kisses (1896-1979), Top 100 AFI Laughs, Top 100 AFI Movies, Top 100 AFI Passions, Top Films
Awards:

1969 BAFTA Best Screen Play

1969 BAFTA Best Direction

1969 BAFTA Best Editing

1969 BAFTA Best Film

1968 Oscar Best Director

BBFC:
Release Date:
14/08/2017
Run Time:
101 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Digital 2.0, German Dolby Digital 2.0, Italian Dolby Digital 2.0, Spanish Dolby Digital 2.0
Subtitles:
English Hard of Hearing
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 2.35:1
Colour:
Colour
Bonus:
  • Audio Commentary with Mike Nichols and Steven Soderbergh
  • Audio Commentary with Dustin Hoffman and Katharine Ross
  • Audio Commentary by Professor Thomas Koebner
  • 'The Graduate': Looking Back
  • Students of 'The Graduate'
  • Mike Nichols: An American Master
  • Analysis of Seduction Scene
  • About the Music
  • Screen Tests
  • Meeting with Author Charles Webb
  • Interview with Dustin Hoffman
  • Interview with Producer Lawrence Turman
  • 'The Graduate' at 25
Disc 1:
This disc includes the main feature
- Special Features
Disc 2:
This disc includes special features
BBFC:
Release Date:
13/09/2010
Run Time:
106 minutes
Languages:
English DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0, French DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono, German DTS 5.1, German DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono, Spanish DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono
Subtitles:
Castillian, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Japanese, Norwegian, Swedish
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 2.35:1
Colour:
Colour
Bonus:
  • 'The graduate at 25' featurette
  • 'The graduate - Looking back' featurette
  • Interview of the author - Charles Webb
  • Analysis of the seduction sequence
  • About the music
  • Jump to song "Mrs. Robinson"
  • Jump to song "The sound of silence"
  • Jump to song "April come she will"
  • Jump to song "Scarborough fair / Canticle"
  • Original trailer

More like The Graduate

Reviews (4) of The Graduate

One of the classics of 1960s cinema - amusing and enjoyable even after 45+ years - The Graduate review by RP

Spoiler Alert
24/10/2014

I remember seeing 'The Graduate' in the cinema way back in 1968. I enjoyed it, but what I remember most was the introduction it gave me to the music of Simon & Garfunkel.

I've just watched it again after a gap of over 45 years - and I can now appreciate it as one of the classics of 1960s cinema. It tells the tale of new college graduate Ben Braddock (Dustin Hoffman) who returns home for the summer vacation, uncertain of his future.

Up steps an older married woman (Mrs Robinson, played by Anne Bancroft. We never learns Mrs Robinson's first name) who seduces young Ben - leaving him even more uncertain of his future. His unsuspecting parents push Ben into a date with Elaine (Katherine Ross), Mrs Robinson's daughter. Ben falls for her, rousing Mrs Robinson's wrath. Elaine returns to college, Ben pursues her, but Elaine is persuaded by her parents into a hastily arranged marriage with another student. Ben arrives at the church too late to stop the ceremony, but elopes (if that is the right word, since she's already married to another) with Elaine, making good their escape on the rear seat of a bus.

The film is in two clear halves: the first is a comedy of manners, in which an experienced older woman introduces Ben to sex (although given the age of the film, nothing is explicit). The second half of the film is a romance, where Ben (slightly creepily?) stalks Elaine and finally tracks her down.

The film is set in a peaceful, perfect, white, middle class America - a world soon to vanish. None of the troubles soon to come (Vietnam, the civil rights movement etc) are visible. Is it too pretentious to imagine that the final scene is taking the two young people away from their parents' lives towards an uncertain future?

The storyline is somewhat hackneyed, the acting is good (Anne Bancroft is excellent) even though the age of the actors doesn't quite match with the characters, and the film is amusing and enjoyable even after 40 years.

It's an iconic 1960s film so I feel I must give it 5/5 stars - but that does seem a little high...

3 out of 3 members found this review helpful.

THE Classic RomCom - A Masterpiece - The Graduate review by GI

Spoiler Alert
02/12/2022

Every time I watch this I am enthralled as just how funny and clever it is. As a romantic comedy it tops the tree in that it's also a serious scrutiny of middle class America in the 1960s and I'm sure will resonate today in many of its themes around expectation. Dustin Hoffman is perfect casting, in his first screen role, as the naïve young man, Ben, the son of wealthy parents who returns home after graduating as a top student. He's confused about the future especially being surrounded by his parents businessmen friends who offer him all kinds of options in which Ben sees he will be trapped and unhappy. Part out of boredom he allows himself to be seduced by his father's business partner's wife, Mrs Robinson (Anne Bancroft). Mrs Robinson is the lost soul of the narrative, a woman who gave up her dreams for the security of wealth and regrets it. Their affair continues unabated despite Ben hating himself for engaging in it but it's the arrival of the Robinson's daughter, Elaine (Katherine Ross) that finally allows Ben to see what he wants. With the fantastic songs by Simon & Garfunkel and the really sharp direction by Mike Nichols this is a real classic of modern cinema, it captures the essence of all powerful true love as a human experience and reveals that social acceptance and success comes at a price. It condemns the notion that each generation expects the next to follow their lead, this was a key challenge in the mid 60s and here was a film that brilliantly voiced the views of thousands of the young generation. Above all else this is hilariously funny, with clever camera work (watch the scene where Ben is running and seems to never get where he's going) and it's a joy to watch this each time. A film every cinephile should make sure they see.

1 out of 1 members found this review helpful.

Social Comedy. - The Graduate review by Steve

Spoiler Alert
26/06/2012

Intelligent and very funny comedy which was a massive box office hit. It looks a knockout with pop art visuals, stunning use of widescreen, unconventional editing, brilliant Technicolor... The whole film is fashioned by an innovative, surreal imagination.

Ben (Dustin Hoffman) has finished college and is seduced by friend of the family, Mrs. Robinson (Anne Bancroft), which proves an impediment when he wants to marry her daughter (Katherine Ross). It is labelled a counterculture film, but that's not what is on screen.

Ben may be experiencing generational friction with his parents and the Robinsons. But he is not rebelling against their wealth or hypocrisy. He is a product of them. He has no causes. He is just drifting. He has as little to communicate as his materialistic mum and dad.

It's a generational film, but Ben is no hero/anti-hero. He's another thwarted American life, alienated, inarticulate and lost within his own familiar society. A brilliant second film by Mike Nichols, with effective use of excellent Simon and Garfunkel songs.

1 out of 1 members found this review helpful.

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