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The Apartment (1960)
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Reviews Counted:40
Fresh:36
Rotten:4
Average Rating:8.3/10
Consensus: It has perhaps aged poorly, but in The Apartment, director Billy Wilder's customary cynicism is leavened here by tender humor, romance, and genuine pathos.
Theatrical Release:11-07-2008
Synopsis: Billy Wilder's THE APARTMENT blends his customary harsh cynicism with a humane streak that appears only fleetingly in his films. It stars Jack Lemmon as C.C. Baxter, an office clerk who curries... Billy Wilder's THE APARTMENT blends his customary harsh cynicism with a humane streak that appears only fleetingly in his films. It stars Jack Lemmon as C.C. Baxter, an office clerk who curries favor with the executives in his office by giving them the key to his small apartment for the odd afternoon dalliance. Among them his is his callous boss, J.D. Sheldrake (Fred MacMurray), who Baxter eventually learns is using his place to sleep with Miss Kubelik (Shirley MacLaine), the sweet elevator operator the clerk has loved from afar. When Sheldrake coldly dumps the vulnerable young woman, she tries to commit suicide, but is saved by the intervention of Baxter. As the clerk lovingly nurses the young woman back to health he begins to realize, with the help of epigrammatic neighbor Dr. Dreyfuss (Jack Kruschen), exactly how much of a fool he has been. Wilder brilliant depiction of the average American office as a place of brutality, coldness, and alienation conjure up Kafka and Marx. The director seduces the audience into what appears to be an unusually frank sex comedy, but turns the tables in displaying the consequences of the executive's cold indifference. Lemmon and MacLaine both give career performances and MacMurray is memorable as the blandly smiling snake. [More]
Starring: Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray, Edie Adams
Starring: Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray, Edie Adams, Ray Walston, Jack Kruschen, Joan Shawlee, Hope Holiday, Naomi Stevens, David Lewis, Joyce Jameson
Director: Billy Wilder
Director: Billy Wilder
Screenwriter: Billy Wilder, I. A. L. Diamond
Producer: Billy Wilder
Composer: Adolph Deutsch
Reviews for The Apartment
A true classic. It's about advancement, ambition, corruption and adultery, and it operates as both a satire and a sorrowful romance.
This comedy tells truths about American business and sexual morés as uncomfortable now as they were in 1960.
Wilder and IAL Diamond's brilliantly witty screenplay has a serious undertow as it savages corporate ethics and conjugal infidelity.
A comedy of men's-room humours and water-cooler politics that now and then among the belly laughs says something serious and sad about the struggle for success, about what it often does to a man, and about the horribly small world of big business.
Most of the time, it's up to director Wilder to sustain a two-hour-plus film on treatment alone, a feat he manages to accomplish more often than not, and sometimes the results are amazing.
The overlong drawn-out one-hook themed Apartment seemed a tad more bare than furnished.
Billy Wilder somehow took a story about infidelity and suicide and made it into a comedy.
I wouldn't call this 1960 picture one of Billy Wilder's best comedies -- it's drab, sappy, and overlong at 125 minutes.
Billy Wilder further enhances his filmic resume with this tender portrayal of a lonely man who may soon get what he deserves. Jack Lemmon is terrific.
The first comedy to win the Oscar since 1944's Going My Way, the Apartment, the serio-comedy about "little people" in N.Y.C. (Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine) is not vintage Billy Wilder, but it's well-acted.
Humanism and cleverness age like fine wine, even if served with spaghetti strained with a tennis racket.
Latest News for The Apartment
June 22, 2007:
AFI Announces Top 100 Movies of All Time ... Again
Ten years ago the AFI gave us a list of the Top 100 American Films Ever Made -- and when that was done they churned out 15 other lists every few years. And then last night they... More...
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