MovieChat Forums > The Swimmer (1968) Discussion > Where did he come from? (The opening sce...

Where did he come from? (The opening scenes)


He just appears out of nowhere, barefoot, in a swimsuit, in the backyard of friends who haven't seen him in a long time.

No shoes, no shirt, nothing except a swim suit..
And no one he meets seems to have seen or heard from him in quite a while.

I've watched and re-watched the film several times (last night was the most recent viewing), and I still have no answer to this question.

Did he escape from a mental institution?
Is he having a mental breakdown, and just left wherever his home is shoeless?

Curious what others think is the answer... or are we meant to never really know?

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I always keep coming back to the idea that Ned is in the midst of a mental breakdown at the beginning of the story and the movie. In the story Ned is with his wife Lucinda at their friends' pool (the Westerhazys) before he makes his decision to swim home, but we're left in the end feeling ambiguous as to whether the brief exchange of words that takes place between Ned and Lucinda is imagined or real. In the movie he's already alone and off on his journey.

In my opinion, Ned is staying with a friend or maybe family (perhaps with a pool) at the beginning of the story after losing everything, including Lucinda. It could be a holiday weekend because of all the parties and this longing for the old good times triggers Ned to go seek out his old life. He spends the day in his irrational state visiting various friends and acquaintances. In his instability he deludes himself about where Lucinda really is at all times and he tells people where he really believes his daughters are (at home waiting for him).

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I'm inclined to agree with you. It's as though Ned is slipping in and out of reality. His own version of reality is happy and perfect... whereas the real world is harsh and unforgiving. He feels he's lived this picture perfect life, but as the film progresses we learn this is far from true.

Another thing I noticed the other night is that as the film opens, the trees are bare. It looks like late fall or early springtime.
Yet in all the pool scenes, the trees are in full foliage, the grass is green, hedges and flowers are in mid-summer form.
Again though, as the movie progresses and Ned's world starts to fall apart, he complains about being cold... at the start both he and every one he meets are in summer clothing.
Is reality the cold bare trees at the beginning? Or is it the mid-summer the rest of the film portrays?

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Good grief jack! Now you have me wondering! I never thought of that! Perhaps it really is fall but in Ned's fantasy world he thinks it's summer.
Now I have to watch again!

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Certain aspects of the film are difficult to explain/understand if taken literally at face value. There is some surrealism, and I feel that much of it is metaphorical for Ned's psychological state.

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I agree. I think it’s meant to be ambiguous/open to varying interpretations.

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