The Graduate

4.00
    The Graduate
    1967

    Synopsis

    Benjamin, a recent college graduate very worried about his future, finds himself in a love triangle with an older woman and her daughter.

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    Cast

    • Anne BancroftMrs. Robinson
    • Dustin HoffmanBen Braddock
    • Katharine RossElaine Robinson
    • Murray HamiltonMr. Robinson
    • William DanielsMr. Braddock
    • Elizabeth WilsonMrs. Braddock
    • Buck HenryRoom Clerk
    • Brian AveryCarl Smith
    • Walter BrookeMr. McGuire
    • Norman FellMr. McCleery

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      The funniest American comedy of the year.
    • 100

      Christian Science Monitor

      Dustin Hoffman gives the inspired performance that launched his movie career, and director Mike Nichols shows a gift for social satire that has never glistened quite so brightly since. [Review of re-release]
    • 100

      TV Guide Magazine

      The Graduate is a flawlessly acted and produced film. [Review of re-release]
    • 90

      The New York Times

      Funny, outrageous, and touching, The Graduate is a sophisticated film that puts Mr. Nichols and his associates on a level with any of the best satirists working abroad today.
    • 90

      Variety

      The Graduate is a delightful, satirical comedy-drama about a young man's seduction by an older woman, and the measure of maturity which he attains from the experience.
    • 89

      Austin Chronicle

      Hoffman and Bancroft are phenomenally cast in a script co-written by Buck Henry and Calder Willingham that is by turns sly, touching, and amazingly fresh 30 years later. [Review of re-release]
    • 70

      Chicago Reader

      The light ribbing of conspicuous consumption in southern California and the Simon and Garfunkel songs on the sound track both play considerable roles in giving this depthless comedy some bounce. [Review of re-release]
    • 50

      Salon

      What was once an all-important signpost to adulthood is really little more than a simple romantic comedy whose "countercultural" message, insofar as it has one, is decidedly retrograde. [Review of re-release]

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