Rating: R
Genre:
Comedy Drama
Release Date: 06/07/2005
SubTitles: Espanol
Dubbed: English
Sound: DTS/DD5.1/DD2
Run Time: 101 Minutes
Flags: Violence, Not For Children, Adult Humor, Profanity, Sexual Situations
Distributor/Studio: Lions Gate
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