The Big Lebowski

Started by kotte, August 27, 2003, 09:27:19 AM

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cowboykurtis

Quote from: Pubrick
Quote from: picolaswhat is the number going to do for you?
he's been telling ppl he wrote it and this is getting to be a gaping hole in his story..

that one was a real zinger - How does it make you feel, making cheap remarks at people over the internet ? Does it make you feel like a big man, Pubrick? Is that your secret? If so, for your own sake, keep em coming.
...your excuses are your own...

cine

Quote from: cowboykurtisthat one was a real zinger - How does it make you feel, making cheap remarks at people over the internet ? Does it make you feel like a big man, Pubrick? Is that your secret? If so, for your own sake, keep em coming.
how old are you?

Pubrick

Quote from: cowboykurtis
Quote from: Pubrick
Quote from: picolaswhat is the number going to do for you?
he's been telling ppl he wrote it and this is getting to be a gaping hole in his story..

that one was a real zinger - How does it make you feel, making cheap remarks at people over the internet ? Does it make you feel like a big man, Pubrick? Is that your secret? If so, for your own sake, keep em coming.
haha, as long as u keep being this insecure, i got plenty of em left..
under the paving stones.

cowboykurtis

Quote from: Pubrick
Quote from: cowboykurtis
Quote from: Pubrick
Quote from: picolaswhat is the number going to do for you?
he's been telling ppl he wrote it and this is getting to be a gaping hole in his story..

that one was a real zinger - How does it make you feel, making cheap remarks at people over the internet ? Does it make you feel like a big man, Pubrick? Is that your secret? If so, for your own sake, keep em coming.
haha, as long as u keep being this insecure, i got plenty of em left..

im happy for you, i really am
...your excuses are your own...

Pubrick

hey speaking of happy, Happy Birthday! how old did u turn?
under the paving stones.

picolas

i was seriously posing that question.

RegularKarate

I'm wondering if anyone could give me a page count on Picolas


modage

Further Details
Universal has released early details on a new collector's edition of The Big Lebowski which stars the likes of Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Julianne Moore and Steve Buscemi. The single-disc  :yabbse-thumbdown: release will be available to own in shops from the 18th October this year, and should set you back around $19.98 in total. A special giftset will also be available from the 18th October, priced at around $49.98. I'm afraid that's pretty much all we know right now, but we'll bring you further details very shortly. Stay tuned.
Christopher Nolan's directive was clear to everyone in the cast and crew: Use CGI only as a last resort.

hedwig

Quote from: themodernage02A special giftset will also be available from the 18th October, priced at around $49.98.

The gift-set comes with coasters, cards, and a shammy towel

Stefen

That's a giftset that an asshole would buy.
Falling in love is the greatest joy in life. Followed closely by sneaking into a gated community late at night and firing a gun into the air.

hedwig


diggler

achievers edition, hilarious

proud we are of all of them
I'm not racist, I'm just slutty

Reinhold

i met a guy at a party recently who has most of the left side of his body tattooed with scenes from and references to the big lebowski.

the last time my aunt dropped me off at school, i accidentally offered to buy her pot if she needed it. i wasn't sure if she was hinting at it. it turns out she definitely wasn't.  anyway, this time, we just talked about the big lebowski in the car. the conversation very nearly ended the same way as last time.
Quote from: Pas Rap on April 23, 2010, 07:29:06 AM
Obviously what you are doing right now is called (in my upcoming book of psychology at least) validation. I think it's a normal thing to do. People will reply, say anything, and then you're gonna do what you were subconsciently thinking of doing all along.

MacGuffin

Q&A: Jeff Dowd Is the Real 'Lebowski'

Call him the Dude. That or his Dudeness, Duder or el Duderino if you're not into the whole brevity thing.

Addressing Jeff Dowd the real life inspiration for Jeff Bridges' character in "The Big Lebowski" is not a formal affair. But as the cult of the Coen brothers' 1998 mistaken identity comedy has grown, so has Dowd's fame.

The 55-year-old film producer first met Joel and Ethan Coen when he helped promote their 1984 debut, "Blood Simple." The Coens decided the large, boisterous Dowd, who referred to himself as "the Dude," would yield endless possibilities if inserted into a genre film a Los Angeles film noir.

"It was sort of imaging him in the context of a (Raymond) Chandler kind of story that got us started on the script," Joel Coen says on the new collector's edition DVD of "The Big Lebowski."

Eight years later, the fan base for the movie continues to grow. A new collector's edition DVD comes out Tuesday, and New York will host the "Lebowski Fest" Oct. 21-22 the fourth year fans will dress up as characters from the film, bowl a few games and sip the Dude's signature white Russians.

Imdb.com notes that the Dude, "the laziest in all of Los Angeles County," says "man" 144 times in the movie. Unfortunately, Dowd didn't drop one "man" talking to the AP, but he did discuss his peculiar "somewhat icon status."

AP: How similar are you to the Dude we know from the movie?

Dowd: A lot of the body language is 110 percent spot on. That's very, very similar. Some of the dress is pretty close. This is what Joel and Ethan imaged I would have been like in the `70s. There was a period of time after when we were very active politically in the late `60s there was no "movement" anymore. A fair amount of people hung out for a couple years. We were hanging pretty heavy, and indeed for a while we drank white Russians somewhere between tequila sunrises and Harvey Wallbangers, or whatever the drink of season was.

AP: Did the Coens tell you they were working on "The Big Lebowski" with you in mind?

Dowd: I actually heard it through a guy named Ben Barenholt who produced a couple of their movies. "The boys are doin' a movie about 'ya, Dude." They told me shortly after that.

AP: Did you work with Jeff Bridges beforehand?

Dowd: Just a day, but he got it. I'm pretty easy to mimic. (Robert) Redford does a good impression of me too. I'm kind of bigger than life and the way I use my hands and mumble and lay back with my belly sticking out. In the script, it says, "The Dude, in rumpled clothes. Casualness runs deep."

AP: Do you bowl?

Dowd: Not that much. I know where Joel and Ethan got the bowling idea. It was during "Blood Simple," when I was helping them with the marketing and distribution. I had an idea to throw a party at a bowling alley in Santa Monica and it was like a thousand people. That's where that came from.

AP: Sam Elliot narrates at the start of the movie that the Dude is "the man for his time and place." Is that true of you as well?

Dowd: I've been fortunate enough to be in the right place and the right time for the better part of half a century being around a lot of interesting people and a lot of interesting events. ... I'm there at 17 years old traveling around Europe with the Living Theater and, by chance, the Rolling Stones. I was around Ralph Nader when he started up his PIRG (Public Interest Research Group) organization. I got involved with Redford ... there's a whole story about the first year of Sundance and how it was started. I was involved in the last demonstration against Richard Nixon at the Spokane World Fair. (Dowd was a member of the Seattle Seven, an anti-Vietnam protest group alluded to in "Lebowski.")

AP: I hear you're writing an autobiography?

Dowd: I'm almost done. It's called "The Dude Abides." It's about how friends can get together and do things positively and hopefully using this somewhat icon status I have now, bequeathed to me by Joel and Ethan ... it'll help empower the younger generation.

AP: What's it like, this "icon status"?

Dowd: The persona of that character automatically is an icebreaker. People are like, "Wow! The Dude!" And they want to give you a big handshake or a hug. It's a very friendly feeling for them and obviously for me. It's different than what happens with people being in awe with a star it's like a friendly thing. People seem to be instantly at ease. From my point of view, that's great, because that's how the world should be anyway.

AP: Do you indeed have a rug that really ties the room together?

Dowd: Absolutely.
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


Skeleton FilmWorks