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Le plongeon

Original title: The Swimmer
  • 1968
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
15K
YOUR RATING
Burt Lancaster in Le plongeon (1968)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:43
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Drama

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

  • Directors
    • Frank Perry
    • Sydney Pollack
  • Writers
    • Eleanor Perry
    • John Cheever
  • Stars
    • Burt Lancaster
    • Janet Landgard
    • Janice Rule
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Frank Perry
      • Sydney Pollack
    • Writers
      • Eleanor Perry
      • John Cheever
    • Stars
      • Burt Lancaster
      • Janet Landgard
      • Janice Rule
    • 203User reviews
    • 84Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:43
    Official Trailer
    The Swimmer: Intro
    Clip 1:40
    The Swimmer: Intro
    The Swimmer: Intro
    Clip 1:40
    The Swimmer: Intro

    Photos101

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    Top cast35

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    Burt Lancaster
    Burt Lancaster
    • Ned Merrill
    Janet Landgard
    Janet Landgard
    • Julie Hooper
    Janice Rule
    Janice Rule
    • Shirley Abbott
    Tony Bickley
    • Donald Westerhazy
    Marge Champion
    Marge Champion
    • Peggy Forsburgh
    Nancy Cushman
    • Mrs. Halloran
    Bill Fiore
    • Howie Hunsacker
    David Garfield
    • Ticket Seller
    • (as John Garfield Jr.)
    Kim Hunter
    Kim Hunter
    • Betty Graham
    Rose Gregorio
    • Sylvia Finney
    Charles Drake
    Charles Drake
    • Howard Graham
    Bernie Hamilton
    Bernie Hamilton
    • Chauffeur
    House Jameson
    House Jameson
    • Mr. Halloran
    Jimmy Joyce
    • Jack Finney
    Michael Kearney
    • Kevin Gilmartin
    Richard McMurray
    Richard McMurray
    • Stu Forsburgh
    Jan Miner
    Jan Miner
    • Lillian Hunsacker
    Diana Muldaur
    Diana Muldaur
    • Cynthia
    • Directors
      • Frank Perry
      • Sydney Pollack
    • Writers
      • Eleanor Perry
      • John Cheever
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews203

    7.615.4K
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    Featured reviews

    Queseyo

    A strong movie, rarely seen, with a telescoping metaphor

    I saw this movie in 1968 when it came out, and have never been able to forget it. I never found anyone who had ever heard of it--a shame. It's my favorite Burt Lancaster performance: I can't imagine anyone else doing the role justice.

    When Neddy is ready to leave the garden cocktail party he has been invited to, he looks out across the valley and sees the row of pools, all belonging to his neighbors. He's obviously a poet, and sees the chain of pools as a river (Metaphor). He decides to swim back home. Little does he, or we, know at this point what going home means! He goes from house to house, he greets his friends and jumps into their pools. We become a little worried as things seem to get a little out of hand--a little more so at each house. It's not long before we realize that this "river" is (Meta-Metaphor!) a trip through time, through his life--and that he has made one fine mess of it. The ending is amazing, and almost unbearable.
    8jai-38

    a terrific adaptation of Cheever -- and one of Burt Lancaster's best

    A man beyond middle-age living in tony, upscale Connecticut environs decides to swim home from one neighbors' swimming pool to another, drinking cocktails all along the way, engaging in friendly, empty banter and confronting all the demons of his life -- most of his own making. This is a late '60s experiment (and, thankfully, they were more experimental in the main in the '60s than today) that takes an exceptional short story by the uniquely American master teller of modern tales, John Cheever, and expands it into a character piece for the wonderful Burt Lancaster. Here he's playing an ordinary business executive stuck in an early '60s, three martini lunch time warp, a Viet Nam era/Hippie-Nation prevailed-upon Upper West side would-be master of the universe. A man who is strangely out of place and out of time and will suffer a fate, maybe cruel, maybe just, but one that he is entirely complicit in despite any protest. This is engagingly dark stuff told under the glare of a late summer bright sunny sky. The film's flaws are bound to its era of production -- auto-camera zooms and sunlight flares and delirious music montages -- but they mean little compared to the hyper-sophisticated smarts of its dialogue and the performances, obviously from Lancaster, but also the unique variety of women he encounters from his past before arriving at his horrible present. "It's a beautiful day! Look at that sky, look at that blue water!"
    10jazerbini

    Great, great, great movie!

    The Swimmer is one of the most beautiful movies I have ever seen. The story is simple but unusual. A successful executive - Ned Merrill - (in the end we realize that this is not quite so), in a psychological trance, imagine being in a time before the real and decides to "go home", the metaphor that supports the film. His return happens in a planned way, passing by the pools of his friends and acquaintances, forming what he calls "The River Lucinda", in fact his dream of returning to the woman he lost in his uncontrolled life. In this dream he thinks of his two daughters who would be expecting him too. And by the way he traces he finds people who still consider him and people who despise him, the fruit of what he did of his life until then. It is a very strong metaphor and produces a gigantic film. Burt Lancaster, I think, made the best part of his career here. I think this film could only have been performed with him in the lead role. Each one of us is incorporated into the story, living with Ned all his dramas, every moment of his "return home." The sequence in which he fights a race with a horse is the most perfect that is known, is exquisite. And he finds women who were part of his past not well understood, but that gives us the dimension of a superficial life and frivolities. Actress Janice Rule has here, too, one of her biggest moments in the movies. It's beautiful. The unexpected and perfect ending of the film completes this vigorous story of a man who has lost his way in life and can not find himself again. I watched The Swimmer in 1968 when it was released and I've been watching it regularly over the last 50 years. Each time I discover a detail, a situation that I did not perceive well, it is an incredible experience. Great, great, great movie!
    8evanston_dad

    Wonderfully Sad Portrait of Suburban Loneliness

    Frank Perry's screen adaptation of the achingly sad John Cheever short story gets the tone of Cheever's story just right, even if the movie itself doesn't have quite the same impact.

    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-
    9judsonkn

    Swimming for Eden

    Judging by the comments here, apparently I'm not the only one who was incredibly moved by this masterpiece--a masterpiece of storytelling on Cheever's part, that is, and a more than passable film portrayal of what one might call "the perfect short story." If HBO had existed in the 1960s, and Rod Serling had written for it, this is what "Twilight Zone" might have looked like: a tangled, twisted terrain of the human psyche that leads to the deepest of our fears--and the most profound of our hopes. The stakes for Ned Merrill, as we come to discover, are about as high as they can be for any character not caught in a literal life and death struggle. But he might as well be, judging by the size and fearsomeness of the phantoms that haunt his way. For this reason I think I'd say that other than *Glengarry Glen Ross,* this is the most terrifying film ever made.

    In contrast to many others, however, I don't think Ned is delusional: I think he's spent so long believing his own publicity, as it were, that he hasn't fully accepted what has happened to him. (And of course, "what has happened to him" is almost entirely of his own making, which makes his predicament all the more painful because it seems to offer no hope of redemption.) And he's clearly one of those hail-fellow-well-met types who, when he promises he's going to do something for someone--as he continually does in the movie, right up to the point where he promises to pay his bill to a local proprietor--he truly means it, at least in the moment.

    Additionally, "The Swimmer" seems like far too profound a work to tie it to themes as dreary and shopworn as the emptiness of suburban life or the dark side of the American dream. Granted, a great deal of powerful literature, dating back at least to Nathanael West's *Day of the Locust*, has been written around the second of these ideas, but "The Swimmer" seems to speak to something much deeper, a haunted place in the human soul. In the ads for the movie--which, in sharp contrast to the brilliant development of the story itself, attempted to lay out all the details in a way at once pedantic and almost pandering (as previews in those days tended to be), a voice-over asks if the viewer might see Ned in him- or herself.

    *The Swimmer* is an epic, but an unusual one. Not because of the small scale and the deceptively trivial-seeming stakes involved it the epic journey--that's an idea Joyce introduced years earlier in *Ulysses*--but because of that journey's destination. Ned isn't going toward a new land, but back--back to nothing short of Eden. And if it's an epic, then he's a hero of sorts, and not entirely an antihero either. After all, even with all the things you learn about him along the way, it's hard not to root for Ned Merrill.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Burt Lancaster always insisted that this was both his best and his favorite film of his career.
    • Goofs
      In 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.
    • Quotes

      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?

    • Connections
      Featured in TCM Guest Programmer: Gilbert Gottfried (2013)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 18, 1968 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El nadador
    • Filming locations
      • Fairfield, Connecticut, USA
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Horizon Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $775
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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