Billy Wilder Week:
Some Like It Hot
Jun 9 to Jun 11
Tuesday through Thursday 4:00, 8:30
Billy Wilder - 1959 - 120m
In Chicago, during the Prohibition era, two skirt-chasing musicians,
Joe and Jerry (Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon), inadvertently witness the
St. Valentine's Day Massacre. In order to escape the wrath of gangland
chief Spats Colombo (George Raft), the boys, in drag, join an all-woman
band headed for Florida. They vie for the attention of the lead singer,
Sugar Kane (Marilyn Monroe), a much-disappointed songbird who warbles
"I'm Through with Love" but remains vulnerable to yet another
unreliable saxophone player. (When Curtis courts her without his dress,
he adopts the voice of Cary Grant--a spot-on impersonation.) The script
by director Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond is beautifully measured;
everything works, like a flawless clock. Aspiring screenwriters would
be well advised to throw away the how-to books and simply study this
film. The bulk of the slapstick is handled by an unhinged Lemmon and
the razor-sharp Joe E. Brown, who plays a horny retiree smitten by
Jerry's feminine charms. For all the gags, the film is also wonderfully
romantic, as Wilder indulges in just the right amounts of moonlight and
the lilting melody of "Park Avenue Fantasy."
The Apartment
Jun 9 to Jun 11
Tuesday through Thursday 1:45, 6:15
Billy Wilder - 1960 - 125m
Romance at its most anti-romantic--that is the Billy Wilder stamp of
genius, and this Best Picture Academy Award winner from 1960 is no
exception. Set in a decidedly unsavory world of corporate climbing and
philandering, the great filmmaker's trenchant, witty satire-melodrama
takes the office politics of a corporation and plays them out in the
apartment of lonely clerk C.C. Baxter (Jack Lemmon). By lending out his
digs to the higher-ups for nightly extramarital flings with their
secretaries, Baxter has managed to ascend the business ladder faster
than even he imagined. The story turns even uglier, though, when
Baxter's crush on the building's melancholy elevator operator (Shirley
MacLaine) runs up against her long-standing affair with the big boss (a
superbly smarmy Fred MacMurray). The situation comes to a head when she
tries to commit suicide in Baxter's apartment. Not the happiest or
cleanest of scenarios, and one that earned the famously caustic and
cynically humored Wilder his share of outraged responses, but looking
at it now, it is a funny, startlingly clear-eyed vision of urban
emptiness and is unfailingly understanding of the crazy decisions our
hearts sometimes make. Lemmon and MacLaine are ideally matched, and
while everyone cites Wilder's Some Like It Hot closing line "Nobody's
perfect" as his best, MacLaine's no-nonsense final words--"Shut up and
deal"--are every bit as memorable. Wilder won three Oscars for The
Apartment, for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Screenplay
(cowritten with longtime collaborator I.A.L. Diamond)
For further information see Guild Cinema's web site.

