Showing posts with label The Big Lebowski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Big Lebowski. Show all posts

Monday, April 27, 2026

Cutter's Way - Radiance 4K

Cutter’s Way (out now on 4K from Radiance) is a movie I’ve seen referenced here and there over the years and always meant to watch but never did for whatever reason. Now that it’s out on 4K, I had a chance to finally rectify that, and I’m glad I did. This is one of those older movies that opens my eyes for other films I love because it was clearly an inspiration for other filmmakers. But what puts it on another level is how deceptively simple the story is in a way that makes it compelling on its own and depressingly relevant decades later.

But let me get the most obvious topic out of the way, first. John Heard is great in this, and anyone who only knows him as the Home Alone dad or even the corrupt cop in The Sopranos needs to watch this. At first glance, he retroactively looks like a caricature of a disgruntled Vietnam vet. He’s got the shaggy hair, beard, eye-patch, missing limb, and he’s sick of this shit! Thanks to countless other portrayals, like Gary Sinise’s Lt. Dan in Forrest Gump, it would be easy to dismiss Cutter at first glance. But Heard makes the character feel real, even if he amps it up to an extreme degree multiple times. There’s real pain in his eye, and he makes you understand his righteous anger with the world. Jeff Bridges and Lisa Eichhorn are great, as well, but this is Heard’s movie. 


Heard’s performance alone makes this worth watching, but its relevance stuck with me more than anything. Take out the 1970s of it all and Cutter’s rants still work. Capitalism has ruined a lot of things in this country, and justice is arguably the most important loss. Rich people seem to get away with everything, even murder, while the lowly regular people suffer, and there’s not much that can be done about it. Even when something drastic is done, it doesn’t change anything, and usually just leads to more suffering. We’re left with two choices: be like Cutter and let it consume you, or walk away like Bone (though even Bone can’t take it anymore in the end). Cutter’s monologue (though focused on Vietnam it can apply to any war or injustice) explains it so well in so few lines: “I watched the war on TV like everybody else. Thought the same damn things. You know what you thought when saw a picture of a young woman with a baby lying face down in a ditch, two gooks. You had three reactions, Rich, same as everybody else. The first one was real easy: ‘I hate the United States of America.’ Yeah. You see the same damn thing the next day, and you move up a notch. ‘There is no God.’ But you know what you finally say, what everybody finally says, no matter what? ‘I’m hungry.’”


Beyond that, this movie reminded me of two other films (though there are plenty of others to compare it to, I’m sure): Inherent Vice and The Big Lebowski. I connect this to Inherent Vice largely for the tone, but also for the slight ambiguity. The eerie score, while quite different from Vice’s, sets an apocalyptic tone signifying the end of an era or America or the idea of it anyway. And while there is a specific man they’re after in Cutter’s Way as opposed to the mostly faceless evil cabal of Inherent Vice, it’s still the same. We’re not sure if Cord has actually committed murder, but it doesn’t even matter. Anyone with that much money and power must have blood on his hands. Both films show the miserable conflict of knowing things are terrible, but also knowing there’s nothing that can be done beyond getting yourself killed on principle. 


The Big Lebowski is the more obvious, if tonally different, comparison. Of course, there’s Bridges; in both films he’s a reluctant participant in his Vietnam vet friend’s conspiracy quests. In many ways, I find Lebowski to simply be the light-hearted comedic version of this story. The world’s fucked, but fuck it, let’s go bowling. It’s as if the Coens watched this movie and took Cutter and Bone and found the most extreme comedic versions of both. In Bone, the go with the flow quasi-gigolo became the constantly stoned Dude, who just wants to be left alone. In Cutter, the darker elements have been stripped away leaving only the goofy diatribes that somehow connect Vietnam to everything. It’s not a one to one, and I don’t actually think the Coens were trying to make a version of this (from the title alone, they were more clearly going for a neo-noir comedy), but it’s impossible not to think of The Big Lebowski while watching Cutter’s Way and vice versa.


It may have taken me way too long to get around to watching Cutter’s Way, but it hit hard once I finally watched. I actually watched it twice within a couple days. This film stuck with me, and I’ll be thinking about it for a while. And thanks to Radiance’s new 4K, I’ll have a great version to check out when I inevitably revisit it after rewatching The Big Lebowski


Special Features and Transfer


This is the kind of movie 4K was meant for. Of course new movies will look great; they already look great on blu-ray. But when a film from decades ago gets the treatment, it adds another layer to enjoy, and this one looks great. 


As for the special features, Radiance is up there with all the other boutique labels. The artwork and case is high quality. And there’s a book included with essays and whatnot. 


There is just one new featurette with three writers (George Pelecanos, Megan Abbott, and Jordan Harper) mainly talking about the source novel and its author, Newton Thornburg. It was decent, and it gave me a few books to add to my ever-growing read list.


On the blu-ray (but not the 4K), there is an option to watch the original title sequence from when it was rightfully titled Cutter and Bone. It might seem trivial, but it’s just nice to see that title on the screen.


Everything else is archival, but what’s great about Radiance is that they go through all the other previous editions and bring all the features together on one release. So you get all the commentaries, featurettes, and interviews from past editions. I only checked out the interviews, and they each offered interesting insights into the making of the film.


Wednesday, August 27, 2025

The Big Lebowski - "Well, You Know, That's Just Like...Uh...Your Opinion, Man."


Before I rewatched this, I dug out my special bowling ball edition DVD of The Big Lebowski hoping that might be enough to inspire a full article. Of course, it wasn’t, but I still wanted to include a few pics (by the way, even though it’s a numbered limited edition, it’s not worth shit [as long as you don’t want it still in plastic, you can get it for $25 or less]). Then I watched The Big Sleep, hoping there would be enough similarities to write a comparison. There might be, but that Bogart film didn’t exactly draw me in, so I abandoned that. I was going to rewatch The Long Goodbye (still might, just for shits and gigs) for the same reason, but decided it wasn’t worth the trouble. This is a largely random movie, and as I watched it I had no problem jotting down shit for my Random Thoughts section. I decided if there was ever a movie I could just post my random thoughts about, it would have to be The Big Lebowski. So, in the spirit of the laziness of the Dude himself, here are my random thoughts and random thoughts only.


Random Thoughts


The “thanks a lot, asshole” at the beginning always gets me. You broke into his house and assaulted him, and he's the asshole? I just always find it funny when people get shit given to them for no reason. 


This movie always makes me miss being in a bowling league.


Speaking of bowling, when I was in high school our local alley upgraded to auto-scoring which meant you got to put your name on the screen. My friends and I alternated names from this and Kingpin.


The only thing that gets Walter to stop asking, “Am I wrong?” is to answer, “Yeah…”


I share the same name as a Columbine shooter, so I'm used to dealing with same name shit. Never on this level, of course. But I did have a strange moment recently. I placed an online order at a pizza place, and when I went to pick it up, the dude at the counter asked if I had placed two separate orders. I hadn't, and the second order was nowhere near what mine was. We both found it a little odd, and then another guy came in, and said he had an online order for Eric Harris. The clerk did a double take, then pointed at me and said, “He's Eric Harris, too!” I didn’t know what to say aside from, “Hey.” With the Coens in mind, I wish I had thought of Brolin's line from No Country after Harrelson says he served in Vietnam, too: “So what does that make me, your buddy?” Anyway, weird as shit glitch-in-the-matrix moment for me.


Hoffman's delayed laugh in response to “I'll suck your cock for a thousand dollars” is fantastic.


Donnie backing as far away as possible without just leaving the sitting area during the “mark it zero” scene is great.


Hoffman is so game for Lebowski’s kidnapping story. “Mr. Lebowski’s in seclusion in the west wing.”


As much as I enjoy Turturro’s performance, I just can’t bring myself to watch The Jesus Rolls, even though it’s been widely available on free streaming services for years.


Donnie looks genuinely hurt when Walter calls him a piece of shit.


Nice to see Richard Gant show up as one of the cops. I mainly remember him as the Don King-type from Rocky V and the coroner who eats Jason’s heart in Jason Goes to Hell.


Watching this and Fargo so close together is interesting. First, Buscemi is the polar opposite of his Fargo character, getting yelled at here whereas he was the yeller previously.


And I kind of get the initial hatred of this movie being a bit nonsensical as a followup to the “prestigious” Fargo, but I’m surprised there aren’t more complaints about how both films center around a botched (or in this case, fake) kidnapping.


Lebowski at the very least is a good listener as he likes to re-use lines he hears throughout the movie, like “this aggression will not stand” and “in the parlance of our times.”


Is this the only movie in which someone gets grabbed out of one limo and thrown into another limo?


Donnie drinks Slice.


I like White Russians more than most, I imagine, but to drink them all day is psychotic.


Autobahn’s album is called Nagelbett, which translates to “nail bed,” which is featured on the cover art.


“What the fuck is with this guy? Who is he?”


I wonder what notes the Dude gave his landlord.


This movie is probably the first time I ever heard of In-N-Out.


“He has health problems.”


I love Goodman’s little stutter step before he takes out the headlights in the “Do you see what happens when you fuck a stranger in the ass?” scene.


This movie is perfectly encapsulated by the moment when the Dude tries to actually be a detective and check what note Jackie Treehorn wrote only to find it was just a drawing of a dick. Nothing to figure out here, just have a few laughs and move on.


I imagine the nihilists running around with giant scissors was the breaking point for a few critics back in 1998, especially the way Flea was operating his pair.


Finally checked out the Branded theme song. I prefer the Dude’s version.


I like how Maude perks up when Dude says he was in the music business and is immediately disappointed when he reveals he was just a roadie for Metallica.


Donnie seems shocked that he didn’t get a strike at the end. I know it’s only meant to foreshadow his death, but are we supposed to believe he has been bowling perfect games every time he bowls?


I can only assume the music playing from the nihilists’ boombox at the end is…ugh…techno pop.