EIFF 2015: Swung

Film Review by Jamie Dunn | 22 Jun 2015
Film title: Swung
Director: Colin Kennedy
Starring: Elena Anaya, Owen McDonnell, Elizabeth McGovern, Steven Cree, David Elliot, Allison McKenzie

Colin Kennedy’s adaptation of Ewan Morrison’s novel about a couple’s experience of the Glasgow swingers' scene opens with a limp joke about erectile disfunction. But don’t judge it too quickly: this isn’t some ooh-er-missus sex comedy.

The reason why out-of-work designer David (McDonnell) and lifestyle journalist Alice (Anaya) enter into this salacious world is twofold: Alice is looking for a juicy magazine story; David, meanwhile, finds that watching other people have sex temporarily abates the medical condition that’s introduced with that opening knob gag.

Kennedy manages to create a tone that’s both playful and sexy, a fine balancing act that's achieved by making his camera as curious and nonjudgmental as his protagonists. There’s a TV cheesiness to some of the supporting roles, but the central pair bring warmth and compassion – and, crucially, sexual chemistry. If there’s a sour note, it’s the conservatism that creeps into the film in its final third, but until then this is a mature and humane peek behind an exotic side of Glasgow that’s rarely seen on screen.


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Our film editor's top ten picks from this year's Festival

All our latest reviews from EIFF 2015

Swung had its UK premiere at EIFF 2015

Swung is released in the UK in November