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FOR PARENTS
Closed Caption; Audio commentary from Bruce Block - film producer and historian; Inside the Apartment documentary; Magic time: the art of Jack Lemmon
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Apartment
1. Main Titles [1:31]
2. Killing Time [6:16]
3. TV Dinner [3:59]
4. Be My Guest [4:35]
5. Two and a Half Colds [2:10]
6. Scheduling Problems [7:12]
7. Why So Popular? [6:27]
8. All Sorts of Things [3:21]
9. Like Old Times [3:38]
10. Trust Me [2:54]
11. Selfish and Ungrateful [3:34]
12. Broken Mirror [7:08]
13. Drowning Their Sorrows [3:23]
14. A Million Laughs [6:08]
15. O-U-T [6:09]
16. Coffee and a Prayer [6:43]
17. Be a Mensch [2:37]
18. Person-to-Person [3:51]
19. So Ashamed [3:47]
20. Chicken Soup and Gin [7:27]
21. The Jackpot [3:21]
22. Lunch Date [4:26]
23. Out of Her System [3:52]
24. Brother-in-Law [1:33]
25. Footprint in the Sand [4:26]
26. A Kick in the Head [5:37]
27. All Washed Up [2:34]
28. Ring in the New [6:15]
Billy Wilder always liked to thread a strong streak of cynicism through his comedies, and he rarely made a film with a darker undertow than The Apartment. The effervescent comic charm of Jack Lemmon and quirky beauty of Shirley MacLaine give the film a palatable sweetness (while she would be given more glamorous treatment in later films, MacLaine was never more adorable than she was here), but they sugarcoat a very bitter pill in what is ultimately a story about moral accountability (and the lack thereof) in American business. While the film starts off as a naughty-for-its-time sex comedy about sad sack C.C. Baxter (Lemmon) who discovers he can curry the favor of his many bosses by letting them use his apartment for romantic indiscretions, it takes a more serious turn when we get to know Fran Kubelik (MacLaine), an elevator operator with precious little self-esteem. While most of the women Baxter's superiors lure to the tiny den of seduction look like brassy bar girls who've been this route before and know what they're doing, Kubelik is at heart a sweet (if disappointed) girl who desperately wants to be loved and who has made the mistake of falling for the duplicitous J.D. Sheldrake (Fred MacMurray), whose callous indifference to the agony he inflicts falls just short of horrifying. (Anyone who grew up watching MacMurray on My Three Sons may be shocked to see how slimy he is in this role.) Ultimately, Baxter and Kubelik seem like two innocents stranded in a corrupt world, and what's most remarkable is not that they finally end up together, but that they both survive the experience intact and that Wilder is able to wring so many laughs out of a story that runs so close to tragedy. Mark Deming Barnes & Noble
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Even though the whole plotline revolves around extramarital affairs, nothing is ever shown, and the dialogue about nonstop lovemaking is all euphemistic. When the hero, Baxter, is suspected by neighbors of having sex with two women in one n... More
Even though the whole plotline revolves around extramarital affairs, nothing is ever shown, and the dialogue about nonstop lovemaking is all euphemistic. When the hero, Baxter, is suspected by neighbors of having sex with two women in one night, for instance, it's talked about as a "double-header." Baxter refers to himself at one point as a "sexpot" -- and that's as intense as it gets. Close
One punch. An attempted suicide via pill overdose and a few other suicide tries.
Mention of the old Hollywood movie Grand Hotel and the Broadway musical (later filmed) The Music Man.
One use of "damn" in the Gone With the Wind sense ("He doesn't give a damn about me").
About TheApartment
Parents need to know that this screen classic features an attempted suicide via pill overdose and a few other suicide tries (or actions that are mistaken for suicide tries) more or less played for laughs. The main focus of the plotline is sex and adulterous affairs -- but in keeping with censorship of the era, it's lots of carefully-coded talk. Nothing explicit is shown. There are, however, intervals of heavy drinking and smoking. It will be an uphill battle getting some younger viewers who can't tolerate anything not in color to sit still and watch this talky dramedy.