The Seven Year Itch

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Pop-culture immortality in three....two....

"When something itches, my dear sir, the natural tendency is to scratch."

The 1955 Billy Wilder-directed film that marked the arguable high point of Marilyn Monroe's popularity - and a fair contender for the title of the most famous American film you've probably never seen.

Richard Sherman (Tom Ewell) is a wealthy book publisher who lives with his wife and young son in a large apartment in the Gramercy Park neighborhood of New York City. It gets so hot one summer that the wife and kid decide to take a vacation up to Maine, with Richard staying behind to hold down the fort.

Richard has been having disagreements with his wife lately, and feels repressed. Even so, he agrees (at first) not to smoke, drink alcohol, or eat meat for the duration of his time alone. But one evening, as he is returning home from dinner at a vegetarian restaurant, he slips on one of his son's roller skates, hits his head....and, in the form of the blonde, curvy Girl (guess who), Hilarity Ensues.

Actually based on a 1952 stage comedy in which Ewell also appeared - and which included an actual extramarital affair between Richard Sherman and The Girl, which was censored out in the film version.

Also is famous for popularizing the Marilyn Maneuver, which is discussed in more detail below.

The Seven Year Itch is the Trope Maker for:
Tropes used in The Seven Year Itch include:

Tom MacKenzie: What blonde in the kitchen?
Richard: Wouldn't you like to know! Maybe it's Marilyn Monroe!

  • Cloudcuckoolander: The waitress at the vegetarian restaurant Richard visits.
  • Contemptible Cover: Richard's job is to publish books with such covers — even classic literature, such as Little Women (retitled as The Secrets of a GIRLS DORMITORY).
  • Costume Porn: It's a real shame this movie didn't even get nominated for an Academy Award for costumes. Among William Travilla's many creations for Marilyn, particular standouts include an absurdly famous billowing off-white dress (see Marilyn Maneuver below) and a spangled gown with zigzagging tiger stripes. Meow (see also Hot Chick in a Snazzy Suit below).
  • Crazy Prepared: Tom Mackenzie's hayride with Helen Sherman. ("Even the horses are wearing blinkers.")
  • Cutting the Knot: There's a boarded-up trapdoor between Richard and the Girl's apartments. The Girl just uses the claw of a hammer to pull out the nails, and the trapdoor falls away.
  • Dumb Blonde: The Girl is arguably the Trope Codifier here, although even she shows some cleverness - particularly in her final line of the film.
  • Fake-Out Opening: The film opens with this narration:

Narrator: The island of Manhattan derives its name from its earliest inhabitants - the Manhattan Indians. They were a peaceful tribe, setting traps, fishing, hunting. And there was a custom among them. Every July when the heat and the humidity on the island became unbearable, they would send their wives and children away for the summer, up the river to the cooler highlands, or if they could afford it, to the seashore. The husbands of course, would remain behind on the steaming island to attend to business - setting traps, fishing, and hunting. Actually, our story has nothing whatsoever to do with Indians. It plays 500 years later. We only brought up the subject to show you that in all that time, nothing has changed.

  • The Fifties: Choose just about any frame of this film, and you're looking at it undiluted. Interestingly, being made almost smack in the middle of the decade, The Seven Year Itch appears to strike an aesthetic and ideological balance between the more "traditional" early years of the decade and the "hipness" of its later years.
  • Follow the Leader: At the time, very few movies opened with gimmicky main title sequences. Saul Bass supplied the zany credits sequence here, and its success with audiences pretty much made his career. And in the 1960s and '70s, it seemed like every movie comedy opened with a cartoonish sequence of some sort.
  • Foot Focus: The Girl uses her toes to retrieve her shoes at one point. She also mentions getting her big toe stuck in the faucet while taking a bath. She says she felt embarrassed when the plumber arrived not because her toe was stuck, but because she didn't have her toenails painted.
  • Getting Crap Past the Radar: A number of examples, including some where the radar apparently wasn't working at all!
  • Goofy Print Underwear: Richard is seen undressing, and we get a good look at his polka-dotted boxer shorts.
  • Henpecked Husband: Richard sees himself as one (even though he really isn't), and uses this characterization as a persecution complex to justify all his (mostly imagined) indiscretions.
  • Hot Chick in a Snazzy Suit: The Girl is briefly seen wearing a light pink blouse and slacks with a matching belt, and some white high-heeled sandals.
  • Hypocritical Humor: Near constantly.

Richard: Let me tell you, Helen loves me.
Tom MacKenzie Sure, she loves you!
Richard: She loves me because I'm sweet and gentle and worried, and nervous and shy and tender! (knocks him out)

Richard: I can explain everything: the stairs, the cinnamon toast, the blonde in the kitchen!
Tom Mackenzie: Wait! Wait a minute, Dicky-boy! What blonde in the kitchen?

  • Sexy Secretary: Miss Morris.
  • Shout-Out: One of Richard's Imagine Spots spoofs the famous beach scene from From Here to Eternity.
  • Smoking Is Cool: Subverted at first, when Richard mentions that one of his doctors has ordered him not to smoke during periods of hot weather, and he locks his cigarettes away in a table drawer. But after the Girl shows up and (inadvertently) encourages him to rebel, he unlocks the drawer and helps himself to a cigarette - and suffers no ill effects from it.
  • Spiritual Successors: Somewhat surprisingly, this film has yet to be remade for modern-day cinematic audiences (an attempted remake in the 1980s came to nothing after Al Pacino turned down the Richard Sherman role; meanwhile, it was remade as a TV movie in Germany no less than twice, and an unidentified project called Seven Year Switch is supposedly in development). However, its basic themes have inspired quite a few films in its wake, including 1984's The Woman In Red (which even paid tribute to the Marilyn Maneuver scene) and 1999's Best Picture Oscar winner American Beauty (which took the basic theme, made it even kinkier, and wrapped it up with a Downer Ending).
  • This Loser Is You: Richard, arguably.
  • What You Are in the Dark: Comedic variant, as Richard, in one of his awkward monologues, muses that "Something happens to this town in the summer...." and then elaborates a bit by describing all the mischief that "summer bachelors" in New York get into when their families are gone and nobody knows what they're up to.
  • Woman in White: Well, who do you think?