“The Swap” Uses Robert De Niro Well

The Swap (1979)

Cannon Group released The Swap on 7 May 1979. It’s a fascinating exploitation film for reasons we will get to later.

I first discovered this film in 1990 in a video store. It said that it starred Robert De Niro. Well, it didn’t. It looked like De Niro had starred in some home movies when he was in college, the producers of The Swap got the rights to it and built it around this footage.

I was mostly correct. And I admire that. But the footage was actually from a regularly released feature film from 1969.

Sam’s Song

That film was Sam’s Song. It’s an art film. It tries to be very French New Wave. And it does come off a lot like Truffaut’s Jules and Jim.

It tells the story of Sam, a young documentary film editor. He goes with his rich friends to their Long Island second home. There he becomes accustomed to the ways of the rich and gets dumped by a pretty girl.

The problem is that Sam just isn’t that interesting. The script clearly thinks that Erica (Jennifer Warren) is the central character. Instead, the film flirts with its four principal characters who mostly don’t act in ways I recognize from real life.

This is generally my problem with the French New Wave. Even films I really enjoy — like Alphaville and Weekend — still suffer from too much intellectual nonsense. Taken straight, as in Sam’s Song, well, let’s just say I’m not the target audience.

What’s been really funny to me has been reading reviews. Over and over people claim that the only decent actor in this film is De Niro. From my perspective, he’s the weakest of the principals (maybe the second weakest). It’s funny to watch people spout conventional wisdom as though it were their actual opinion.

As I’ve said many times: Robert De Niro is the most overrated actor I know of. He’s really good but people talk about him as though he’s some kind of phenomenon. I even heard John Frankenheimer talk about him like that. Give me a break! He’s a professional actor who has had the good luck to work in some of the best film productions of his day.

The Swap

The Swap is about Vito who gets out of prison to figure out why his brother was murdered and to get vengeance for it. All the footage from Sam’s Song is used as flashbacks as people tell the story of what happened.

It makes for a delightfully strange film. The old footage is carefully shot and relatively complex in its editing. The new stuff is all shot with a minimum of set-ups — usually making its professional cast seem much worse than they are.

The style of the dialog is totally different as well. The new material goes with very cheeky Raymond Chandler style. Of course, most people hate this film. And that’s fair enough: it’s not a Robert De Niro film. And frankly, this would be a better film if it didn’t even use the material from Sam’s Song.

But with it, it’s a bizarre gem.

Other 7 May Anniversaries

Filmmakers:

  • Val Lewton (1904-1951): Producer of Cat People and I Walked with a Zombie.
  • Ishirô Honda (1911-1993): Director known for Godzilla, Rodan, and so many more Toho productions.
  • Darren McGavin (1922-2006): Actor best know for the title role in Kolchak: The Night Stalker.
  • Albert Band (1924-2002): Producer and father and father of Richard and Charles Band.
  • Ruggero Deodato (1939-2022): Director of Cannibal Holocaust and more.
  • Traci Lords (1968-): Actor in Excision and Sharkansas Women’s Prison Massacre.
  • Carrie Henn (1976-): Newt in Aliens.

Films:

  • The Black Cat (1934): The first film to feature Karloff and Lugosi; the latter seeks revenge from the former.
  • Taste the Blood of Dracula (1970): The fifth of the Hammer Dracula films; I consider it the worst.
  • Gamera: Super Monster (1980): Space turtle.
  • The Mummy (1999): Treasure hunters face a supernatural force.
  • Van Helsing (2004): The standard Dracula story as an action film.

The Swap (1979) poster via Wikipedia under Fair Use.

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