A retrospective by Brooks Rich For a film that won Best Picture and Best Picture, as well as three other Academy Awards, I don't think Billy Wilder's 1960 film The Apartment is as well remembered as it should be. I am sure it might not play as well to a modern audience, especially with some of the attitudes of the '60s in full display in the film, but I still really like it and it actually is condemning the sexual hierarchy of '60s corporate America. Jack Lemmon plays C.C. Baxter, a mild mannered employee at a big insurance company in New York City. He has a deal going with several executives in his company where he loans out his apartment to them so they have somewhere to take their mistresses, mostly women from the office. C.C.'s neighbors think he is a playboy as they see and hear women coming in and out of his apartment but in reality he spends his nights either at work or wandering the streets. What works about this film is what I said earlier, the film does...