Un homme passe une journée d'été à nager dans autant de piscines que possible dans une paisible ville de banlieue.Un homme passe une journée d'été à nager dans autant de piscines que possible dans une paisible ville de banlieue.Un homme passe une journée d'été à nager dans autant de piscines que possible dans une paisible ville de banlieue.
- Prix
- 1 victoire au total
- Ticket Seller
- (as John Garfield Jr.)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBurt Lancaster always insisted that this was both his best and his favorite film of his career.
- GaffesIn the second shot of Ned pounding on the door of the empty house, the film is being run backwards - it's the same shot as before the interior of the house is seen through the broken window.
- Citations
Kevin Gilmartin Jr.: They took the water out of the pool because I'm not a good swimmer. I'm bad at sports and, at school, nobody wants me on their team.
Ned Merrill: Well, it's a lot better that way, you take it from me. At first you think it's the end of the world because you're not on the team. Till you realize...
Kevin Gilmartin Jr.: Realize what?
Ned Merrill: You realize that you're free. You're your own man. You don't have to worry about getting to be captain and all that status stuff.
Kevin Gilmartin Jr.: They'd never elect me captain in a million years.
Ned Merrill: You're the captain of your soul. That's what counts. Know what I mean?
- ConnexionsFeatured in TCM Guest Programmer: Gilbert Gottfried (2013)
There have been countless strong and powerful films made around the theme of suburban loneliness, and this movie belongs to that genre. There's something so poignant about the idea that someone can exist in a world that's manufactured for the sole purpose of providing its inhabitants with luxury, pleasure and convenience, and still be miserable. You'd think people would have gotten the point by now, and figured out that privilege, wealth and materialism have virtually nothing to do with ultimate happiness, but if our own consumerist culture is any indication, they haven't.
What helps "The Swimmer" to stand out from other similarly-themed films is the way the story is told. It's only through the reactions of others that we begin to sense what's wrong with Burt Lancaster's character. To us, he looks the picture of middle-aged robustness and health. Lancaster became a much better actor as he aged, and he gives a wonderful performance here, as his bravado and macho virility (the strutting and preening of a man on top of the world) slowly dissolves into a lost insecurity, until the film's final devastating moments leave him as forlorn as a baby.
What a sad, sad movie.
Grade: A-
- evanston_dad
- 1 juin 2006
- Lien permanent