Movie Description Hauling his sentimental friend out of his postbreakup funk, a club-hopping swinger takes him on a hilarious odyssey through the dating game of the 1990s, hitting the Vegas strip, fashionable martini lounges, and other modern hunting grounds of the opposite sex.
| Credits | | Producer: | Victor Simpkins | | Cast: | Brooke Langton, Deena Martin, Heather Graham, Vince Vaughn |
| Details | | Sound: | HiFi Sound, Stereo Sound |
Notes Theatrical release: October 18, 1996.
Jon Favreau appeared on an episode of THE SOPRANOS playing himself; Christopher talks to him about the making of SWINGERS and hands the actor-writer a script.
Marty & Elayne appear as themselves at the Dresden, a gig they have had for many, many years.
Produced by Independent Pictures.
Color by DeLuxe.
Shown at the Telluride Film Festival September 1, 1996.
Shown at the 1996 Venice Film Festival.
Additional cast: Deena Martin, Katherine Kendall, Brooke Langton and Blake Lindsley.
Additional credits: Julianne Kelley (music supervisor), Brad Halvorson (production designer), Genevieve Tyrrell (costume designer), Bradford L. Schlei & Avram Ludwig (associate producers) and Nicole Shay LaLoggia (line producer).
Editorial Reviews "...Writing, directing and acting are all pitch-perfect in a party movie that keeps spinning funny, sexy and touching surprises..." Rolling Stone - p.78 - Peter Travers
"...Terrific....[Liman scores] from Favreau's exuberantly witty script....[Vaughn is] a scene-stealer..." -- Rating: A Entertainment Weekly - p.46 - Owen Gleiberman
"...Sweet and funny....SWINGERS is a winningly confident snapshot of the nightlives of a bunch of young showbiz wannabes....Engaging, refreshingly human in its humor and becomingly modest in its aspirations..." Variety - Todd McCarthy
"...A guy film that gives you something to latch onto....Ruefully funny and unpretentious, with an air of relaxed and confident hipness, SWINGERS is helped along by a clever script and the not surprising fondness it feels for its characters..." Los Angeles Times - Kenneth Turan (10/18/1996)
"...The movie is sweet, funny, observant and goofy..." Chicago Sun-Times - Roger Ebert (10/25/1996)
"Favreau's script crackles with sharply amusing, endlessly quotable dialogue..." Uncut - Andrew Sumner (07/01/2005)
"Liman's very quotable debut offsets its outer hipness with a compassion for its characters' vulnerabilities." Sight and Sound - Matthew Leyland (07/01/2005)
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