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The Dudes Abide: The Coen Brothers and the Making of The Big Lebowski

di Alex Belth

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In the autumn of 1996, Joel and Ethan Coen were a few months from filming their seventh feature film, The Big Lebowski. Their sixth, Fargo, had been released that March to acclaim; awards would follow. Alex Belth, a 25-year-old aspiring filmmaker, landed a job as their personal assistant on Lebowski--and for the next year was the fly on the wall as the Coens created the movie that would become an enduring classic. First as their personal assistant and then as an assistant film editor, Belth observed everything from the preproduction work of location scouting, casting, and rehearsals all the way through filming and postproduction. Belth witnessed when Jeff Bridges and John Goodman met for the first time and rehearsed their iconic roles as The Dude and Walter; when a private screening was held for Alan Klein, the Rolling Stones' notorious former business manager; and long sessions with the Coen brothers in the editing room, as they tied their movie together. The Dudes Abide is the first behind-the-scenes account of the making of a Coen Brothers movie and offers an intimate, firsthand narrative of the making of The Big Lebowski--including never-before-revealed details about the making of the film and insight into the inner workings of the Coen Brothers' genius.… (altro)
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Very fun Kindle single by an assistant to the Coens on The Big Lebowski. Lots of interesting tidbits & an intriguing look behind the scenes. Essential reading for Lebowski-ites. ( )
  Duffyevsky | Aug 19, 2022 |
The Big Lebowski is one of my favorite movies of all time, and also one of my most-watched (for many people the two are not quite the same), so naturally I was down to read an account of its production by the Coen brothers' personal assistant. There's a limit to how truly revelatory a book like this can be, but if you're a die-hard Urban Achiever then this hits all the right notes. I loved the anecdotes, the asides, the accounts that brought home how personal this movie was for everyone involved. It's really gratifying to know that a movie famous for its quotability had that exact same effect on the people who made it, and that such an intensely lovable film had such an affable genesis (at least, as affable as the making of a major motion picture can be).

I would watch the films with all of these alternate castings:

"Robert Sean Leonard was a military Brandt, Tim Blake Nelson an insipid Brandt. Steve Zahn was a dense Brandt, Paul Giamatti a volatile Brandt, and Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who got the part, a big-assed Brandt. I didn’t recognize many of the younger actors who read for the role, but among them were Owen Wilson, Paul Rudd, Jamie Kennedy, and Vince Vaughn. Catherine Keener and Patricia Clarkson read for Maude. Ethan said Clarkson gave an excellent enunciation of "vagina." Meat Loaf read for Marty, the Dude’s landlord; Joey Lauren Adams and Charlize Theron for Bunny; Billy Idol for one of the Nihilists; Drew Carey for Gary the bartender; and Matthew Lillard tried out for Jackie Treehorn’s blond goon."

Fun quotability anecdote:

"As the Boys edited, we heard the same dialogue over and over. Soon, I greeted Joel and Ethan by quoting the Dude and they'd quote him back. Our favorite lines were: "Awww, man" (when the Dude wakes up from the first dream sequence); "Shit yeah, the achievers"; "He thinks the carpet pissers did this?"; "Employed?"; "After effects?"; "Ron Kuby"; and, of course: "I gotta rash, man." It occurred to me that Bridges' voices cracked in these, and other, line readings. I don’t know whether it was a conscious choice on his part, but Bridges was doing his variation on the way the way the Boys spoke."

Belth tries to explain the Marv Albert scandal to Elvis Costello:

"This was when the NBA commentator Marv Albert was on the front page of the tabloids for dressing in women's clothes and, as his mistress testified, biting her during sex. Elvis looked at the front page of the Daily News and asked me who Marv Albert was. How to convey who the voice of the Knicks was and what he meant? Marv just looked like another front-page perv. I did my best to explain, and Costello nodded thoughtfully."

Overall you come away wishing that you could just hang out with the Coen brothers all the time while they make movies. I'm sure that in reality it's not quite this much fun, but I want to believe. ( )
  aaronarnold | May 11, 2021 |
A fun and speedy read through a behind-the-scenes view of the making of The Big Lebowski. Belth was a young man looking to break into film editing when he lucked into the position of personal assistant to Joel and Ethan Cohen (aka The Boys). He followed them to LA and had a fly on the wall view of the casting, filming, and editing of one of the Cohen's classics. Belth has an engaging writing style sprinkled with humor and observations without getting too gossipy or name-droppy. If you have Amazon Prime, this is free Kindle Single and is worth a read for folks interested in the Cohen Brothers, The Big Lebowski, or the world of film making in general. ( )
  kristykay22 | Dec 31, 2017 |
This was a fun memoir that gives an insider look at the making of a cult classic. You'll enjoy it the most if you are very familiar with the film. ( )
  iBeth | Dec 27, 2014 |
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In the autumn of 1996, Joel and Ethan Coen were a few months from filming their seventh feature film, The Big Lebowski. Their sixth, Fargo, had been released that March to acclaim; awards would follow. Alex Belth, a 25-year-old aspiring filmmaker, landed a job as their personal assistant on Lebowski--and for the next year was the fly on the wall as the Coens created the movie that would become an enduring classic. First as their personal assistant and then as an assistant film editor, Belth observed everything from the preproduction work of location scouting, casting, and rehearsals all the way through filming and postproduction. Belth witnessed when Jeff Bridges and John Goodman met for the first time and rehearsed their iconic roles as The Dude and Walter; when a private screening was held for Alan Klein, the Rolling Stones' notorious former business manager; and long sessions with the Coen brothers in the editing room, as they tied their movie together. The Dudes Abide is the first behind-the-scenes account of the making of a Coen Brothers movie and offers an intimate, firsthand narrative of the making of The Big Lebowski--including never-before-revealed details about the making of the film and insight into the inner workings of the Coen Brothers' genius.

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