The film treats Levenson's rapid descent as if someone had turned on the lights at a sex party: scurrying away with pity and irritation that the good times had to end.
American Swing (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:23
Fresh:12
Rotten:11
Average Rating:5.2/10
Consensus: While American Swing covers a fascinating subject, its amateur documentary treatment does it no favors.
Theatrical Release:Mar 27, 2009 Limited
Synopsis: In 1970s New York City, Plato's Retreat was an epicenter of sensual excess. The renowned sex club was a thriving destination for patrons who wanted to leave their inhibitions at the door. This... In 1970s New York City, Plato's Retreat was an epicenter of sensual excess. The renowned sex club was a thriving destination for patrons who wanted to leave their inhibitions at the door. This colorful documentary recounts the creation of the club by Larry Levenson, and its ultimate demise during the AIDS era. [More]
Director: Jon Hart, Mathew Kaufman
Director: Jon Hart, Mathew Kaufman
Producer: Jon Hart, Mathew Kaufman, Gretchen McGowan, Christian Hoagland
Composer: Jim Coleman
Studio: Magnolia Pictures
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Reviews for American Swing
Though sweetly reminding us that some outer-borough suburbanites did find liberation at Plato's, the film tries -- and fails -- to swing both ways, nostalgically glorifying its subject only to smugly revel in Levenson's ignominious demise.
A poorly-done documentary that manages to make the phenomenon of swinging boring.
Interesting and concise documentary about the positive and destructive effects of casual sex.
Such a sociologically rich subject deserves better than a reductive K-tel treatment.
Certainly, the sex was exciting, as well as controversial. But Plato's Retreat also represented an effort to think through the mores behind monogamy, to challenge assumptions and imagine an alternative.
A shrewdly made documentary about the rise and fall of Plato's Retreat, the infamous Manhattan sex club of the '70s and '80s.
And what of New York's disco-era gays? They're written out of the story here just as decisively as they were written out of Levenson's version of utopia.
Although American Swing pointedly goes out of its way to include positive testimonials from several women who patronized the club, it leaves you feeling queasy.
The filmmakers never adequately confront the complex nature of the iconic locale.
Repetitive, narratively fractured, and padded with more hardcore inserts than hardcore facts, this amateurish documentary about the disco-era Manhattan sex club Plato's Retreat skimps on context and basic information. It's a fan site on celluloid.
American Swing doesn't have a particularly well-defined point of view, but it is a succinct, entertaining and valuable record of a time that in some ways now seems as remote as the Roaring '20s.
A lively and moderately engaging documentary, but its lack of thorough explorations leave you feeling slightly empty, underwhelmed and yearning for more insights.
The pearls of wisdom are best extracted from the minds of those who stood on the front line, people who walked into the seminal fluid line of fire and lived to tell the tale.
The tantalizing combination of ’70s New York nostalgia and public orgies at the infamous sex club Plato's Retreat fails to meet its storytelling potential.
There's glossy surface engagement as an artifact snapshot of the sexual revolution, but everything about American Swing is only thumbnail-deep; it doesn't have, ahem, the rigorous thrust necessary to leave a lasting impression.
An essential document to the rich history of New York, "American Swing" is too short sighted for the vision of its controversial subject.
American Swing could use the flair of similar portraits of disco-era debauchery like Boogie Nights or Inside Deep Throat, but it’s even-handed in capturing the operation’s ambition and hubris. Just don’t bring an appetite.
American Swing is an entertaining, oddly affectionate portrait of Plato's Retreat's Larry Levenson, and a brash, grainy, warts%u2013and-all Polaroid of an era of sexual history.
Directors Jon Hart and Matthew Kaufman don’t delve deeply enough into the psyche of club founder Larry Levenson or the culture he exploited. But they do present an entertaining snapshot of his brief reign as New York’s self-appointed King of Swing.
Latest News for American Swing
April 06, 2009:
Cautionary documentary revisits rise and fall of Plato's Retreat. ![]()
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