Monday, February 13, 2012

Swimming

Very nicely done.


Director Robert J. Siegel handles this delicate material with grace and style. ''Swimming'' conveys the thrill and complexity of an adolescent crush, underscoring Frankie's nuanced character. Yearning for something more than the weekend partying on the boardwalk with piercing-shop proprietor Nicola, the repressiveness of the restaurant, and the condescension of her older brother, Frankie is eager to assume her own identity. The film nicely delivers two different characters into Frankie's world who help her figure out who she is and where her loyalties lie: the dubious but seductive Josee and Heath (Jamie Harrold), a likable drifter who sells T-shirts from his van.
Ambrose delivers an authentic, understated, beautifully etched performance that ranks with classics of the coming-of-age genre, which has been much maligned by Hollywood in recent years. ''Swimming'' is a finely crafted film that is all the more remarkable because it achieves its emotional power and moments of revelation with such delicacy, restraint, and ambiguity.

Boston Globe.

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