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Billy Wilder?s -The Apartment-1960
The Apartment is the movie that heralded the sexual freedom of the sixties and seventies and gave the workplace a bad name, in terms of the "way people act". In fact. In it's day it was quite risque, and was too sophisticated for me to appreciate at the time it came out, although I have come to... Read full review »
Bidness as usual: The Apartment
The Apartment (1960)
This is another Billy Wilder film, who if you don't know was one of the most versatile movie directors ever. Wilder made many films, often probing relatively untapped ground for the usually unimaginative film industry like alcoholism (Lost Weekend); murder for...
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The Apartment - Lemmon's A Peach In A Plum But Dated Role
In the 95 years Billy Wilder spent on planet Earth, this legendary jack-of-all-trades left a film legacy which includes such titles as Ball of Fire, The Lost Weekend, Sunset Boulevard, Ace in the Hole, Stalag 17, Sabrina and Some Like it Hot. My personal favorite amongst these Wilder efforts is the... Read full review »
We All Know a C.C. Baxter Trying to Climb the Ladder
Here I am, writing about yet another Billy Wilder film, "The Apartment". I've only reviewed a few films on Epinions, and now three of them will be by one of my favorite directors.
Each time "The Apartment" airs, I can't resist watching it because of the "eager beaver young executive"...
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C.C. Baxter's Apartment is a Wild Place
To many people C.C. Baxter’s apartment is a fun playground where married men can run amok with their clandestine affairs. To C.C. Baxter it’s a lonely place, a reminder of what’s missing in his own life. His focus therefore becomes his career, one which he hopes to advance by passing the keys to... Read full review »
The Apartment: A Flawless Comedy-Drama
Introduction
Billy Wilder is one of those rare directors who directed a good handful of masterpieces. The Apartment is definitely one of them. He combines lighthearted humor with dramatic severity in ways that makes it seem easy. Though obviously it isn't, because that's rarely so...
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Jack Lemmon Wants No More Sex in His Apartment
Jack Lemmon stars as a man on the rise at his company for letting his bosses use his apartment as a place to engage in their sexual encounters safe from their wives and bank accounts. Complications arise as he falls in love with the elevator operator (Shirley MacLaine) who’s using his... Read full review »
Classic in Many definitions.
There are many ways to define a " classic" movie and when I rewatched this seminal Wilder work a number of weeks ago on AMC , I realized this movie gloriously exemplifies three of them :
ONE– A movie that simply stands the test of time in it's own right. TWO– A movie that not ONLY stands...
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The Apartment: Jack Lemmon (1925-2001)
What a shame. What a downright shame that this review - which I've put off since the release of The Apartment on DVD nearly two weeks ago - must now take on the saddening bent of a eulogy. For as we know all too well by now, thanks to the maddening hunger and subsequent overkill of the media, Jack... Read full review »
Important Moral Message in the Film, "The Apartment"
Intro
I just rented Billy Wilders, "The Apartment" on DVD. It was an excellent movie. It stars Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, and Fred MacMurray. All actors did a wonderful job and the movie was a pure delight.
Plot Summary
C.C. Baxter (Jack Lemmon) works as a clerk...
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The Apartment
Winner* of five 1960 Academy AwardsÂ(r), including Best Picture, The Apartment is legendary writer/director Billy Wilder at his scathing, satirical best, and one of "the finest comedies Hollywood has turned out" (Newsweek). C.C. "Bud" Baxter (Jack Lemmon) knows the way to success in business...it's through the door of his apartment! By providing a perfect hideaway for philandering bosses, the ambitious young employee reaps a series of undeserved promotions. But when Bud lends the key to big boss J.D. Sheldrake (Fred MacMurray), he not only advances his career, but his own love life as well. For Sheldrake's mistress is the lovely Fran Kubelik (Shirley MacLaine), elevator girl and angel of Bud's dreams. Convinced that he is the only man for Fran, Bud must makethe most important executive decision of his career: lose the girl...or his job. *1960: Director, Story and Screenplay, Editing, Art Direction (B&W)
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Apartment / Ltbx [VHS]
Romance at its most anti-romantic--tha t is the Billy Wilder stamp of genius, and this Best Picture Academy Award winner from 1960 is no exception. Set in a decidedly unsavory world of corporate climbing and philandering, the great filmmaker's trenchant, witty satire-melodrama takes the office politics of a corporation and plays them out in the apartment of lonely clerk C.C. Baxter (Jack Lemmon). By lending out his digs to the higher-ups for nightly extramarital flings with their secretaries, Baxter has managed to ascend the business ladder faster than even he imagined. The story turns even uglier, though, when Baxter's crush on the building's melancholy elevator operator (Shirley MacLaine) runs up against her long-standing affair with the big boss (a superbly smarmy Fred MacMurray). The situation comes to a head when she tries to commit suicide in Baxter's apartment. Not the happiest or cleanest of scenarios, and one that earned the famously caustic and cynically humored Wilder his share of outraged responses, but looking at it now, it is a funny, startlingly clear-eyed vision of urban emptiness and is unfailingly understanding of the crazy decisions our hearts sometimes make. Lemmon and MacLaine are ideally matched, and while everyone cites Wilder's Some Like It Hot closing line "Nobody's perfect" as his best, MacLaine's no-nonsense final words--"Shut up and deal"--are every bit as memorable. Wilder won three Oscars for The Apartment, for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Screenplay (cowritten with longtime collaborator I.A.L. Diamond). --Robert Abele
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The Apartment [VHS]
Romance at its most anti-romantic--tha t is the Billy Wilder stamp of genius, and this Best Picture Academy Award winner from 1960 is no exception. Set in a decidedly unsavory world of corporate climbing and philandering, the great filmmaker's trenchant, witty satire-melodrama takes the office politics of a corporation and plays them out in the apartment of lonely clerk C.C. Baxter (Jack Lemmon). By lending out his digs to the higher-ups for nightly extramarital flings with their secretaries, Baxter has managed to ascend the business ladder faster than even he imagined. The story turns even uglier, though, when Baxter's crush on the building's melancholy elevator operator (Shirley MacLaine) runs up against her long-standing affair with the big boss (a superbly smarmy Fred MacMurray). The situation comes to a head when she tries to commit suicide in Baxter's apartment. Not the happiest or cleanest of scenarios, and one that earned the famously caustic and cynically humored Wilder his share of outraged responses, but looking at it now, it is a funny, startlingly clear-eyed vision of urban emptiness and is unfailingly understanding of the crazy decisions our hearts sometimes make. Lemmon and MacLaine are ideally matched, and while everyone cites Wilder's Some Like It Hot closing line "Nobody's perfect" as his best, MacLaine's no-nonsense final words--"Shut up and deal"--are every bit as memorable. Wilder won three Oscars for The Apartment, for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Screenplay (cowritten with longtime collaborator I.A.L. Diamond). --Robert Abele
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