Jack Lemmon in The Apartment. 1960. USA. Directed by Billy Wilder
These notes accompany screenings of Billy Wilder’s The Apartment on June 19, 20, and 21 in Theater 3.
The Apartment won three Oscars for Billy Wilder as producer, di...
Jack Lemmon in The Apartment. 1960. USA. Directed by Billy Wilder
These notes accompany screenings of Billy Wilder’s The Apartment on June 19, 20, and 21 in Theater 3.
The Apartment won three Oscars for Billy Wilder as producer, director, and co-screenwriter. It is hard to recall a film so honored that is also so cynical (spoiler alert: in spite of its over-the-top romantic ending) or so lacking in visual elegance—both of which are typically valid criticisms of Wilder’s work. The Motion Picture Academy could have recognized the genius of Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho that year, or even sprawling epics like Otto Preminger’s Exodus or Elia Kazan’s Wild River, but The Apartment seemed to have touched a contemporary, and possibly raw, nerve.
Like the New Wave directors in France at the time, Wilder allows himself a few in-jokes: evoking his earlier Oscar-winning The Lost Weekend; poking fun at Marilyn Monroe (star of his recent The Seven Year Itch and Some Like It Hot), whom he had come to dislike and who is embodied here by a look-alike/impersonator (Joyce Jameson); and mocking television’s destruction of classic movies (Grand Hotel, Stagecoach) with crappy reception and endless commercials. As always, Wilder presents all this with a subversive edginess.
Bertrand Tavernier, the French director of The Clockmaker and ‘Round Midnight, succeeded the Godard/Truffaut/Chabrol/Rivette/Rohmer generation at Cahiers du Cinéma. He said recently: “The auteur theory is still working, but it has been caricatured. It was saying that within the best films of a director…you have an author…where he really had a chance of expressing his ideas. But the notion then came that the people working round him are less important. This is a mistake! This is a mistake!” Wilder is a particularly good example for making Tavernier’s point. Romanian-born I. A. L. Diamond began writing (or co-writing) Wilder’s films with Love in the Afternoon, and from that point they collaborated on all of them (with the lone exception of 1957′s Witness for the Prosecution) until the end of their respective careers. Diamond, almost a generation younger than Wilder, shared the director’s cynical subversiveness, and it is hard to find a director/writer duo as compatible in Hollywood history, except possibly for Josef von Sternberg and Jules Furthman—or Charles Chaplin and himself.
Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine in The Apartment. 1960. USA. Directed by Billy Wilder
In The Apartment, Fred MacMurray’s unsympathetic character is the head of a gigantic insurance company. Paul Douglas, originally cast in the role, died, and one can’t resist the idea that Wilder thought of MacMurray because he had played a shady insurance man in the director’s excellent melodrama Double Indemnity (1944). Wilder would also use Shirley MacLaine again in Irma La Douce. Jack Lemmon, of course, was a Wilder regular. It can be argued that, with The Apartment, Lemmon’s lightweight comedy persona began a progression into the serious actor of Days of Wine and Roses, Save the Tiger (for which he won an Oscar), and That’s Life. (Of course, he would still be hysterically funny in Blake Edwards’s The Great Race, Gene Saks’s The Odd Couple, and Wilder’s The Fortune Cookie and Avanti!).
Some years ago, I contemplated doing a book on directors born (like Wilder) in or near Vienna, of which there were a disproportionate number. Most of them were Jewish, and they lent to the American cinema both genius and a diaspora-based questioning of conventional Anglo-Saxon values and sexual mores. In the silent era, the films of Erich von Stroheim (who would later star in Wilder’s Five Graves to Cairo and Sunset Boulevard) not-so-subtly hinted at a kinkiness that the likes of a Sarah Palin or Michele Bachmann would have called “anti-American.” In the 1930s, the Viennese-born Sternberg and Marlene Dietrich minced no images. In my monograph on Dietrich, I point out that in The Scarlet Empress, the rout