Graduate

"The Graduate" (1967) is a drama starring Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft and Katharine Ross. Plot: A recent ...

Approval Rate: 93%

93%Approval ratio

Reviews 21

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  • by

    wolfmantip

    Tue Aug 25 2009

    I saw this in the theatre, One of my Favorites. The soundtrack by Simon & Garfunkel adds that little something Special.

  • by

    serpentsmasher

    Mon Sep 10 2007

    "are you trying to seduce me" blah blah

  • by

    genghisthehun

    Mon Sep 10 2007

    I was in college when this film entered release.  I had a friend who dared me to go to it stating that if I didn't like it, he would reinburse me for the ticket.  I went, and I really enjoyed it, and I continue to enjoy it over the last forty years.   The sound track was first rate, and Dustin Hoffman, Ann Bancroft and Katherine Ross were perfect.  Everything clicked in this flick including some great character actors.  I strongly recommend that you watch it, dear reader.  It does have some 1960's blah, blah, blah, but little enough that it should not annoy you to any great extent.

  • by

    canadasucks

    Mon Sep 10 2007

    Still very watchable- but I have to agree that it is somewhat dated and slightly (only slightly) overrated. . .still, a time-capsule film that is still worth watching. . ."are you here for the affair?"

  • by

    irishgit

    Mon Sep 10 2007

    I like this film a good deal, particularly the performance by Anne Bancroft, but I found, on my most recent viewing, that the film does not stand up to the passage of time as well as I would have thought. Not that its bad, by any means, its just that it falls a fair ways short of great.

  • by

    spike65

    Thu Aug 23 2007

    I saw this in the Steinbeck theater on Cannery Row when I was about 19 years old. The movie had been out fairly short time and had generated lots of buzz on the street. The theater was fairly new and had an excellent sound system for that era. No one knew who any of the actors were (a few might have seen Anne Bancroft before) and Dustin Hoffman was way too odd looking to be a product of Hollywood. The movie blew me away at the time and made me much more appreciative of Simon and Garfunkel who were close to being obsolete at that time being a leftover from the dying folk music era. I believe the first Monterrey Pop festival was that same summer so you can see where the music and the culture were headed. Dustin Hoffman went on to defy the critics who said he'd never be a leading man or any kind of star. As for me it started a life-long love of Anne Bancrofts' work. Here's to you Mrs. Robinson.

  • by

    jimmyinatlanta

    Mon Jun 23 2003

    Great movie! The cinematography, direction, script, and soundtrack really propelled this movie. Very true to the cynicism in the dating scene, the difficulty for young men to relate to the world (parents, women), cool metaphors (Christ in the church, the fishbowl, him in the scuba gear, Ms. Robinson in the hallway after he spills the beans - all symbols of alienation) - the hip style of this film is superb. Copied by movies like Ferris Bueller. Very dark, chic, hip, urbane, funny, witty. I like movies that leave you wondering. They symbolize where men and women are headed in the future and what they ultimately will mean to each other. I also like how we never really know what's in his head - he's more a symbol than a character. All of that and the soundtrack leave a haunting image.

  • by

    racoon

    Thu Dec 26 2002

    An all-time classic. I saw it for the first time today and was completely dazzled, all the way from chilling start to slick, dynamic (and even more chilling) end. If you want a romantic flick that doesn't pile on the sentimentality then this is the place to start heading. One very big puzzlement that arose while watching this powerful and enthralling film, in which a young man finds himself falling in love with the daughter of the woman with whom he is having an affair, was just why so many people always refer to it as a comedy. I thought it was a lot more serious and haunting than funny. The obscure angles from which many sequences were shot were well done and added to the general unease, which Hoffman was successfully able to transfer to the viewers via his character's own fear and insecurity. And the ending was amazing - a real andrenalin inducer that rounded off the perfect film and brought it to a poignent but at the same time uplifting close. Heck, this film is worth watch... Read more

  • by

    antondatree

    Thu Jun 13 2002

    Began a new era of Hollywood movies. I love Simon and Garfunkle's tune, the performances, and the overall feel of the movie. A true classic and it's in my Top 20. Not only that, it's hilarious!

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    jimi_capra

    Sun Apr 28 2002

    The American Film Institute have this film in their top 10 or 20 movies of all time, i think thats over doing it. it's not a great movie, it does not deserve 5 or 4 stars 3 stars is good.

  • by

    h_dawkins

    Tue Jan 22 2002

    although never as good or as funny as the critics make out , this sees a young dustin hoffman provide an intelligent performance. wonderful soundtrack , some good laughs and incredible symbolism

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    steve989

    Tue Jan 15 2002

    Humor, romance, and drama combined dosn't seem like a bad idea, but after seeing the movie, you realise that it could have been a little better.

  • by

    sueco76

    Wed Nov 21 2001

    Great movie with chemistry, character study, awesome cinematography, and the deliciously evil martyr, Mrs. Robinson played meticulously by the talented Anne Bancroft

  • by

    jorgen

    Tue Sep 25 2001

    A low starter, but an excellent finish. One of my favorites, with a fantastic hoffman and a beautiful ross. btw, the soundtrack an d especially scarborough fare is the best there is next to the good the bad and the ugly.

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    molfan

    Tue Aug 28 2001

    A real funny movie. Dustin Hoffman is a young man just graduated from college who is seduced into an affair with a middle aged woman who is a friend of the family. Anne Bancroft is good as Mrs. Robinson and so is Dustin Hoffman as Ben. the movie has it's twist when Ben ends up liking Mrs. Robinsons daughter istead> The very ending is good.It also has a very good soundtrack with songs from Simon and Garfunkel.

  • by

    ashleys

    Fri Jul 27 2001

    I like it because it's funny with some decent songs. I saw Rainman before this. Dustin Hoffman had the same blank stare in both.

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    callmetootie

    Sun Apr 15 2001

    The Graduate is a 1967 classic comedy-drama that you have to see to belive. The film is about a young man who gets seduced by his girlfriend's mother, Mrs. Robinson. As the film goes along, their relationship is quite strange and small, as he still dates her daughter.

  • by

    woodstock

    Thu Dec 07 2000

    The Graduate is a great movie because it is timeless. It says so much about human nature but remains simple. It also manages to be very funny. It generally draws a reaction from the audience.

  • by

    nassty

    Wed Nov 22 2000

    This movie has it all. A girl chases boy. Boy likes another girl. Girl runs away. And the music is tight. Simon and Garfunkel. The ending is good but it is a real feel good movie.

  • by

    gte71429du

    Mon Nov 22 1999

    The Graduate should definetely get major kudos. I saw this movie this past weekend. I had no idea it existed before. There should be a required class in High School that is dedicated to showing and reviewing the most classic and pivotal films.

  • by

    wiggum

    Fri Nov 19 1999

    One of the best movies ever made. And it hasn't lost much with age (much like Anne Bancroft as Mrs. Robinson). If anything, the story of alienation in modern society is more relevant now than it was back then. My favorite scene is when Dustin Hoffman and Katherine Ross are connecting for the first time - they close the top of the convertable and that shuts us, as viewers, out of their conversation, so we only hear the random noises around them as they talk in the car.