What came first The Graduate or Mrs. Robinson?

Ah, to be you again.

I think you mean “The Sounds of Silence”.

Saw it for the nth time a couple of weeks ago. Still great.

I never knew the movie was in color. I’ve only seen it in black & white and I was fine with that. Which I suppose makes it seem very Sixties, but movies in B&W isn’t an extraordinary thing to me.

I think I may have just figured out why women in seventies movies always seem more attractive to me, even though, when I look at them objectively, they really aren’t–many seem even less attractive. Now that I notice the filters, I notice that the flesh tones are closer to one of my favorite colors, the Crayola “Peach.”

No wonder black actresses had such a hard time getting roles.

Ah, well there’s the problem. I’ve seen it n+1 times, and it’s starting to age.

Somebody asked Roger Ebert if he ever wanted to change any of his reviews. He said that on further consideration, he’d like to change his comment about the soundtrack of *The Graduate *being “forgettable”.

You is wasted on the young.
mmm

Of course, only you can make this world seem right.

No, I think ZebraShaSha did indeed mean Scarsborough Fair, which IIRC is played a few times in the background, at least once when Ben is up at Berkley stalking Elaine?

The Sounds of Silence was only played during the opening credits as Ben is on the airport walkway.

The “Mr. Robinson” work-in-progress version as featured during the movie - when Ben is driving back home (I seem to remember the song slowed down in tempo as he ran out of gas)? - wasn’t that just sung notes (e.g. “dee-dee-dee-dee-dee-deee”) - no true lyrics?

I have always heard originally it was supposed to be “Where have you gone, Mickey Mantle” as Mantle was Simon’s baseball hero growing up (DiMaggio retired when Simon was 10). But the number of syllables didn’t fit the song so Simon went with DiMaggio who initially thought he was being insulted and DiMaggio was very touchy about perceived insults. But some of his posse convinced him Simon wasn’t being disrespectful.

You’re only you once.