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The Swimmer on DVD (1968)

The Swimmer cover art
Average rating: 73%
1113481620413
3.5
from 311 members
 
Starring: Burt Lancaster, Janice Rule, Diana Muldaur, Kim Hunter, Marge Champion
Director: Frank Perry
Studio: SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 91 mins
Certificate: PG
User collections: Welcome to the Monkey House
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Released: 26/05/2003

Brief synopsis of The Swimmer

Burt Lancaster stars in this adaptation of John Cheever's dreamlike short story about one man's highly unusual attempt to find meaning in his life. On the morning after a booze-filled night, Ned Merrill wakes up in a haze, confronted by the sterility of his isolated, wealthy suburban existence. So he decides to traverse this upper-class world swimming pool by swimming pool: he goes to each neighbor's house, swims through the chlorinated waters of the requisite backyard pool, and chats with the owner. Among the people he sees are his longtime mistress, a sexy babysitter and a couple of politically-liberal (or so they believe) nudists. This interesting, overlooked film, is a visually captivating look at the essential emptiness of the "American Dream."

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 4 stars out of 5 Radio Times

Remember the Levi jeans advertisement where a hunk took a dip in a dozen pools to the strains of Mad about the Boy? This is the film that inspired it. Based on a short story by cult writer John Cheever, it stars Burt Lancaster as a washed-up suburban man who decides to swim home, using all the pools in his neighbourhood en route. This is not only healthy — and Lancaster looks terrific in his trunks — it's a metaphor for alienation from affluence, sexual desire, Vietnam — you name it, it's all at the bottom of the deep end. Not to everyone's taste, this weird picture now seems an oddly powerful companion piece to The Graduate.

Time Out

A largely loony but oddly compulsive allegory, taken from a John Cheever story, in which Lancaster, clad only in... Read more on www.timeout.com

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 3 starsNot Waving but Drowning ...

armchaircritic2 from West Sussex , 15/03/2005

A middle aged man, bronzed and fit and clad only in swimming trunks appears at a poolside on a sunny summer afternoon. He is warmly greeted by the family sitting around it and states his intention to swim from pool to pool to his home across the valley.

The film follows him and takes us on an increasingly chilling psychological journey. This movie rated so-so notices from some reviewers, partly because Burt Lancaster, who plays the lead with immense control and skill, was better known for beefcake roles and was considered miscast.

Twenty years on this seems irrelevant and although there are some signs of its age, the film still packs a pretty strong punch.

  6 out of 6 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsThe wet way home

A customer from Norfolk, England , 15/07/2004

A great premise that has been spoofed and copied but this is the original and best.

To swim home using all the neighbourhood pools on route simple enough, but underling this it is a swim through his life and mistakes. A great snapshot of suburban

America?s middle class values.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsAhead of its time

A customer from Jersey , 16/08/2004

A very un-American film, nicely paced and subtly acted, that avoids cliches and does not insult the viewers intelligence. Wobbly camerawork and cheesy orchestration let it down a little, but otherwise it's a thought-provoking critique/expose of American suburban, middle class values circa 1968.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsgreat film

A customer from london , 21/11/2004

i saw this film without knowing what the story was all about. It made the experience even more powerful.

Strange, slightly surealist film, about social status, madness and fall. Amazing Burt Lancaster. A must

  2 out of 2 people found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 5 starsThe wet way home

A customer from Norfolk, England , 15/07/2004

A great premise that has been spoofed and copied but this is the original and best.

To swim home using all the neighbourhood pools on route simple enough, but underling this it is a swim through his life and mistakes. A great snapshot of suburban

America?s middle class values.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all highest rated reviews

Rated - 3 starsNot Waving but Drowning ...

armchaircritic2 from West Sussex , 15/03/2005

A middle aged man, bronzed and fit and clad only in swimming trunks appears at a poolside on a sunny summer afternoon. He is warmly greeted by the family sitting around it and states his intention to swim from pool to pool to his home across the valley.

The film follows him and takes us on an increasingly chilling psychological journey. This movie rated so-so notices from some reviewers, partly because Burt Lancaster, who plays the lead with immense control and skill, was better known for beefcake roles and was considered miscast.

Twenty years on this seems irrelevant and although there are some signs of its age, the film still packs a pretty strong punch.

  6 out of 6 people found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all highest rated reviews