Kalifornija. Otuđeni i dezorijentirani Benjamin Braddock završio je studij na koledžu. Upravo je navršio 21 godinu i njegovi imućni roditelji žele da ili nastavi studij na sveučilištu ili počne graditi poslovnu karijeru. Gđa Robinson, sredovječna atraktivna i blazirana supruga očeva partnera, uvodi ga u svijet seksa. Benjamin se međutim zaljubi u Elaine, privlačnu i nevinu kćerku Robinsonovih... "Just one word: Plastics." "Are you here for an affair?" These lines and others became cultural touchstones, as 1960s youth rebellion seeped into the California upper middle class in Mike Nichols landmark hit. Mentally adrift the summer after graduating from college, suburbanite Benjamin Braddock (Dustin Hoffman) would rather float in his parents pool than follow adult advice about his future. But the exhortation of family friend Mr. Robinson (Murray Hamilton) to seize every possible opportunity inspires Ben to accept an offer of sex from icily feline Mrs. Robinson (Anne Bancroft). The affair and the pool are all well and good until Ben is pushed to go out with the Robinsons daughter Elaine (Katharine Ross), and he falls in love with her. Mrs. Robinson sabotages the relationship, and an understandably disgusted Elaine runs back to college. Determined not to let Elaine get away, Ben follows her to school and then disrupts her family-sanctioned wedding. None too happy about her pre-determined destiny, Elaine flees with Ben . but to what? Directing his second feature film after Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Nichols matched the storys satire of suffocating middle-class shallowness with an anti-Hollywood style influenced by the then-voguish French New Wave. Using odd angles, jittery editing, and evocative wide-screen photography, Nichols welded a hip New Wave style and a generation-gap theme to a fairly traditional screwball comedy script by Buck Henry and Calder Willingham from Charles Webbs novel.