Moving Up The
Chain-Billy Wilder’s “The Apartment” (1960)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
The Apartment, starring
Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray, written directed by Billy
Wilder, 1960
I have mentioned on
other occasions that sometimes when reviewing, as here with Billy Wilder’s The Apartment, an older film what I am
looking for is a social “slice of life” aspect of the times in which the film
took place. That is the case here where the main action takes place in late
1950s corporate New York. The “slice of life” aspect, although I am sure the
versatile Mister Wilder had several bees in his bonnet is the extra-curricular
“dating” habits of “happily married men” or maybe not so happily married in a
large corporation. Most of that hanky-panky which would not pass muster these
days in the office without a serious look see for sexual harassment by some
Human Resources officer. And that is to the good.
Here’s the play. C.C
Baxter, played by Jack Lemmon, is a hungry up and coming office worker in a
large insurance company who just so happens to have a very convenient apartment
right in the city just made for the occasional tryst by those executives, male
executives, who are further up the food chain and can do C.C. a world of good in
moving up that same food chain by leaving a convenient key under the doormat of
that apartment. And by offering those services C.C. does creak his way up. But
C.C. also has his own love interests, love interest in one comely elevator
operator from his office building, Fran, played by Shirley MacLaine. Problem,
big problem though is that Fran has been courted by Sheldrake, played by Fred
MacMurray last mentioned in this space after taking a couple of slugs from his
estranged paramour Barbara Stanwyck in another Wilder classic, Double Indemnity, who is even further up
the food chain than the guys he had been servicing previously. Of course like
the others Sheldrake is married and just out for a lark.
But C.C. for a while
anyway can only see the executive washroom in his plans until Fran in a fit of
despair when Sheldrake lowers the boom on her one night and he comes to her
rescue. After that C.C. will pursue her to the end, the end when she leaves the
perfidious but now contrite Sheldrake for him. Yeah, a New York slice of life
film which was well-written, well-acted and well-directed.
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