Odd Couple Clip Say It Again and Ill Bash Your Skull in

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The Odd Couple is a 1968 comedy film adjusted from Neil Simon's hitting Broadway play, directed by Gene Saks and starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau.

Oscar Madison (Matthau) is a divorced New York City sportswriter who lives in a spacious merely horrifically messy Upper West Side apartment. He hosts a weekly Friday night poker game, which includes as i of the players Felix Ungar (Lemmon), a persnickety television news writer. Felix is in a state of grief and despair, his wife Frances having only left him; subsequently he makes an unsuccessful endeavour on his life, Oscar takes him in. Comic situations ensue as super groovy-freak Felix and slovenly Oscar proceed to irritate the hell out of each other.

Matthau reprised his office from the Broadway product, which had featured Art Carney every bit Felix. I of many many adaptations of the play, including a pop 1970–75 TV sitcom starring Jack Klugman as Oscar and Tony Randall equally Felix, a 1980s Race Lift Tv show that featured Ron Drinking glass equally Felix and Demond Wilson as Oscar, and another Tv adaptation in The New '10s starring Matthew Perry as Oscar and Thomas Lennon equally Felix. Thirty years afterwards the flick, Lemmon and Matthau reprised their roles in a sequel, The Odd Couple II.


Tropes in this motion-picture show:

  • Accidental Misnaming:
    • Part of the marriage between Oscar and Felix is shown past Felix sometimes calling Oscar "Frances."
    • Oscar and Felix go along getting the names of the Dove sisters mixed up. Even in the end credits, the names have to be switched around.
  • Adopted to the Business firm: Oscar invites Felix to movement in with him after his wife kicks him out, and soon comes to regret information technology.
  • All Women Are Lustful: Gwendolyn and Cecily are pretty clearly looking to go laid, dropping deliberate comments about how they're beating the Oestrus Moving ridge by standing in front end of their fridge in the nude. This is why Oscar is then enraged when Felix gets maudlin and ruins the mood.
  • Bikini Bar: In the opening montage Felix wanders into your standard 1960s movie Bikini Bar, with go-go dancers in bikinis, while walking effectually afterward his wife throws him out.
  • Bookends: Begins and ends with the gang trying to play poker simply getting worried that Felix might kill himself.
  • Suspension the Motivational Speaker: In the backstory, Felix's marriage counselor threw him out of the office and wrote on his chart "Lunatic!".
  • The Cameo: Oscar works a Pirates-Mets game at Shea Stadium, where time to come Hall of Famer Bill Mazeroski hits into a rare triple play (which Oscar misses seeing considering Felix has called him nigh the dinner carte du jour).
    • Sharing the press box with Oscar at the game is Heywood Hale Braun, a existent-life sportswriter and CBS commentator.
  • Army camp Straight: Felix, although evidently heterosexual, is quite effete.
  • Character Evolution: By the end, Felix has grown out of his despair at getting divorced, and can face the prospect of a telephone call from his soon-to-be-ex-married woman with self-possession. Oscar for his part is non as much the filthy slob, telling his poker buddies to exist careful with the cigarette and cigar ash as they sit down to play.
  • *Crack!* "Oh, My Back!": Felix is hiding in Oscar's bathroom after beingness kicked out past his wife. Terrified that he's going to endeavor suicide, Oscar and the other poker players break into the bath, hit Felix with the door, who proceeds to moan nigh his dorsum throughout the residuum of the scene.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Oscar has most of the best lines.

    Oscar: Let'south play cards, and please agree them up. I can't see where I marked them.

  • The Eeyore: Felix is this for much of the first part of the film, due to being miserable over the breakup of his marriage. His attempts to make small talk with the Pigeon sisters reduces all iii of them to a sobbing mess in the short time it takes for Oscar to ready drinks in the kitchen.
  • Establishing Grapheme Moment: The opening of the film is an extended one for Felix. He checks into a hotel and asks for a room on the highest floor because he intends to throw himself out the window. He'southward and so fussy he leaves his possessions in an envelope marked for his children, and and then gives up when the window won't open and he throws out his back.
    • Just 1 look at Oscar'south flat during the initial poker game establishes his character, with all the rotten nutrient, empty beer cans, a months-old dead Christmas tree, stacks of unorganized papers, and a broken air conditioner making anybody at the political party sweat.
  • Family Theme Naming: The Pigeon sisters are named Gwendolyn and Cecily, after the heroines of The Importance of Being Earnest.
  • The Film of the Play
  • The Ghost: Felix'southward wife Frances and Oscar'due south ex-wife Blanche. Often talked nigh but never seen or heard, though we practice hear a loud click when Blanche angrily hangs the phone up on Oscar.
  • Hypochondria: Another i of Felix's neuroses. He thinks he's allergic to all kinds of odd things, including perfume.
  • Instrumental Theme Melody: Composed by Neil Hefti, and subsequently reused for the 1970–75 TV series.
    • There are unused lyrics besides, written by Sammy Cahn.
  • Joisey: During one of the poker games Vinnie mentions that he and his wife are "driving to Asbury Park for the weekend".
    • After Speed lights up a cigar during the same game:

      Roy: Hey, y'all wanna practise me a really big favor? Smoke towards New Jersey.

  • Friction match Cut: From bowling pins falling to pool balls being knocked around as Felix and Oscar are out having fun (or, rather, Oscar is trying to make Felix take more fun).
  • Men Can't Keep House: Oscar's apartment is simply this side of a toxic waste dump. Felix, who averts this trope as much as it can be averted, makes the identify over.
  • Missing the Expert Stuff: Oscar misses seeing a rare triple play at the Mets game when Felix phones him at the ballpark press box to inform him he'southward making franks and beans for dinner.

    Oscar: ARE YOU CRAZY? ARE You OUT OF YOUR Listen? TAKE YOUR FRANKFURTERS AND... (slams phone downwardly)

  • Neat Freak: Felix'due south problem, which irritates Oscar to no end and patently is part of the reason his married woman left him. The poker game breaks up later on the other players realize Felix washed the playing cards.
  • Nervous Wreck: Felix.
  • Newhart Phonecall: Oscar talking to his ex on the telephone.
  • Odd Couple: Call up so?
  • Rooftop Confrontation: Eventually Oscar snaps, breathing fire and murder and chasing Felix effectually the building. He finally corners him on the roof, where he manages to restrain himself from murdering Felix but does demand that Felix move out immediately.
  • Shout-Out:
    • Speed expresses irritation with Murray's glacially slow card shuffling by snarking, "Aren't you lot the 1 they call The Cincinnati Child?"
    • At ane point Oscar sarcastically compares Felix to Mary Poppins. After he calls him the Wicked Witch of the North.
    • The Pigeon sisters note that Felix is named similar the cat.
    • Equally Felix and the Dove sisters are sobbing over their respective divorces, Oscar emerges from the kitchen with a potable tray, asking "Is everybody happy?" in a chipper singsong voice. Besides beingness a funny gag, this would have been recognized past older 1968 viewers as the catchphrase of Low-era bandleader Ted Lewis.
    • "'Let it exist on your head!' What the hell is that, the curse of the Cat People?"
  • Suicide as Comedy: The pic opens with a despondent Felix planning to jump to his decease from a hotel room, simply to throw his back out trying to open the window. Subsequently nosotros learn he also downed an entire bottle of sleeping pills and and so threw them up, all offscreen.
  • Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: The whole premise of the motion-picture show is this. Despite existence friends, Felix and Oscar eventually outset to disharmonism with each other, something which is bound to happen when ii people with drastically unlike personalities and values attempt to alive with each other.
  • Talk About the Weather: Felix derails all the sex banter between Oscar and the sisters by making an awkward comment well-nigh the conditions.
  • Video Credits: The film ends with clips of the main cast—Oscar, Felix, their poker buddies, the Pigeon sisters.
  • Style By the Expiration Appointment: Information technology'due south poker night in Oscar's apartment, cigar smoke fills the air:

    Oscar Madison: I'm in for a quarter.
    Murray: Aren't you going to expect at your cards first?
    Oscar: What for? I'm gonna bluff anyhow. Who gets a Pepsi?
    Murray: I get a Pepsi.
    Oscar: My friend Murray the policeman gets a warm Pepsi.
    Roy: You nevertheless didn't fix the refrigerator. It'due south been 2 weeks now — no wonder information technology stinks in hither.
    Oscar: Atmosphere, temper. If I wanted nagging, I'd become back with my wife. I'm out. Who wants food?
    Murray: What practice you got?
    Oscar: (checks plate of pre-made sandwiches) I got, uh, chocolate-brown sandwiches and, uh, greenish sandwiches. Which ane do you lot want?
    Murray: What'due south the green?
    Oscar: Information technology'southward either very new cheese or very quondam meat.
    Murray: I'll take the dark-brown.

  • You're Insane!: After Oscar snatches the plate of linguini and senselessly throws it against the kitchen wall:

    Felix: You're crazy! I'k a neurotic nut just you're crazy!
    Oscar: I'chiliad crazy, huh? That'south really funny coming from a fruitcake like you.


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Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Film/TheOddCouple1968

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