Swing poster
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Swing

Swing  ·  2010, Singapore
8.0
2,973 ratings
1
Film
0
Watchlisted
● Completed 🕑 2010

A few weeks after Wei Long and Daniel have broken up, Daniel asks Wei Long to meet him once more. (Source: leoncheo.com)

Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Episodes
Reviews (5)

In the quiet aftermath of a painful breakup, Wei Long receives an unexpected call from his ex-boyfriend, Daniel, asking for one final meeting. Set against the intimate, rain-drenched streets of Singapore, this tender short film unfolds over a single, charged encounter. As the two men navigate the awkwardness and lingering affection between them, buried emotions resurface—grief, resentment, and the faintest ember of hope. With no grand gestures or dramatic declarations, *Swing* captures the universal ache of a love that wasn't meant to last, yet refuses to fully let go. Stripped of pretense, the film relies on quiet glances, hesitant touches, and the weight of unspoken words to tell a story that feels achingly real. A masterclass in minimalist storytelling, it leaves viewers reflecting on the beauty and pain of closure.

Episode data is coming soon.

8.0
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HE
heartstring_echo
Mar 12, 2025
9/10
I didn't expect to cry at a 20-minute short, but here we are. The way Wei Long and Daniel look at each other when they think the other isn't watching—that's the kind of raw, aching love that makes this genre so special. No drama, no grand gestures, just two people who once meant everything to each other trying to let go. Absolutely heartbreaking and beautiful.
LA
lens_and_light
Jul 8, 2024
8/10
The cinematography in *Swing* is a quiet masterpiece. Every frame is composed with such care—the rain-streaked windows, the muted tones, the way the camera lingers on their hands almost touching. It reminds me of Wong Kar-wai's sense of urban loneliness but with a gentler, more intimate touch. A visual treat that proves you don't need a big budget to create a stunning short film.
PP
plot_police_101
Sep 2, 2024
6/10
I appreciate the attempt at realism, but the pacing dragged in the middle—there's only so much staring into space I can take before I start checking the runtime. The dialogue is sparse to a fault, and I wish we'd gotten just a bit more backstory to understand why these two broke up in the first place. It's fine for a mood piece, but as a story, it left me wanting more substance.
CC
consent_couch
Dec 21, 2025
7/10
What I appreciated most about *Swing* is how it handles the emotional labor of closure without any manipulation or toxicity. Both characters respect each other's boundaries even in their pain—there's no guilt-tripping, no forced reconciliation. It's a rare portrayal of a breakup where both people are trying to be kind, even when it hurts. A refreshing, mature take on queer relationships.
OO
ost_obsessed
Apr 5, 2025
8/10
The sound design in this short is incredible. The ambient rain, the distant city hum, and the sparse piano score that swells just at the right moments—it all works together to amplify the loneliness and yearning. I've had that main theme stuck in my head for days. Music isn't just background here; it's the heartbeat of the story.