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#dude where's my car
baltharino · 1 month
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Dude Where's My Car (2000) Dir. Danny Leiner
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myoldboyfriends · 1 month
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Ashton Kutcher & Seann William Scott
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teaganrae15 · 23 days
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me and bro fr
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dataentryspecialist · 3 months
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Brent Spiner then and now
Happy birthday, you blue eyed silver fox 🦊💞
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dopedorkmagazine · 3 months
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Shibby! a relic indeed. Surprised mom actually approved of this rental back in the day 😂 the forever quotable “Dude, Where’s My Car?” on VHS. 🫡
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stiflerclause · 3 months
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Will you make any more DWMC shitposts? I love your American Pie ones a lot but I'm also a big DWMC fan ^^
dwmc in 2024... HELL YEAH!!! i need to rewatch it so bad omg but in the meantime. here's some from the vault. hopefully this isn't too niche
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jesse and Chester the kind of guys to take a bite out of the blunt
also a collection of other photos that i can assign to them. they are strange little creatures i love them
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gtsvideos2 · 1 year
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Super Hot Giant Alien (Dude, Where's My Car?)
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lucasluvzy0u · 9 months
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Ethan! Your babysitter is standing right behind you!!
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braindamaged007 · 2 years
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baltharino · 1 month
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Dude Where's My Car? (2000) Dir. Danny Leiner
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timemachinereviews · 1 year
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I Watched The Big Lebowski — Am I Part of the Cult?
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HELL YES. (Spoilers ahead.)
I’m not entirely sure what I just watched. 
But it was fucking amazing.
The Big Lebowski. Where do I even begin? Well, why not with the fact that I finally watched the damn thing? You don’t need me to tell you how beloved this film is, how it’s one of the biggest cult classics out there. I was alive the year it came out, I had no excuse. Sure, I was in diapers, but that’s still no excuse. I’m kicking myself in the shins right now for not having watched it sooner.
Regardless, I watched it, and the minute I finished it, I knew this was going to be one of those movies for me. You know, the ones you constantly quote, the ones you have dozens upon dozens of conversations about with several different people, the ones you force every movie fan in your life to watch.
I’m not much of a Coen Brothers fan. Before The Big Lebowski, I had only seen one of their other films: True Grit. That was such a long time ago, though, and I don’t remember much — really, the thing I remember most about it is that it introduced most of us to Hailee Steinfeld. However, The Big Lebowski has got me seriously interested in watching more Coen Brothers films, particularly because of how fantastically funny the screenplay is.
Man, this movie is quotable. So, so quotable. I tried to keep note of all my favorite quotes while watching the film but after a certain point, there were just so many, I decided a rewatch would have to be necessary. I’m sure I missed out on a ton, but here are some of my favorite quotes from my first watch:
“I’m talking about the Dude here.”
“It’s down there somewhere. Let me take another look.”
“Yeah? Well, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man.”
“Her life is in your hands, Dude.”
“Careful, man! There’s a beverage here!”
“The goddamn plane has crashed into the mountain!”
“I dig your style too, man. Got a whole cowboy thing going.”
If you think these quotes are a lot, they’re not even half of all the great quotes present in this movie. According to IMDb, very few lines were improvised and virtually every line, every "man" and "dude," was scripted. That’s insane to me and a testament to just how talented the Coens are at screenplays — but it’s mostly insane to me because the acting in the film felt so natural, I was convinced some of these lines had to be improvised.
Jeff Bridges, especially, owns the role of The Dude. No other actor could’ve played him, which is pretty wild because according to Joel Coen, he and his brother did write for John Goodman and Steve Buscemi, but didn’t know who was going to play the lead role. Mel Gibson was even considered and thank God that didn’t happen, because The Dude was pretty much the role Jeff Bridges was born to play. The way he brings this character to life is absolutely top-notch.
The rest of the cast is a delight too — nearly all of them shine in their roles, delivering their lines with terrific comedic timing and a perfect understanding of their respective characters, but the two particular standouts to me were Philip Seymour Hoffman as Brandt and Julianne Moore as Maude Lebowski. The two aren’t on-screen a lot, but when they are, they’re irresistible — it’s near impossible to not pay attention when they’re talking.
Of course, given the spoiler warning above, you’ve probably already seen this movie, or you just don’t care much about spoilers. Let’s talk about this film’s ending then, where apart from the death of a friend, nothing in The Dude’s life really changes. Everything just kind of resolves itself and The Dude goes on living nearly the exact life he had at the beginning of the movie, presumably never interacting with the majority of the characters he met in this film ever again.
Does this make the whole thing pointless? I can see why one would think that. After all, if the protagonist doesn’t seem to have undergone any significant changes throughout the story, why bother telling the story at all? If, by the end, he’s almost the exact same person he was at the beginning, why was this specific period in his life the one the Coen brothers thought was worth making a movie about?
The way I see it, The Big Lebowski’s whole point is that it’s pointless. There have been plenty of times in my life when something big happens, only for everything to go back to the way it was right after. That’s just how life works sometimes — does that mean these stories aren’t worth telling or remembering?
Of course not. Maybe this film is just a blip in The Dude’s life, an interesting story he tells at parties but one that never really made a big impact in his timeline. (Again, apart from Donny’s death.) Still, he has fun telling this story, doesn’t he? Or at least the Coen brothers do. And we have fun listening to it. Maybe that’s just what life is sometimes — a series of events that don’t seem to add up to any discernible purpose, but we have fun living through them anyway.
But you know, that's just, like, my opinion, man.
P.S. Y’all know that stoner comedy cult classic called Dude, Where’s My Car? Apparently, that title is a reference to The Big Lebowski. I knew it the minute John Goodman said, “Dude, where’s your car?”
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therealdanreynolds · 6 months
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Guys, in the appreciation of my "Dude, Where's my bitches?!" post- mind you a fucking SHITPOST that got me to where i am now with 84 FOLLOWERS?? im literally so happy. i want to thank @lillazyboithings for also being one of my close-ish silly moots, and helping me get to where i am.
I think there's gonna be a Dude, where's my car?!(or bitches yk) au for RTC.. OR i might redraw the og post. I'm very thankful for my position on here and 84 seems like a shitty number but it means a lot to me. (P.S sorry for not uploading more i got caught into watching shitty memes on tiktok 💔)
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nothingexistsnever · 1 year
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leechhealer · 2 years
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On April 18, 2001, Dude Where's My Car? debuted in France.
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