This scene is completely unedited—look closely and brace yourself for the unexpected twist…
In The Apartment, an iconic office shot shows Jack Lemmon’s C.C. Baxter dwarfed by endless rows of desks—an image often mistaken for early visual effects. In reality, director Billy Wilder and production designer Alexandre Trauner used pure forced perspective: full-size desks and adults up front, then progressively smaller desks, child actors, and cardboard cutouts toward the back. The uncut illusion powerfully conveys corporate isolation. The film’s story was equally rooted in reality—sparked by Brief Encounter and shaped by a real Hollywood scandal involving talent agent Jennings Lang, actress Joan Bennett, and producer Walter Wanger, with co-writer I. A. L. Diamond adding darker emotional truth—resulting in a film that blends ingenuity, satire, and moral complexity.