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The Apartment
(1960)
In Billy Wilder's Best Picture-winning film - a a
classic, caustically-witty, satirically cynical, melodramatic comedy
about unethical, greedy, and corrupt corporate America politics in
the year 1959 - and a bitter-sweet romance:
- the opening voice-over narration ended with the
shot of the interior of the Manhattan insurance company office
filled with chattering employees -- and the dissolve showed lowly
subordinate worker C. C. "Bud"
Baxter (Jack Lemmon), one of "31,259 drones" staying on
late by himself at his desk on the 19th floor at the impersonal Consolidated
Life of New York insurance company (a shot paying homage to King
Vidor's silent film classic The Crowd (1928)),
and waiting until his own apartment was vacated - after being used
by his married higher-up executives for their trysts and affairs:
("You
see, I have this little problem with my apartment...I live in the
West Sixties, just half a block from Central Park. My rent is $85
a month. It used to be eighty until last July when Mrs. Lieberman
(Frances Lax), the landlady, put in a second-hand air conditioning
unit. It's a real nice apartment - nothing fancy - but kind of cozy
- just right for a bachelor. The only problem is - I can't always
get in when I want to")
- those who used Bud's Upper West Side apartment
for after-hours romantic trysts-affairs included his four philandering
managers and his fast-talking, authoritative married executive
Jeff D. Sheldrake (Fred MacMurray); Sheldrake was womanizing with
Fran behind Baxter's back
- Bud surprised his concerned neighbor
Dr. Dreyfuss (Jack Kruschen), when he was seen carrying out a large
wastebasket of used liquor bottles; Bud was admonished and mistaken
for a 20th century Don Juan lothario, partier and frequent alcohol
imbiber: "The way you're beltin' that stuff, you must have a
pair of cast-iron kidneys....As a matter of fact, you must be an
iron man all around. From what I hear through the walls, you got
somethin' goin' for ya every night...Sometimes, there's a twi-night
double-header. (He clucked his tongue) A nebbish like you!...You
know, Baxter, I'm doing some research at the Columbia Medical Center
and I wonder if you could do us a favor?...When you make out your
will, and the way you're going, you should, would you mind leaving
your body to the University?... (Shaking his finger) Slow down, kid"
- "Bud" developed
a growing relationship with the company's pixie-faced, charming,
elfin elevator operator Miss Fran Kubelik (Shirley MacLaine); one
day in the elevator, when he complained about his cold (from sleeping
on a Central Park bench overnight), she commiserated with him: "You
should have stayed in bed this morning" - he quipped back: "I
should have stayed in bed last night"
- in a devastating sequence,
Bud discovered Miss Kubelik unconscious and overdosed on sleeping
pills in his apartment on Christmas Eve - after the irredeemable
Sheldrake had told her that he couldn't commit to her: "Look,
I know you think I've been stalling you, but-well, when you've
been married to a woman for twelve years, you just don't sit down
at the breakfast table and say, 'Pass the sugar, I want a divorce.'
It's not that easy. Anyway, this is the wrong time. The kids are
home from school. My in-laws are visiting for the holidays. I can't
bring it up now"
- on Christmas Day, when Bud made a person-to-person
phone call to Sheldrake's home, the family was celebrating
a lavish Christmas under the tree - the embarrassed Sheldrake (in
a new dressing gown just received as a present) shamelessly refused
to offer help even though he heard that Fran had taken an overdose
of sleeping pills and was recovering after a "touch and go" night
- still morose and recuperating in bed, Fran asked Bud: "Why
can't I ever fall in love with somebody nice like you?" Bud
replied (with his most famous line) - speaking with shaving cream
all over his face: "Yeah, well, that's the way it crumbles,
cookie-wise"
- in a kitchen scene, Bud sang operatically as
he dexterously strained spaghetti over the strings of his tennis
racket for an Italian spaghetti dinner: ("You should see my
backhand") - it was a special dinner for Miss Kubelik after
her suicide attempt; he quipped: ("Me, I used to live like Robinson
Crusoe, I mean shipwrecked among eight million people. Then, one
day I saw a footprint in the sand, and there you were. It's a wonderful
thing, dinner for two...Sometimes I have dinner with Ed Sullivan,
sometimes Dinah Shore or Perry Como. The other night, I had dinner
with Mae West. Of course, she was much younger then")
- during a New Year's Eve celebratory scene in a
Chinese restaurant, Fran was being entertained by Sheldrake and
learned that Bud had quit his job rather than lending out his apartment's
key anymore: (Sheldrake: "He just walked out on me, quit. Threw
that big fat job right in my face...that little punk, after all I
did for him. Said I couldn't bring anybody to the apartment, especially
not Miss Kubelik"); she responded:
"I guess that's the way it crumbles, cookie-wise"
- Fran rushed to Bud's apartment,
realizing that he really loved her and had sacrificed his career
for her; but when she reached the top of the stairs, she heard what
she thought was a gun-shot - and was relieved when the door opened
and Bud was holding a recently-uncorked bottle of champagne foaming
over
Curtain-Closing Final Scene - Gunshot and Rummy
Game
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- during the curtain-closing scene - a card game
(gin rummy) between Fran and Bud as the New Year dawned, he professed
his love ("I absolutely adore you")
and Fran responded by handing him a pack of cards and bluntly speaking
the film's last line, still romantically reticent: "Shut up
and deal!"
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Bud's Insurance Company Office
Bud with Wastebasket of Liquor Bottles - Neighbor's Reaction
Innocent Elevator Operator Miss Kubelik
Sleazy Executive Sheldrake
Fran's Recovery From Overdose of Pills
"That's the way it crumbles, cookie-wise"
Tennis Racket Spaghetti-Straining
Sheldrake's Revelation to Fran that Bud Had Quit
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