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Swimming With Sharks
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Directed by George Huang.
Originally screened at Telluride as The Buddy Factor, Swimming With Sharks is an uneven but engrossing picture, and a possible warning to anyone with plans to break into the motion-picture business. When Guy (Frank Whaley), a recent film-school graduate with big ideas, takes a job as assistant to major studio executive Buddy Ackerman (Kevin Spacey), he believes his ship has finally come in; little does he know it's a slave ship, for his boss is indeed worse than a slave driver. Buddy delights in abusing his boy-toy (exemplified by the scene in which he forbids Guy to go to the bathroom as he pours water back and forth from a glass to a pitcher). Meanwhile, Guy struggles to push his idea for a script and feels he's finally made it when Buddy congratulates him on a job well done. However, much to his chagrin, his conniving boss actually takes sole credit for the project, pushing the young assistant to wit's end -- he breaks into Buddy's Beverly Hills showplace and takes him hostage, then proceeds to torture him in a number of demeaning and horrifying ways. The whole film stands as a sort of parable about the value system in Hollywood and the cost of reaching the top; it doesn't play like real life, but it's not supposed to. The real reason to watch the film, however, is Spacey's performance. He manages at once to be terrifying, hateful, and hilarious, and he makes Buddy Ackerman a character the audience won't soon forget. ~ Jeremy Beday, All Movie Guide
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OvationOvation Re: Top 5 Movies About Making M ...
by Ovation in Top 5
hasn't rated it.
"A few not mentioned here: 8 1/2 (edit: already discussed) The Stunt Man Swimming with Sharks Boogie Nights The Blair Witch Project Cecil B. Demented This Is Spinal Tap RKO 281 While not a "masterpiece" I thought "A Nightmare on Elm Street Part 7: Wes Craven's New Nightmare" was interesting in the way Freddy went after Wes Craven and the creators and actors from the previous films. PSHello PSS (edit)I forgot to list the one film that made me respond to this post. The film Roger Ebert called "one of the best movies I've seen about the making of a movie": Baadasssss! " [More]
HairyLimeHairyLime "that's all"
by HairyLime in HairyLime Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"One of those movies that was meant for the audience to root for the plucky heroine, but gets hijacked by the actor or actress that is obviously having the time of their life with a juicy villain role. I found myself very annoyed and frustrated by the main character here. Why in the hell she didn't just quit after the first half an hour of abuse from this boss and snippy coworkers is beyond me, I suppose we are meant to admire her 'stick-to-it-iveness' and enjoy her transformation from dowdy frump to fashion queen, and then root for her to 'learn a big life lesson' and go back to her previous life 'a little wiser for the experience'. Fooey on that.Meryl Streep is the show here. She steals every scene in which she appears, and her dismissive 'that's all' at the end of each machine gun firing monologue is a great capper that so perfectly sums up her attitude towards those she deems her 'inferiors' (which could be just about everyone she ... " [More]
davisfreebergdavisfreeberg Re: Kevin Spacey
by davisfreeberg in Walk of Fame
hasn't rated it.
"Kevin Spacey really is a good actor. He has a lot of range and can play all kinds of different character. He also does a good job of picking scripts because most of what he's in is realy good even beyond Spacey's performance. One of my Spacey favorites was Swimming With Sharks. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Writer/director George Huang's vitriolic 1994 debut is perhaps most notable for the blistering, caustic turn by Kevin Spacey as remorseless studio executive Buddy Ackerman. Spacey's Buddy is a different kind of Hollywood monster: physically compact and unusually soft-spoken, he's like a seething volcano that erupts only sporadically, when people least expect it. Spacey has the good sense to underplay the role, rendering Buddy's actions and demands all the more horrific. The conclusion -- in which Buddy's meek underling Guy (Frank Whaley) exacts revenge -- is a bit of a letdown, since Guy can't dream up anything more sinister than blatant physical abuse. For Spacey, the role would be one of a handful of standout performances in independent features, including his Oscar-winning role in The Usual Suspects the next year. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 



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