Posted on 12/23/2004 3:19:55 PM PST by pissant
That super-hot kiss between Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed. The Charleston contest, and the retractable dance floor with a pool underneath. Hee-haw, Sam Wainwright! Clarence the unlikely guardian angel. "I want to live again!"
And of course the famous line uttered by little Zuzu: "Teacher says every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings."
Courtesy photo Jimmy Stewart overcomes thoughts of suicide and decides that indeed, It's a Wonderful Life. Starring with him in the 1940s classic are Donna Reed, Larry Simms, Carol Coomes and Jimmy Hawkins. Those are just some of the things we love about Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life. The film did only so-so business in the winter of 1946-47 but, thanks to countless TV showings in later decades, it became a bona-fide holiday classic.
Dark moment Although it's a dark moment a man contemplating suicide on Christmas Eve that sets the story in motion, the film has a happy, if not typically Hollywood, ending. (The audience never does find out if mean old Mr. Potter gets what's coming to him.)
Jimmy Stewart's favorite of all his movies (Capra's favorite of his own films, too) turns up on Christmas night on NBC. Here, just for the occasion, are a few behind-the-scenes tidbits to put you in a Wonderful mood.
The basic story came to author/historian Philip Van Doren Stern while shaving one morning. A few years later Stern printed up his short story and sent it out as Christmas cards.
Stewart or Fonda Capra wanted either Jimmy Stewart or Henry Fonda for the George Bailey role. As it happened Stewart, just back from World War II, was staying at Fonda's place when he signed on.
H.B. Warner, who played Mr. Gower, young George's druggist boss, had portrayed Christ 20 years earlier in Cecil B. De Mille's King of Kings, and as a result was usually offered only dignified roles. He was delighted to be cast as a "proper drunk" in this movie. Warner apparently believed in Method acting; with Capra's blessing he started drinking early the day he was to box George's bad ear.
The Bedford Falls set was reputed to be one of the longest ever made for an American movie at the time: three city blocks over four acres, including a tree-lined median and 75 building fronts. The trees were real 20 full-grown oaks were transplanted. The Christmas Eve snowstorm required spraying 50 tons of white plaster on the trees, plus 250 tons for snow banks. The snowstorm was shot in June 1946. The first day the temperature was in the 90s by noon, but this white stuff was unmeltable.
Early on in filming, Capra wasn't crazy about how Lionel Barrymore, as Mr. Potter, looked. He didn't want audiences to see Barrymore and think of the kindly curmudgeons he'd played before. Capra gave makeup people a copy of Grant Wood's famous American Gothic painting and told them he wanted Barrymore to look something like that. A skullcap and makeup resulted in the Potter we know and hate today.
It's a Wonderful Life was supposed to have premiered in January 1947 but, at the last minute its release was moved up to Christmas week 1946. Another good thing (the thinking went) about a December release was that the film might coast to Academy Award wins, given the field that year.
Modest hit So much for best-laid plans: Wonderful was only a modest hit; it certainly didn't meet expectations. Oscarwise, Capra's movie won nothing at all, even though it had been nominated for best picture, actor and director. (The Best Years of Our Lives nabbed each of those.)
What about George? Was his really a wonderful life? "In the end he is still stuck in Bedford Falls," Frank Capra Jr. told the Los Angeles Times in 2003. "He's still got Mr. Potter to contend with. But he has his family, and he has his friends. How can that not appeal to everyone?"
Unlucky break, running against Best Years of Our Lives, a great picture.
By the way, a few years ago I took a poll of all my classes (perhaps 110 college students) as to their favorite Christmas movie, and "Christmas Story" came in #1 (probably 55%) with "Christmas Vacation" #2 (about 40%) and all the other movies somewhere totaling 5%.
We love to watch The Bishop's Wife (the ORIGINAL with David Niven and Cary Grant) on Christmas Eve.
Love that movie!
My mom says that she and my dad saw the film while they were dating. I'd not heard of the
film until it started to appear on local TV (I've heard this was due to some legal rights
that the film-owners allowed to lapse).
First film that ever made me cry as an adult.
This calls for a sequel, it will involve a lot more action, car chases, Mr. Potter will be a gangsta leader and little Zuza will be a goth teenager with sarcastic lines.
Wow, forgot about "The Bishop's Wife." That was a good one. Wasn't Loretta Young the aforementioned wife? I am among the small detested minority that does not like "It's A Wonderful Life." Seems to me that movie only became a "classic" sometime in the 1980s when TBS began running it endlessly around Thanksgiving.
If you must go vintage, producers, put on some oldie Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers films. At least, these will keep the movie viewing public awake and munching popcorn in time to the music.
Leni
Thanks for the post!
Don't forget the flying, killer robots, the evil, global computer network, and the slow-motion, techno-music montages...
"I assume by "second best" Christmas movie you mean behind Chevy Chase's "Christmas Vacation,""
Nope, the 1951 A Christmas Carol is my all time fav.
Don't forget the flying, killer robots, the evil, global computer network, and the slow-motion, techno-music montages...
I'm imagining a Matrix-ized version of "It's a Wonderful Life", and it's almost too weird to contemplate.
Capra also was a prop coordinator for the Our Gang series before he began to direct his own stuff.
What is remarkable about his pictures is that even the most seemingly insignificant characters would end up getting a momentary spotlight.
I concur.
It's a Wonderful Life is by far one of the greatest Christmas movies of all time,
Today it seems as if the movies are overly dramatic or overly violent. *sigh*
Mr. Roberts. Gulag 17. Operation Petticoat. The Thin Man. Anything with John Wayne. Hmmmm...Do I detect a certain militaristic bent to my movie watching?
And yes, I realize I am missing VERY good movies, these are the ones that jumped to the front of my tired old brain!
Did you know that in the Charleston scene where the gym floor opens up to the pool below, the buy who pushed the button was Alphalfa in the Little Rascals.
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