IMDb RATING
6.3/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
An adman attempts to rebuild his shattered life after suffering a nervous breakdown.An adman attempts to rebuild his shattered life after suffering a nervous breakdown.An adman attempts to rebuild his shattered life after suffering a nervous breakdown.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations total
Carol Eve Rossen
- Gloria Anderson
- (as Carol Rossen)
E.J. André
- Uncle Joe
- (as E.J. Andre)
Donna Anderson
- Girl in Motel
- (uncredited)
Brian Andrews
- Child
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.33.5K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
gets pretty dark & heavy
Some pretty big names, right at, near, or just past their peaks... kazan, douglas, dunaway, kerr, cronyn. Ed anderson is an ad man. (the irony of the "clean" cigarette campaign.) he has a midlife crisis. And of course, we flash back to what brought him to this point. Everyone wants to know what really caused it... the doctors, the therapists, coworkers, his wife. At the center of all this is gwen, the office "assistant", who doesn't have any clear duties. And now eddie wants to take care of his father, who has dementia. It's a psychological-thinker film. Izzokay. Moves pretty slowly. And gets pretty heavy. Lots of yelling. It's all well done, but i can understand why people thought it was such a downer. And so long. Keep an eye out for harold gould.. he was "miles" on golden girls. Written and directed by elia kazan. According to the trivia section, this kind of became his swan song.
Arrange To See, The Arrangement
Just resaw this movie after 36 years. All I could remember from the first time I saw this film at age 11 was the car crash. Anyhow, outstanding acting by all involved. However, the movie is stolen by the powerful and emotional performance of Faye Dunaway. Miss Dunaway is stunning, both physically and emotionally. She grits her teeth and gives one of her most intense and raw performances. The film however, has a sad and depressing flip to it; the American Dream turned into a nightmare. Made in the last 1960s, to most young viewers this Elia Kazan masterpiece probably seems a weird and strange ride. However, for children of the 60s, this movie captures the "Nature of the Beast" which was 1969.
The Arrangement is outstanding.
The Arrangement is outstanding.
jumbled self-indulgent mess
Eddie Anderson (Kirk Douglas) is a successful ad-man who seems to have everything. He has his big home, his housekeeper, his well manicured garden, and his beautiful family. His latest ad is selling cigarettes. For some reason, he deliberately crashes into a truck and nearly dies. His marriage to Florence (Deborah Kerr) is passionless and he's having a workplace affair with Gwen (Faye Dunaway). His midlife crisis has turned into full-blown depression and psychological breakdown.
I like the start but I don't like the unnecessary flashbacks. This is written and directed by Hollywood legend Elia Kazan adapted from his book. Somebody should have gotten in there to give him a second opinion. I like the character study in its central premise but there is a jumbled mess all around it. The acting is overwrought. It's way too melodramatic in a bad way. The cast is top notch. I'm sure that Kazan has a stuffed rolodex. This would be better as a simpler story telling and character study. The opening is great and it actually explained his life without explaining anything. One already gets a sense of him. The movie only really needs Faye Dunaway to be introduced and their love affair. This is a jumbled mess.
The second half has fewer flashbacks and that helps. It's less of a mess but I still don't like it. Part of that is my dislike of Eddie. It would be more compelling if it's not about choosing between Gwen and Florence. I would like something deeper. It becomes a melodrama. It's a scenes from a marriage and I don't care about this marriage. The father suggests something different. The movie goes on for too long. This is a long, rambling grind.
I like the start but I don't like the unnecessary flashbacks. This is written and directed by Hollywood legend Elia Kazan adapted from his book. Somebody should have gotten in there to give him a second opinion. I like the character study in its central premise but there is a jumbled mess all around it. The acting is overwrought. It's way too melodramatic in a bad way. The cast is top notch. I'm sure that Kazan has a stuffed rolodex. This would be better as a simpler story telling and character study. The opening is great and it actually explained his life without explaining anything. One already gets a sense of him. The movie only really needs Faye Dunaway to be introduced and their love affair. This is a jumbled mess.
The second half has fewer flashbacks and that helps. It's less of a mess but I still don't like it. Part of that is my dislike of Eddie. It would be more compelling if it's not about choosing between Gwen and Florence. I would like something deeper. It becomes a melodrama. It's a scenes from a marriage and I don't care about this marriage. The father suggests something different. The movie goes on for too long. This is a long, rambling grind.
A sorrowfully neglected cinematic achievement
In recent years I have come to reevaluate most of Elia Kazan´s films. "A Streetcar Named Desire" (1951) looks more and more the stagebound it is and belongs rather to its actors than to its director. "On the Waterfront" first of all is an elaborated excuse for informing (something Kazan had done some years earlier in front of the HUAC). "America, America" (1963) is the sort of tale immigrants who have made it tend to tell at family gatherings over and over again. On the other hand "Panic in the Streets" (1950) now emerges as a powerful thriller about paranoia. "The Visitors" (1972) - more or less a home movie - is a painfully depiction of America´s guilt with regard to the Vietnam War and as such much ahead of its time (most certainly much ahead of Brian De Palma´s "Casualties of War" (1988), that tells are rather similar story). The most astonishing film being "The Arrangement" (1969), a film that has been dismissed that often as a downright bomb that this verdict was taken for granted for a very long time. Well, it´s high time for a change.
"The Arrangement" deals with an advertising executive´s alienation from his job, his family, his world and even from himself. This Eddie Anderson is one of Kirk Douglas´s most touching and least mannered performances. He manages to keep the audience interested in a guy who is lost in almost every sense of the word. A gripping psychodrama, a film for adults and therefore out of place even at a time when traditional Hollywood was blown away by America´s very own New Wave. "The Arrangement" may at times annoy you, but it won´t insult your intelligence for even that long as a second. Cudos to the director, Kirk Douglas and both Richard Boone and Deborah Kerr who gave two performances to crown their already sterling careers. Faye Dunaway, by the way, has never before and never since been that erotic on screen.
"The Arrangement" deals with an advertising executive´s alienation from his job, his family, his world and even from himself. This Eddie Anderson is one of Kirk Douglas´s most touching and least mannered performances. He manages to keep the audience interested in a guy who is lost in almost every sense of the word. A gripping psychodrama, a film for adults and therefore out of place even at a time when traditional Hollywood was blown away by America´s very own New Wave. "The Arrangement" may at times annoy you, but it won´t insult your intelligence for even that long as a second. Cudos to the director, Kirk Douglas and both Richard Boone and Deborah Kerr who gave two performances to crown their already sterling careers. Faye Dunaway, by the way, has never before and never since been that erotic on screen.
Gadj goes nutzoid
Elia Kazan's 1969 midlife-crisis epic is an x-ray of American manhood gone cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs. Kirk Douglas, icon of tortured machismo, plays Eddie Anderson, son of a tyrannical Greek merchant (Richard Boone) turned Madison Avenue sell-out. He sleeps in childlike separate beds with his wife (Deborah Kerr), who looks and acts more like his mother. He's obsessed with the one woman (Faye Dunaway) who looks at his barbered, Lavoris'd self and sees the Man He Could've Been. The sixties satire of Organization Man is stock, the bombast beats thick and hard, and, as per usual, Kazan can't resist the Big Moments that are thoroughbred Hollywood hokum. But it's impossible to deny that this is as anguishedly personal as any of Kazan's movies--and the machete hacking through the brush that cleared the way for Cassavetes, Scorsese and Ferrara. With its mod, PETULIA-style sets, balletic editing and penchant for stylized tricks, it's also the most goofily cinematic of Kazan's pictures--a Sam Fuller whirligig turned into a slick, upscale thirty-second spot.
Did you know
- TriviaCritics were overwhelmingly negative when the film came out, and it was the consensus that Elia Kazan should never have filmed his own best-selling novel, which was panned by most literary critics as trash when it was published in 1967. It was widely known that the lead role had been turned down by Marlon Brando, who had garnered three Academy Award nominations and was awarded one Oscar under Kazan's direction at the beginning of his film career and was the heart and soul of some of Kazan's best work as a movie director. By the late 1960s, after a string of flops, most critics felt Brando was through as a movie star and that he desperately needed Kazan to turn his career around, both as an artist and as a box-office star. When the film came out, Kirk Douglas' lead performance was roundly panned, and most critics felt that even Brando at his best couldn't save what was, in essence, a melodramatic potboiler. The failure of "The Arrangement" was the end of Kazan's own career as an A-list director.
- GoofsWhen Eddie's father eats the piece of white bread, the number of bites and placement of the bread on the tray or his belly changes between shots.
- Crazy creditsExcept for the title, company logo and "A Film Written and Directed by Elia Kazan," all the remaining credits are at the end, which was still uncommon in those days.
- ConnectionsEdited into Un Américain nommé Kazan (2018)
- How long is The Arrangement?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $9,536
- Runtime
- 2h 5m(125 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content






