Saturday Night Cinema: It’s a Wonderful Life

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Tonight’s Saturday Night cinema feature is the Christmas classic, Frank Capra’s It’s a Wonderful Life. You didn’t think I would let the Christmas holiday go by without a proper cinematic tribute, did you?

I don’t care how many times you’ve seen this holiday gem, it is always fresh, new, moving. It is the most well-loved of all Christmas movies.

Hollywood at her best.

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Disclose.tv‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ [1946 Frank Capra]

The NY Times had this to say in 1946:

Movie Review
It s a Wonderful Life (1946)
By BOSLEY CROWTHER
Published: December 23, 1946

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The late and beloved Dexter Fellows, who was a circus press agent for many years, had an interesting theory on the theatre which suited his stimulating trade. He held that the final curtain of every drama, no matter what, should benignly fall upon the whole cast sitting down to a turkey dinner and feeling fine. Mr. Fellows should be among us to see Frank Capra’s “It’s a Wonderful Life,” which opened on Saturday at the Globe Theatre He would find it very much to his taste.

For a turkey dinner, with Christmas trimmings, is precisely what’s cooking at the end of this quaint and engaging modern parable on virtue being its own reward. And a whole slew of cozy small-town characters who have gone through a lot in the past two hours are waiting around to eat it—or, at least, to watch James Stewart gobble it up. For it is really Mr. Stewart, who does most of the heavy suffering in this film, and it is he who, in the end, is most deserving of the white meat and the stuffing.

That is because Mr. Capra, back from the war, has resumed with a will his previously manifest penchant for portraying folks of simple, homely worth. And in this picture about a young fellow who wants to break away from his small-town life and responsibilities but is never able to do so because slowly they close in upon him, Mr. Capra has gone all out to show that it is really a family, friends and honest toil that make the “wonderful life.”

His hero is a personable fellow who wants to travel and do big things but ultimately finds himself running a building-and-loan association in a one-horse town, married and locked in constant struggle with the greedy old banker of the town. And when it finally looks as though the banker is about to drive him to ruin, he makes what appears a brash endeavor to take his own baffled life. Whereupon a heavenly messenger providentially intercedes and shows him, in fanciful fashion, what the town would have been like without him. The vision is so distressing that he returns to his lot with boundless joy — and is saved, also providentialy, by the financial assistance of his friends.

In composing this moralistic fable, Mr. Capra and his writers have tossed in a great abundance of colloquial incidents and emotional tangles of a mistful, humorous sort. The boyhood of his hero, the frolic at a high school dance, the clumsy pursuit of a courtship—all are shown in an entertaining way, despite the too frequent inclinations of every one to act juvenile and coy. And the heavier sections of the drama are managed in a tense, precipitate style.

As the hero, Mr. Stewart does a warmly appealing job, indicating that he has grown in spiritual stature as well as in talent during the years he was in the war. And Donna Reed is remarkably poised and gracious as his adoring sweet-heart and wife. Thomas Mitchell, Beulah Bondi, H. B. Warner and Samuel S. Hinds stand out among the group of assorted small-town characters who give the picture variety and verve. But Lionel Barrymore’s banker is almost a caricature of Scrooge, and Henry Travers’ “heavenly messenger” is a little too sticky for our taste.

Indeed, the weakness of this picture, from this reviewer’s point of view, is the sentimentality of it—its illusory concept of life. Mr. Capra’s nice people are charming, his small town is a quite beguiling place and his pattern for solving problems is most optimistic and facile. But somehow they all resemble theatrical attitudes rather than average realities. And Mr. Capra’s “turkey dinners” philosophy, while emotionally gratifying, doesn’t fill the hungry paunch.

IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE, screen play by Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett and Frank Capra, with additional scenes by Jo Swerling; directed and produced by Frank Capra for Liberty Films; released by RKO-Radio Pictures, Inc. At the Globe.
George Bailey . . . . . James Stewart
Mary Hatch . . . . . Donna Reed
Dr. Patter . . . . . Lionel Barrymore
Uncle Billy . . . . . Thomas Mitchell
Mrs. Bailey . . . . . Beulah Bondi
Ernie . . . . . Frank Faylen
Bert . . . . . Ward Bond
Clarence . . . . . Henry Travers
Mr. Gower . . . . . H. B. Warner
Violet . . . . . Gloria Grahame
Harry Bailey . . . . . Todd Karns
Ruth Dakin . . . . . Virginia Patton
Pa Bailey . . . . . Samuel S. Hinds
Cousin Millie . . . . . Mary Treen
Cousin Eustace . . . . . Charles Williams
Mrs. Hatch . . . . . Sara Edwards
Mr. Martini . . . . . Bill Edmunds
Annie . . . . . Lillian Randolph
Sam Wainwright . . . . . Frank Albertson
George, as a boy . . . . . Bobbie Anderson
Nick . . . . . Sheldon Leonard
Potter’s Bodyguard . . . . . Frank Hagney
Jane Bailey . . . . . Carol Coomes
Zuzu Bailey . . . . . Karolyn Grimes
Pete Bailey . . . . . Larry Simms
Tommy Bailey . . . . . Jimmy Hawkins

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EJO
EJO
8 years ago

Maybe all is not lost.
———-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnZfRh_7tzw

joe1429
joe1429
8 years ago
Reply to  EJO

Loved it… great!! Go TRUMP!!!!

EJO
EJO
8 years ago

Let’s yuk it up a bit.
———-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJecWvOTIT8

EJO
EJO
8 years ago

Santa Claus hates ISIS.
———-
Taking the ISIS! Maine family turns on controversial Christmas display featuring Santa ‘relieving himself’ on illuminated terror group lettering

* Neighbors called York County Sheriff’s Office about the display on Friday

* Couldn’t tell what was happening in the display outside the Limerick home

* Saw ISIS in bright lights and thought ‘ISIS sympathizer’ was behind display

* Homeowner agreed to rearrange the lights so anti-ISIS message was clear

* Sheriff William King Jr said that no law was broken by the homeowner

By EVAN BLEIER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED: 18:18 EST, 13 December 2015 | UPDATED: 19:12 EST, 13 December 2015

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3358648/Limerick-Maine-Christmas-display-shows-Santa-peeing-ISIS-lettering.html#ixzz3uGAetzA9

IB
IB
8 years ago

Frank Capra also directed the Prelude to War; Why We Fight….His classic comparison of the good world of Judeo-Christian values vs. dark evil world of tyranny helps people even today to understand just why we should fight.

conan_drum
conan_drum
8 years ago

I do not like Christmas movies except for A Christmas Carol

Numb3rTech
Numb3rTech
8 years ago
Reply to  conan_drum

Both of the National Lampoon’s “Christmas Vacation” movies are an excellent comedy diversion. “Holiday Inn” with Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire and Virginia Dale is a nice patriotic home-style Christmas movie as well. One of my favorite older Christmas movies is “It Happened on 5th Avenue”, starring Don DeFore, Ann Harding, Charlie Ruggles, Victor Moore and Gale Storm. It also has a patriotic home-style theme.

Memri Dotorg
Memri Dotorg
8 years ago

No spoiler alerts back in 1946 ? 🙂

Xavier
Xavier
8 years ago

Every time an Islamic savage gets sent to Hell, an angel gets his wings.

RCCA
RCCA
8 years ago

From sea to shining sea… Merry Christmas to all!

I'm gtttin' pissed
I'm gtttin' pissed
8 years ago

Miss Puerto Rico for President. If you use twitter, let her know she has no reason to apologize for telling the truth. Donald should invite her to his house, like Oblabber did to the hoax-bomber Clockmed.

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/gossip/puerto-rico-suspended-anti-muslim-rant-article-1.2472115

joe1429
joe1429
8 years ago

Thx pam… yes this movie will always be a classic!!!

knightsstrength
knightsstrength
6 years ago

Above link dead on YouTube

This one works
https://m.xmovies8.org/watch?v=Its_a_Wonderful_Life_1946

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