
The Big Lebowski
Jeffrey 'The Dude' Lebowski, a Los Angeles slacker who only wants to bowl and drink White Russians, is mistaken for another Jeffrey Lebowski, a wheelchair-bound millionaire, and finds himself dragged into a strange series of events involving nihilists, adult film producers, ferrets, errant toes, and large sums of money.
Director(s)
Joel Coen
T. Kukovinski
Jeff Rafner
Donald Murphy
Where to watch

Amazon Video
Rent
Cast & crew

Julianne Moore
Maude Lebowski

Flea
Nihilist

Steve Buscemi
Donny

Mark Pellegrino
Treehorn Thug

Jeff Bridges
The Dude

John Goodman
Walter Sobchak

David Huddleston
The Big Lebowski

Philip Seymour Hoffman
Brandt

Tara Reid
Bunny Lebowski

Philip Moon
Treehorn Thug

Peter Stormare
Nihilist

Torsten Voges
Nihilist

Jimmie Dale Gilmore
Smokey

Jack Kehler
Dude's Landlord

John Turturro
Jesus Quintana
James G. Hoosier
Quintana's Partner

Carlos Leon
Maude's Thug
Terrence Burton
Maude's Thug

Richard Gant
Older Cop

Christian Clemenson
Younger Cop

Dom Irrera
Tony the Chauffeur
Gérard L'Heureux
Lebowski's Chauffeur

David Thewlis
Knox Harrington

Lu Elrod
Coffee Shop Waitress

Mike Gomez
Auto Circus Cop

Peter Siragusa
Gary the Bartender

Sam Elliott
The Stranger

Marshall Manesh
Doctor

Harry Bugin
Arthur Digby Sellers

Jesse Flanagan
Little Larry Sellers
Irene Olga López
Pilar
Luis Colina
Corvette Owner

Ben Gazzara
Jackie Treehorn

Leon Russom
Malibu Police Chief

Ajgie Kirkland
Cab Driver

Jon Polito
Private Snoop

Aimee Mann
Nihilist Woman

Jerry Haleva
Saddam

Jennifer Lamb
Pancake Waitress

Warren Keith
Funeral Director

Wendy Braun
Chorine Dancer (uncredited)

Asia Carrera
Sherry in 'Logjammin' (uncredited)

Kiva Dawson
Dancer (uncredited)

Joel Coen
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T. Kukovinski
-
Jeff Rafner
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Donald Murphy
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Details
Reviews
Film.Viewer.999
Fun, clever and engaging. Joel & Eitan Cohen's most iconic creation
r96sk
<em>'The Big Lebowski'</em> is entertaining. Jeff Bridges and John Goodman are a fun duo, I even would've enjoyed this 1998 flick more if it was just those two for the whole near 2 hours. Everyone else on the cast is good too, amusing seeing Peter Stormare in a role like this - as opposed to one like John Abruzzi. Speaking of <em>'Prison Break'</em>, Jonathan Krantz is also in this! The film starts like a house on the fire, I did find the rest of it - particularly the middle portion - a little (emphasis on 'little') less as the story is stretched out a tad, though all in all it gave me a good time and I'd happily rewatch it no doubt.
CinemaSerf
The “Dude” (Jeff Bridges) just wants to go through life drinking and bowling so is a bit narked when two thugs break into his apartment demanding cash! They’ve got the wrong “Lebowski” but only discover that after they’ve micturated on his rug! Determined to get some recompense, he goes to the correct one (David Huddleston) where he is given short shrift but decides to help himself to one of the many rugs that dot the man’s mansion and he also takes a bit of a shine to his young trophy wife! Days later, he is summoned back by the butler “Brandt” (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and told that she has been kidnapped and that he is to help them deliver $1,000,000 to the felons. He reckons she’s probably behind the crime herself, but agrees - for a fee, and recruits his loud mouthed mate “Walter” (John Goodman) to help out. That’s not all, though! It turns out that there’s yet another “Lebowski” and she’s his daughter “Maude” (Julianne Moore). She’s an energetically enigmatic, quite ruthless, woman who points out that the cash they are proposing to use is actually not her dad’s - and she needs it back. With the scene now set, the capers quickly escalate and no rug is safe! Bridges leads this ensemble cast really well here as the story lurches from one disastrous escapade to another, marrying some witty dialogue with some borderline slapstick and all held together via White Russians and the bowling alley. Moore is also on good form as is the less-is-more performance from an underused but amiable Steve Buscemi as the third wheel on their wagon “Donny”. The plot itself doesn’t really matter, it’s largely incidental to the engaging efforts of all except, maybe, for a Goodman whose constant expletives lose their potency quite quickly as his character becomes a bit too boorish. It is laugh out loud funny at times and as a semi-satirical look at layabout life, wealth and drug crime it’s well worth a look.





