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Slideshow

THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH

Friday, May 29
8:20

Saturday, May 30
6:30

Sunday, May 31
1:00

Monday, June 1
4:15

Thursday, June 4
5:20

Sunday, June 7
3:00

Thursday, June 11
4:40

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U.S., 1955
Directed by Billy Wilder
Starring Marilyn Monroe, Tom Ewell, Evelyn Keyes
Approx. 105 min.


“When it’s hot like this, you know what I do? I keep my undies in the icebox.” With the dog days already melting the asphalt, Tom Ewell packs the wife and kid off to Maine while he holds the fort in sweltering NYC to work at his publishing job, turning literary classics into vintagely lurid 25-cent paperbacks (What’s Secrets of a Girls’ Dormitory? Why, Little Women, of course). But when the summer widower’s next project, Repressed Urges in the Middle-Aged Male, coincides with the arrival of a new upstairs neighbor—TV toothpaste pitchwoman and “art” photo model Marilyn Monroe (!)—it’s time to scratch that old “seven year itch.” If Rachmaninoff doesn’t do the trick (“That’s classical music, isn’t it?” she asks. “I can tell because there are no vocals,”) at least there’s the thrill of watching her cool off over a subway grate on a sultry summer night. And when klutzy would-be Casanova Ewell confesses “Nothing like this ever happened to me in all my life,” Marilyn ingenuously replies, “That’s funny. Happens to me all the time.” But who wouldn’t get mixed signals from a date who sympathizes with the Creature from the Black Lagoon because “he just craved affection?” Screenplay by Wilder and, surprisingly enough, original playwright George Axelrod.

Presented with support from The Robert Jolin Osborne Endowed Fund for American Classic Cinema of the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s and The Ada Katz Fund for Literature in Film

Reviews

As the innocent in the big city and the kook, Marilyn Monroe seems oddly cast at first glance. But in a way that was hers alone, she makes the girl warm, funny, and sexy.
– David Shipman

Film Forum