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The Swimmer (1968)

7.3 | Aug 09, 1968 (US) | Drama | 01:35

When you talk about "The Swimmer" will you talk about yourself?

A man spends a summer day swimming home via all the pools in his quiet suburban neighborhood.

Featured Crew

Director, Producer
Original Music Composer
Executive In Charge Of Production
Story
Screenplay
Conductor, Orchestrator
Second Assistant Director
Wardrobe Designer
Executive Producer
Orchestrator

Cast

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Burt Lancaster
Ned Merrill
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Janet Landgard
Julie Ann Hooper
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Janice Rule
Shirley Abbott
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Tony Bickley
Donald Westerhazy
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Marge Champion
Peggy Forsburgh
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Nancy Cushman
Mrs. Halloran
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Bill Fiore
Howie Hunsacker
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Rose Gregorio
Sylvia Finney
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David Garfield
Ticket Seller
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Kim Hunter
Betty Graham

Reviews

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Wuchak
7 | Jun 16, 2024
**_Offbeat parable of self-discovery on the collapse of the “American dream”_** A somewhat confused man in swimming trunks (Burt Lancaster) travels from pool to pool in suburban Connecticut on his way home. Some of the people he comes across are played by Janet Landgard, Janice Rule, Joan Rivers and Diana Muldaur, amongst several others. "The Swimmer" (1968) is a semi-surreal commentary on mid-60’s America and the emptiness of materialism, as well as self-destruction. The fact that Ned Merrill (Lancaster) is almost naked throughout the film tells all. But the revelations are lowkey; you have to put the pieces together. I liked the insights on the folly of compulsiveness, whether social, youth-obsession, sexual or self-delusion. It’s an immersion into a struggling man’s soul. The allegory offers additional insights about the people we cross paths with in life. Friends might, more accurately, be casual acquaintances. Those whom you least suspect might be your biggest fans, at least in their memories. How did you treat others when you were on top? Who’s there for you when you’re no longer on top? It runs 1 hour, 35 minutes, and was shot entirely in southwest Connecticut (Weston, Wilton, Westport, Stamford and Fairfield). GRADE: B
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CinemaSerf
7 | Jun 03, 2023
"Ned" (Burt Lancaster) has been away for a while so his neighbours are a bit surprised to see him, clad only in his trunks, swimming in their pool. After some chat with them, he discovers that barring the odd bit of terrain to cross, he can pretty much swim his way home through the pools of other neighbours/friends/acquaintances - a river and even a public lido... The film now follows him as this rather unique journey introduces us to his community, and to his own interesting, complicated and lively backstory. I could run to all sorts of amateur psychology about my understanding of what each stop means to him; to those with whom he stops, and to those of us watching - for the adaptation of the pretty depressing Cheever short story would certainly indulge that; but I felt this was more of a testament to an always slightly under-rated actor in Lancaster. He starred in some superb films over his career, and this - with him almost entirely en cueros, with his soul likewise just as scantily attired, allows us to gradually understand where his character has been, and to guess, maybe, where he might be going. Kim Hunter maybe stands out amongst the supporting cast, but I'm not sure that any of them outdo the other - they all fulfil their function adequately offering us a myriad of possibilities for his current and past behaviour. The ending is especially poignant and as an ingenious and imaginative piece of cinema, this takes some beating.