The Swap and How they make it (1965) – Joe Sarno.
Some monochromatic, sizzlingly melodramatic wife-swapping exotica from one of the smartest, inventively stylised purveyors of higher brow bedroom bacchanalia! It's interesting to note that all of the frisky female swingers are quite strikingly beautiful, whereas the anonymously Brooks-Brothered menfolk are, like, cubesville, man!!! These cardboard cats are such lightweight squares you could use 'em as disposable napkins, but the score includes some dynamite fuzz guitar that frequently amps up the voltage in Sarno's salty suburban swap-a-rama. Once the wantonly wondering wives have salaciously sated their extra marital itches, the angst kicks in heavier than a Chernobyl-sized hangover. It is not absolutely beyond the realm of plausibility to suggest that Joe Sarno's finest erotic dramas share the same intimate qualities as Cassavetes, since the filmmaking is often equally compelling, vivid and freewheeling, yet capturing tender intimacies with remarkable sensitivity.





















