C.C. Baxter
Jack Lemmon
C.C. Baxter

“Movie-wise, there has never been anything like it - laugh-wise, love-wise, or otherwise-wise!”
Bud Baxter is a minor clerk in a huge New York insurance company, until he discovers a quick way to climb the corporate ladder. He lends out his apartment to the executives as a place to take their mistresses. Although he often has to deal with the aftermath of their visits, one night he's left with a major problem to solve.
Official Arrow Trailer Official
C.C. Baxter
Jack Lemmon
C.C. Baxter
Fran Kubelik
Shirley MacLaine
Fran Kubelik
Jeff D. Sheldrake
Fred MacMurray
Jeff D. Sheldrake
Joe Dobisch
Ray Walston
Joe Dobisch
Dr. Dreyfuss
Jack Kruschen
Dr. Dreyfuss
Al Kirkeby
David Lewis
Al Kirkeby
Mrs. Margie MacDougall
Hope Holiday
Mrs. Margie MacDougall
Sylvia
Joan Shawlee
Sylvia
Mrs. Mildred Dreyfuss
Naomi Stevens
Mrs. Mildred Dreyfuss
Karl Matuschka
Johnny Seven
Karl Matuschka
The Blonde
Joyce Jameson
The Blonde
Mr. Vanderhoff
Willard Waterman
Mr. Vanderhoff
A tiypical Billy Wilder comedy. Fun and with great script and performance from Jack Lemmon. A must to see.
Read full reviewEssential viewing once a year for soul maintenance
Read full review**It's a good movie, but Best Picture at the Oscars? Frankly…** I really enjoyed this film, largely thanks to the lightness of its story, and the funny way in which the film plays with the situation in which the protagonist finds himself intertwined. The film was, in fact, the big winner of the Oscars in its year, with ten nominations and five statuettes (Best Editing, Best Art Direction in Black and White, Best Original Screenplay, Best Director and, the icing on the cake, Best movie). However, if we observe that that year were also nominated for much more memorable films such as “Spartacus” or “Psycho”, it is questionable whether this film really deserved to be considered the best film of the year. The script is based on the difficulties experienced by a simple office worker of a large insurance company from the moment he begins to lend his own apartment to several superiors in the firm, so that they can take their mistresses and girlfriends there. With the situation, he gains a bad reputation among the neighbors and with the landlady, in addition to not being able to go to his own house when he wants and thinks he should, being always limited by the arrangements that he is, from a certain moment, coerced into keeping. , as you progress in the firm thanks to the exchange of favors. Of course, there's going to be a very complicated romance midway through the story, and everything will end well, as it does in these comedies. The cast is half the recipe for this success. Jack Lemmon gives us a very good performance, perhaps the best of his career as an actor, along with his enormous acting exercise in “Some Like it Hot”. Fred McMurray was also very good in this film, giving us with commitment and great charisma an unpalatable character (a married man, very important in the company, who betrays his wife and will take advantage of the ambition of a minor employee). Without disapproval for the good performance of Sirley MacLaine, who gave life to a fragile young woman who is the main love interest of the protagonist, the film is not especially sympathetic to any element of the female cast. The film has a very pleasant pace and time passes without us noticing it, if we give the story a chance to get involved. I think the good editing and the fact that the film doesn't stop at dead moments helped a lot at that point. Good sets and costumes, especially the office set, with all the details we can imagine, make for a film that is good, although I can consider that there are far superior films.
Read full reviewOffice Christmas Party Scene
Baxter Gets A Promotion
The Elevator Operator With Shirley MacLaine
Opening Scene
4K UHD Unboxing
Shirley MacLaine shares behind-the-scenes memories from the making of THE APARTMENT.
"The Apartment" and "Spartacus" winning Art Direction Oscars®
"The Apartment" winning the Oscar® for Film Editing
Billy Wilder winning the Oscar® for Writing "The Apartment"
Billy Wilder winning the Oscar® for Directing "The Apartment"
"The Apartment" winning Best Picture
Jack Lemmon On THE APARTMENT
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