Swimming Pool (film)

This article is about the 2003 film. For the 1976 film, see Swimming Pool (1976 film). For the 2001 film, see Swimming Pool (2001 film). For the 1969 Italian-French film, see La Piscine (film).
Swimming Pool

Theatrical release poster
Directed by François Ozon
Produced by Olivier Delbosc
Written by François Ozon
Emmanuèle Bernheim
Starring Charlotte Rampling
Ludivine Sagnier
Charles Dance
Music by Philippe Rombi
Cinematography Yorick Le Saux
Edited by Monica Coleman
Production
company
Distributed by Focus Features
Release dates
  • 18 May 2003 (2003-05-18) (Cannes)
  • 2 July 2003 (2003-07-02) (US)
  • 22 August 2003 (2003-08-22) (UK)
Running time
103 minutes[1]
Country France
United Kingdom
Language English
French
Budget $7.8 million[2]
Box office $22,441,323[3]

Swimming Pool is a 2003 French-British erotic thriller film directed by François Ozon and starring Charlotte Rampling and Ludivine Sagnier. The plot focuses on a British crime novelist, Sarah Morton, who travels to her publisher's upmarket summer house in Southern France to seek solitude in order to work on her next book. However, the arrival of Julie, the publisher's daughter, induces complications and a subsequent crime.

While the film's protagonist is British and both of the lead characters are bilingual, the majority of the story takes place in France – thus, the dialogue throughout the film is a mixture of French and English, which is appropriately subtitled.

Swimming Pool premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on 18 May 2003,[4] and was released in France a few days later, with a U cinema rating, meaning it was deemed suitable for all ages.[5] It was given a limited release in the United States that July, and was edited in order to avoid an NC-17 rating due to its sexual content and nudity. It was subsequently released in North America on DVD in an unrated cut.

The film ignited controversy with audiences because of its ambiguous nature and unclear conclusion which can be interpreted and argued in various ways – while in France many comparisons were made with Jacques Deray's 1969 film La Piscine ("The Swimming-pool"), starring Romy Schneider and Alain Delon.

Plot

Sarah Morton, a middle-aged English mystery author, who has written a successful series of detective novels, is having writer's block that is impeding her next book. Sarah's publisher, John Bosload, offers her his country house near Lacoste, France for some rest and relaxation. Sarah takes him up on the offer, hinting that she hopes John may come and visit as well. After becoming comfortable with the run of the spacious, sun-filled house, and meeting the groundskeeper Marcel, Sarah's quietude is disrupted by a young woman claiming to be the publisher's daughter, Julie. She shows up late one night explaining that she's taking time off from work herself. She eventually tells Sarah that her mother used to be Bosload's mistress, but that he would not leave his family.

Julie's sex life consists of one-night stands with various oafish men, and a competition of personalities develops between the two women. At first, Sarah regards Julie as a distraction from her writing. She uses earplugs to allow her to sleep during Julie's noisy nighttime adventures, although she nonetheless has a voyeuristic fascination with them. Later she abandons the earplugs during one of Julie's trysts, beginning to envy Julie's lifestyle. Sarah sneaks into Julie's room and steals her diary, using it in the new novel she's working on. The competition comes to the fore when a local waiter, Franck, is involved. Julie wants him but he appears to prefer the more mature Sarah, having struck up a relationship with her during her frequent lunches at the bistro.

An unexpected tragedy occurs after a night of flirting among the three. After swimming together in the pool, Franck refuses to allow Julie to continue performing oral sex on him, once Sarah, who watches them from the balcony, throws a rock into the water. Franck feels frightened and tells Julie he is leaving. The next day, Franck is missing. While investigating Franck's disappearance, Sarah learns that Julie's mother died years earlier, though Julie had spoken of her mother as if she were alive. She returns to the villa, where a confused Julie thinks that Sarah is her mother and has a breakdown. She eventually recovers and confesses that Franck is dead because Julie repeatedly hit him over the head with a rock as he tried to leave her at the pool. His body is in one of the sheds.

When Marcel becomes suspicious of the mound of fresh soil where Sarah and Julie have buried Franck's body, Sarah seduces the elderly gardener to distract him. Julie leaves, thanking Sarah for her help and leaving her the manuscript of an unpublished novel written by her late mother, which she had previously claimed that John made her mother burn. Sarah uses the mother's manuscript in her novel-in-progress.

Sarah returns to England and visits John at his publishing office with her new novel. His daughter Julia also shows up just as Sarah is leaving, but is revealed to be a completely different person than the girl Julie that the viewer was introduced to as John's daughter. The viewer now must question whether the story that took place at the country house was a fictional plot dreamed up by Sarah.

Cast

Ending interpretations

The intentionally ambiguous ending sparked much confusion and controversy with audiences. One suspicion is that Sarah had been alone at the villa for the entire time. Ostensibly this would mean that the character of Julie is a total fiction conjured by Sarah for the purpose of her new book – also titled Swimming Pool – which she presents defiantly to Bosload at the end of the film. Ozon himself has stated:

Charlotte's character kept mixing fantasy and reality. Although in Swimming Pool, everything related to fantasy is part of the act of creation, so it is more channeled and less likely to end up causing madness. In terms of directing, I've treated everything that is imaginary in Swimming Pool in a realistic way so that you see it all – fantasy and reality alike – on the same plane.[6]

Release

Box office

Swimming Pool grossed $10,130,108 in the United States and $12,311,215 internationally for a worldwide total of $22,441,323.[3] It had a budget of €6.1 million (approximately US$7.8 million), meaning that it was a financial success[2]

Critical reception

The film was well received and earned an 84% "freshness" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with most critics' praise centering on the two leads. Roger Ebert gave the film a positive review and stated that "François Ozon, the director and co-writer (with Emmanuèle Bernheim), understands as Hitchcock did the small steps by which a wrong decision grows in its wrongness into a terrifying paranoid nightmare."[7]

Neil Smith of the BBC also praised the film, calling it a "compelling psychological melodrama" and "Hitchcockian thriller."[8]

References

  1. "SWIMMING POOL (15)". British Board of Film Classification. 2003-06-19. Retrieved 2013-06-03.
  2. 1 2 "Swimming pool". screenrush.co.uk. Screenrush. Archived from the original on 2008-01-07. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
  3. 1 2 "Swimming Pool". boxofficemojo.com. Box Office Mojo, LLC. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
  4. "Festival de Cannes: Swimming Pool". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-11-07.
  5. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0324133/parentalguide#certification
  6. http://www.futuremovies.co.uk/filmmaking.asp?ID=23
  7. Roger Ebert reviews Swimming Pool. Chicago Sun Times, 2 July 2003 (retrieved 3 August 2009)
  8. BBC Film Reviews: Swimming Pool. Neil Smith, 25 July 2003 (retrieved 3 August 2009)

External links

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