The story of how It’s a Wonderful Life went from box office
failure to Christmas classic is well known.
When I was younger, though, I didn’t know why it seemed to show up
almost every day on one TV station or another during the month of
December. It wasn’t until years later
that I learned about things like the public domain and film rights. Since the studio had not renewed the rights
on this film anyone with a TV transmitter could show it as often as they liked
and not have to pay anything. It was
this constant presence in front of a large number of people that finally made it
popular. I actually never saw it until I
was an adult, despite how prevalent it was.
When I did I was amused by the fact that it’s not really a Christmas
movie at all; it’s just that the climax happens on Christmas Eve. It was still a heartwarming film from the
king of heartwarming films – Frank Capra.
First things first, I admit that calling this a “Gloria
Grahame movie” is a stretch. She has
only five quick scenes, and maybe a total of three or four minutes of screen
time. It was the first time she got
noticed, though. She plays Violet, the
sexy blond girl that likes George Bailey (Jimmy Stewart). Of course her character loses out to the
virtuous girl Mary (Donna Reed). I had
not seen this film for many years so I re-watched it to refresh my memory of
Grahame’s part in it. You may best
remember her character as the one that George loans money to so that she can go
to New York City . This is one of the things that comes to a
head for him since a man giving money to a “bad girl” is already tried and
convicted in the court of public opinion.
Like most people, when George Bailey is young he has big
dreams of leaving his small town and going out into the big, wide world and
having an adventure. His father runs
Bailey’s Housing and Loan, a scrappy alternative to the local bank in the town
of Bedford
Falls. The Baileys don’t ever really
make money from their business but they are able to provide a number of
citizens with the ability to own their first real homes and to get out from
under the thumb of the filthy rich, mean as a hornet, big man in town Henry
Potter (Lionel Barrymore). Resemblances
to Ebenezer Scrooge are completely intentional, especially since Barrymore was
known for voicing the character on radio shows.
Things seem to keep happening at the worst times for
George. Just as he is going to go off to
college his father dies. Potter, as a
member of the Board, is insisting that the Housing and Loan liquidate all
assets and close. George gives an
impassioned speech about what it means to the town. The board votes to keep it open…but only if
George takes his father’s place as the person running it. George’s Uncle Billy Bailey (Thomas Mitchell)
is as absent minded as they come and there’s no way they would trust him to
take over. George very reluctantly
agrees, and uses the money he had saved for his own education to send his
brother off to college instead.
George doesn’t want to get married, since that would tie him
down even more, but he soon finds himself walking down the aisle with
Mary. Just as they are going to leave on
their big honeymoon, the 1929 Wall
Street crash happens and there’s a run on all the
banks. George and Mary use the $2,000
they have for their honeymoon to hand out loans to the folks in town so that
they can get through the worst of the crisis.
They do this because Potter uses this opportunity to take over the
town’s bank and he wants to do the same thing to the Housing and Loan. George knows if Potter gets control of that
then the folks in Bedford
Falls will never get out
from under Potter’s thumb.
Years later it all comes to a head for George. Some very bad things happen to him and it
seems like he has just wasted his entire life always giving up his dreams and
it has all led to nothing but the worst.
This is when an Angel named Clarence (Henry Travers) is sent to try to
guide him through this. We actually see
George’s life in flashback as Clarence gets familiar with the man he needs to
help in order to earn his angel’s wings.
Capra re-used several of the actors from previous films of
his, including two of the three main characters. Both Lionel Barrymore and Jimmy Stewart had
been in Capra’s Best Picture winner You Can’t Take It With You (1938), and
Stewart worked with Capra again the next year in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939). Barrymore had to convince Stewart to take the
role of George Bailey, though.
Like many Hollywood actors
Stewart had served during WWII. Unlike
most of these actors, especially the “name” ones, Stewart didn’t stay behind
the lines entertaining troops; he piloted actual combat missions over Europe . He rose to
the rank of Colonel during the war and stayed active in the service after that,
finally retiring in 1959 as a Brigadier General – the highest rank any
performer ever achieved. It was not long
after the war had ended when they were looking to cast It’s a Wonderful Life. Stewart didn’t feel he was ready to transition
back to making films, especially since he had not made one for five years. Later in life he said he was glad he had
taken the role because this turned out to be his favorite of all the films he
made.
Donna Reed had been in almost 20 films starting in the early
1940s, and she had had sizeable roles in 1945 in The Picture of Dorian Gray and
They Were Expendable, but It’s a Wonderful Life was the first time she got to
co-star in a film. Lionel Barrymore was a legend, but he had
been in declining health. The reason
that his character of Mr. Potter is in a wheelchair in the film is not to try
to make him appear more out of the ordinary; it was a necessity since
Barrymore’s arthritic hips simply couldn’t support him anymore. By the way, he had won a Best Actor Oscar for
the 1931 film A Free Soul.
Of course, both Stewart and Capra had Oscars of their own –
Stewart for Best Actor in The Philadelphia Story (1940) and Capra three of them
for directing It Happened One Night (1934), Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936), and
You Can’t Take It With You (1938). Donna
Reed would later join them as an Oscar winner for her performance in From Here
to Eternity (1953).
And despite It’s a Wonderful Life being a box office
“failure” – meaning it did not make back its budget on its initial release – it
received five Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director, and
Best Actor. It lost in all three of
those categories to The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). That film had also opened only one week
before It’s a Wonderful Life and many feel this was a big factor in not much
notice being given to Capra’s film.
If like me you’ve somehow made it to adulthood and not seen
It’s a Wonderful Life, then you owe it to yourself to seek it out. It’s a little harder to find now that the
rights to it were bought back and it is under control of a studio again. Since this is the Christmas season it’s the
most traditional time to watch it. Don’t
just see it because it’s “expected”, though; see it because it actually is a
good movie. I highly recommend it.
Chip’s Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Christmas isn't complete without it.
ReplyDeleteI think everybody who celebrates Christmas has something they associate with it. For me it is the TV specials A Charlie Brown Christmas and The Grinch Who Stole Christmas. I've seen them most every year since I was very little.
DeleteNot gonna lie I cried at the end...
ReplyDeleteI think a lot of people probably have. You're in good company.
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