Almost three decades later, a sequel—The Odd Couple II, in which Lemmon and Matthau reprised their roles—was released, but it was a critical and commercial failure.[4]
Plot
Newly separated Felix Ungar wanders Manhattan in a daze, with thoughts of dying by suicide.
Divorced sportswriter Oscar Madison and his poker playing cronies Murray, Speed, Roy and Vinnie have assembled in Madison's Washington Heights[according to whom?] apartment for their usual Friday night game. Murray is concerned because their mutual friend Felix is unusually late for the game. Murray's wife phones and informs them that Felix's whereabouts are unknown. Oscar calls Felix's wife Frances, who tells him that she and Felix have separated.
Felix arrives, unaware that everyone has already heard that he and his wife have separated. The nervous group attempts to pretend that nothing is wrong, but Felix eventually breaks down and his friends attempt to console him. After everyone else leaves, Oscar suggests that Felix move in with him, for Oscar has lived alone since breaking up with his own ex-wife, Blanche, sometime earlier. Felix agrees and urges Oscar not to be shy about letting him know if he gets on Oscar's nerves.
Within a week, the two men discover that they are incompatible. Felix is constantly cleaning the apartment and berating Oscar for being so sloppy. Felix is in no mood to have any fun, spending most of his time thinking about Frances. While at a tavern, Oscar tells Felix about recently meeting two English sisters who live upstairs in their building: Cecily and Gwendolyn Pigeon. Oscar telephones the girls and arranges a double date for the following evening.
After the sisters arrive, Oscar leaves the room to mix some drinks, hoping that uptight Felix will loosen up while alone with the two flirtatious girls. Instead, Felix talks incessantly about his wife and children, begins weeping and burns the meatloaf. The sisters are attracted to Felix's sensitivity and invite the two men to their apartment, but Felix refuses to go.
The following day, Oscar is still angry with Felix for ruining the date. He resorts to giving his friend the silent treatment and tormenting him by deliberately making the apartment as much of a mess as possible. Eventually, the tension escalates to an argument that results in Oscar demanding that Felix move out. Felix complies but leaves Oscar feeling guilty for having abandoned his friend who is still in need.
Oscar assembles the poker group to help find Felix, but they are unsuccessful. After returning to Oscar's apartment to play poker, Gwendolyn appears and informs Oscar that Felix has moved in with her and Cecily. Felix shows up and tells Oscar that he intends to get a place of his own. Felix and Oscar apologize to each other, realizing that a bit of each has rubbed off on the other, each better for the experience. Felix promises that next week, he will attend their usual Friday night poker game. The normally slovenly Oscar reminds his friends to beware of their footprints as the poker game continues.
The Odd Couple was originally produced for Broadway, and the original cast starred Art Carney as Felix and Walter Matthau as Oscar. At one point, Frank Sinatra (as Felix) and Jackie Gleason (as Oscar) were reportedly considered for the film version.[according to whom?]Dick Van Dyke and Tony Randall were also among those considered for the role of Felix, and Mickey Rooney and Jack Klugman (who later replaced Matthau as Oscar on Broadway) were among those considered to portray Oscar in the film. Oscar's poker playing friends in the film are Roy (David Sheiner), Vinnie (John Fiedler), Homer "Speed" Deegan (Larry Haines) and Murray the policeman (Herbert Edelman).
Much of the original script from the play was retained for the film, although the setting was expanded. For example, rather than take place entirely in Oscar's apartment, Neil Simon added some scenes that take place at various New York City locations (such as the scene at Shea Stadium in Queens).[citation needed]
One of the outdoor scenes in the film involves Felix shopping at Bohack, a Maspeth, Queens-based supermarket chain that was ubiquitous in the New York City area during the mid-20th century. The last Bohack supermarket closed in 1977.[6]
Theme music
The award-winning jazz instrumental theme was composed by Neal Hefti. It is used throughout the movie's sequel starring Lemmon and Matthau that was released 30 years later. It was also adapted for the 1970 TV series. The song also has seldom-heard lyrics, written by Sammy Cahn.[7]
Release
The film's copyright date in the opening credits mistakenly reads MCMXLVII (1947).[citation needed]
The Odd Couple garnered both critical acclaim and box-office success; it opened at New York's Radio City Music Hall on May 2, 1968, and ran there for a record-breaking 14 weeks, with a record gross of $3.1 million.[8] It grossed more than $44.5 million in the United States,[3] making it the third highest-grossing film of 1968.[9]The Odd Couple received universal acclaim from critics, earning a 98% "Fresh" rating on the review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 40 reviews, with a weighted average of 8/10.[10]
Reception
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3½ stars out of four, and praising the "universally good" performances, although he noted times when "the movie's Broadway origins are painfully evident, as when the players in the poker game are grouped around three sides of the table, but the 'downstage' side is always left bare."[11]
Renata Adler of The New York Times called the film "a very funny, professional adaptation" of the play, although "Mr. Lemmon sometimes overacts".[12]
Arthur D. Murphy of Variety called it an "excellent film", adding that the "teaming of Lemmon and Matthau has provided each with an outstanding comedy partner".[13]
Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times declared, "My not very fearless forecast is that 'The Odd Couple' will cause more people to do more laughing than any film you are likely to see all year."[14]
Stanley Eichelbaum of the San Francisco Examiner wrote that "Neil Simon, whose hit plays haven't always been served too well by Hollywood (remember the flat-footed film of Barefoot in the Park), did his own adaptation this time and there's been no appreciable loss of hilarity", also applauding Saks's direction and the performances of the cast.[15]
Oscar Madison: "I cannot stand little notes on my pillow! "We are all out of cornflakes, F.U." It took me three hours to figure out 'F.U.' was Felix Ungar." – Nominated[22]
Spin-offs
The film spawned a television series spin-off in 1970, also titled The Odd Couple, that ran for five seasons until 1975.[citation needed]
In 1998, almost three decades later, a sequel, The Odd Couple II, was released. It reunited Lemmon and Matthau, along with original writer Neil Simon. However, it was a critical and commercial failure, grossing less than half than its predecessor.[4]
^"Broadway's 'New Sites' Week; 8th For 'Rosemary' Sock $81,000; 'Odd' in 14th (Farewell), $225,000". Variety. August 7, 1968. p. 9.
^North American rentals were $18.5 million. See "Big Rental Films of 1968", Variety, 8 January 1969 p 15. Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.