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It's a Wonderful Life

It's a Wonderful Life

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: My all-time favorite!
Review: I love this movie and it's a Christmas tradition to watch it with as many of my five kids as I can get together. It has helped me through some pretty tough times.

As a young boy in the 50s and 60s I grew up watching old movies on television with my mother. Jimmy Stewart has always been my favorite actor, not in any small measure because of this movie. It was my mother's fondness for him that initially led me to this great discovery. Having my own roots in a small community of western Pennsylvania, only 60 miles from Jimmy's hometown, helped to cement my affinity for him as well. I'm such a big fan of both him and this work that a copy of an original poster for this film hangs in my living room.

One of my greatest regrets is that, despite my exposure to what were even then "old" movies during my youth, I hadn't yet seen "It's a Wonderful Life" when I had the opportunity of meeting both director Frank Capra AND actor Jimmy Stewart on separate occasions while in college. I would have liked to have told them how much the movie meant to me. (As if they hadn't heard that before!) I found great pleasure in later learning that both Capra and Stewart said of all their movies, this one was their favorite.

Moving and inspiring the film is a human drama that touches my funny bone and my innermost senses in ways few movies ever do. It's an all-American timeless classic with a message of personal struggle and hope. In all it's simplicity it is simply great entertainment while at the same time leaving us no doubt as to the essential truth of what's *really* important in life.

Yes it's a bit sappy, certainly sentimental. Yes it's in black and white (unless you happen to see the "colorized " version) and granted it's an "oldie," but if you don't like this movie I can only have pity for you.

We all matter. We all have purpose. Despite what we might think at times, it IS a wonderful life and we have much to be thankful for.

"Each man's life touches so many other lives. If he wasn't around, it would leave an awful hole." -- Clarence

At least that's the way we should all live and hope it shall be.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Should be called 'It's a Wonderful Movie'
Review: Nobody's poor who has friends. This is the moral of this movie, one of the happiest and best ever made. A story of looking at our lives, not at the bad, but the good. Of discovering how we have affected others.

Jimmy Stewart plays George Bailey, a resident of Bedford Falls, who doesn't realize that he has affected so many people's lives in good ways. He mostly concerns himself with the present, which at the time isn't good. He has run into debt problems with his father's Savings and Loans building and attempts suicide. It's up to an angel named Clarence to save George and convince him he's led a good life.

Throughout his life, George was always a thorn in the side of Mr. Potter (Lionel Barrymore), the owner of about everything in town except for the Bailey Loans building. George gave up going to college or around the world just so he could run the building. In this, he prevented Potter from taking over and being able to charge whatever rent he wanted and thus ripping off the people of Bedford Falls by having them live in rundown slums. But George's life was much more than that. If it weren't for him, the lives of his brother, the owner of a store (Who George worked for), of his wife and of about everyone in town would be very different.

It is indeed difficult to review a movie like this, what with thousands of words already said about it. While there was some sappiness in it, particulary the ending, there is nothing wrong with this movie. It can cheer you up because it makes us think about all the good things we have done. Than again, if we have lead a bad life like Mr. Potter, it won't make us too happy.

George Bailey may not have been as financially wealthy as Potter. But because he was friends with practically the whole town, he was very much wealthier. Okay, so in real life the whole town probably would not give George all their money just so he could be out of debt. But it certainly makes you think. Enjoy!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "I'm glad I know you, George Bailey."
Review: This is one of my all-time film favorites. I'm in great company on this. Beyond those who love and write about it here, as cited in many tributes and documentaries, it's Director Capra's and actor James Stewart's favorite, as well. IaWL can be summed up by it's essence: it's uplifting message of the extramundane, friendship, and the hopeful worth of the individual. No other film that I've seen can touch and rekindle the warmth I feel by this film's conclusion.

Frank Capra's classic easily transcends the decades since the 1940's and settles me as the viewer in the town of Bedford Falls, New York without complaint. It strengths as cinema...or as a piece of Americana...is its faceted and deeply layered approach to what seems like a simple story involving family, sacrifice, and despair. Nonetheless, It's A Wonderful Life's story, cast, and direction blend into something as beautiful and sentimental as snow falling on Christmas Eve--even to a native Southern Californian like myself.

"You've been given a great gift, George. A chance to see what the world would be like without you." It's A Wonderful Life in a nutshell. Should you hate Christmas, or never watched it on television or videotape, and have never seen the 1946 film, it concerns the trials of one George Bailey. A Bedford Falls native whose boyhood dreams of travel and adventure are seemingly crushed by a life of familial obligations. He's lived in his own world of self-sacrifice toward his younger brother, father, and the small close-knit community around him. George is an imperfect, but extraordinary man with a rising, latent bitterness toward his situation.

By the film's Christmas Eve reckoning, his final hopes come crashing down in potential financial ruin (through no fault of his own), leaving suicide as his idea for an solution to the predicament. Enter the guardian angel--second class--Clarence, who gives George a vivid look into the world as it might have been if he'd never been born. It is a story that draws us into a glancing, heavenly nightmare. George realizes the worth of his life and to those around him (painfully) and pleads to live again. And, climatically, Life (so to speak), realizes the worth of George Bailey, and rewards him.

It is a storyline that touches, at times wrenchingly, life's inequities, what-if's, and moments of sheer joy. George's all too apparent desires and emotions lay familiar as they are pretty universal. I think that is the film's not so subtle secret. Additionally, Mr. Capra's film works, in retrospect, because a great script has a tailor-made cast for its roles. The quintessential everyman role of George Bailey is brought to life by the quintessential common man actor, James Stewart.

Mr. Stewart's greatest gift has been his quality of the vernacular, his informal and but not simple manner. And many an actor has tried to achieve this in other movies, but it only a handful can bring it off (Jack Lemon would be another). As for George's love, Donna Reed brings old fashion warmth, grace, and strength to her part as Mary Hatch. The embodiment of the 'All-American Girl." Her Mary, though, is not without a sense of passion, romantic or otherwise. The perfect wife? Perhaps. For better or worse, she, and this role, laid the groundwork for this ideal for many generations with this portrayal.

The remaining cast is equally perfect. Could anyone else have played the great villain of the town's richest man, Mr. Potter (Capra's key idea and addition to the script), other than Lionel Barrrymore? His role is part caricature to be sure, but it breathes! He has life, malevolently so. and all too real power and menace. Henry Travers as Clarence the Angel, stumbles amiably to the heartfelt rhythm of the film. We should all have a guardian who tries so hard. Uncle Billy, played by Thomas Mitchell, poignantly identifies with family, fears of growing old, and our compassion for an irascible relative. The rest of a mighty cast of great characater actors, Gloria Grahame, Ward Bond, Frank Faylen, etc..., go on to complete and bring life to a part of cinema history.

Finally, but not lastly, Frank Capra's direction and production keeps a heartrending tale from veering to the maudlin. He does not linger on man's goodness or his failings, or on life's ups or downs. But, he does give hope and enlightenment. Capra bestows a magical sense of Heaven (and a little Hell) here on Earth that lasts the duration of the film, and then some. The everyday and the otherworldly. The creation of Bedford Falls as a real place on film, inhabited by real people, is no small feat. His bringing together by whatever means of cast, crew, and script are indelibly etched in many a memory, and the highlight of a great career.

For those who have seen it, who can forget the Charleston dance contest on the high school basketball floor so wonderfully and comically staged; the passionate kiss of George and Mary that comes at a point of romantic anguish and realization for George; or the crescendo and emotional impact that the final 12 minutes bring? After more than fifty years in release, and no matter how many times I see it, it still enthralls me. It is a superbly crafted film--though very Capraesque, I grant you. We're all better for it. Everything works: direction, cast, cinematography, editing, costumes, even corny singing. It seems to be about dreams that turn into nightmares, and nightmares that turn into blessings. George Bailey wins but also loses...and sacrifices, only to gain many fold. It's a Wonderful Life is a film that is greater than the sum of its parts--and again, we 're all better for it.

This DVD has a great transfer of the original B&W film. The extras of a couple of documentaries and the original trailer are a nice addition.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the greatest movies of all time.
Review: When I think of words to describe Frank Capra's masterpiece "It's a Wonderful Life," only one word comes to mind: greatness. Greatness in its storytelling, which embodies the traditions and values of an American era gone by... greatness in its ability to generate some of the most complex characters in movie history from the simplest of human themes... greatness in its sense of heartfelt emotion and true knowledge of what life is really all about. Here is a movie that merits multiple viewings with each new holiday season, leaving its mark on each new generation while giving those familiar with it another chance to experience the magic.

People are most often surprised by the history of the film, which opened to moderate business at the box office, yet failed to muster the excitement and audience embracement that modern viewers have so lovingly bestowed upon it. Due to the weather, many people remained in their homes, while many who ventured to the bistro billed the film as too depressing for the Christmas season. And so, like a snowflake in the winter breeze, Frank Capra's slice-of-life film came and went like most modern movies of today.

Perhaps if its copyright had been renewed, we may never have known the true heart of this magnificent film, which has since become a traditional part of the holidays for many who revere the film as a classic; to bill it as anything but such is an injustice. The film has earned its popularity through its virtue and heartfelt emotional core, telling a story that serves as a model for humankind as well as a striking portrait of some of our country's most darkest days.

The story, originally a short story in the form of a Christmas card which was purchased by RKO Pictures for ten thousand dollars, takes us to the small town of Bedford Falls, where life is simple and people are filled with high spirits despite their hardships. At the center of this is George Bailey, played by Jimmy Stewart in one of the towering screen performances of all time; George has lofty ambitions that include "seeing the world, building skyscrapers 1000 stories high," and "a bridge a mile long." His idealistic view of the outside world is constantly put on hold, as he struggles to upkeep his deceased father's building and loan company, which is in danger of going under.

It may not appear so at first, but as the movie progresses, we can see just how much George does for his fellow man. He keeps the building and loan going as an outlet for those who have little or nothing to begin a better life without having to turn to Henry Potter (Lionel Barrymore), "the richest and meanest man in the county" who sees fit to keep the citizens of Bedford Falls under his rule. But George will not allow it, and so, with the help of his newly-acquired wife, Mary (Donna Reed), and his business partner, his uncle Billy (Thomas Mitchell), he struggles to keep the town alive, ignoring his own dreams and aspirations for the greater good, never realizing the full impact he has on his fellow man until he is given a frightening glimpse of what may have been had he never been born at all, compliments of angel Clarence Oddbody, played by Henry Travers with real wit and acting ability.

Through all of this, George's life is shown in various lights, from the happiest moments a man could ever wish for, to the darkest depths of depression from which every man spends much of his life running from. This is why Capra's film succeeds so enormously: one minute we are in the murkiest recesses of life, as George searches frantically for a way out of his troubles. Through Capra's direction and Stewart's brilliant acting, much of this third act is infused with sheer terror that still manages to evoke chills, as he discovers what his absence would have meant to the people he met in his life. And then, after the realization that running from one's hardships provides no solace, he returns from his nightmare to discover his life in a completely different light, armed with the knowledge that "no man is a failure who has friends."

The overall film itself is a wonderful mosaic of American life at its most jubilant and its most downtrodden. As George grows up, from a small boy working in a drug store, to an ambitious college-bound teenager struck by love when he lays eyes on his future wife, we bear witness to some of the landmarks of our nation's history, from a Charleston contest at a high school dance, to the Great Depression and World War II. Each character is affected by these events, yet their upbeat demeanor in the face of these trying times magnificently captures the human resolve, and we come to care for all of them a great deal more.

And just as Capra is working his magic behind the camera, his wonderful and now-landmark cast works much of their own onscreen. Stewart's performance is one of history's most memorable, and will not soon be forgotten so long as the film remains in our hearts. Donna Reed evokes a warm and caring nature as Mary, sharing a terrific bond with Stewart that makes the marriage between their two characters affectionate and loving, not to mention totally convincing. Thomas Mitchell's eccentric and frantic Uncle Billy is supplied with heart, while each supporting actor offers humor and heartfelt emotion to the town's most notable citizens. Barrymore, too, plays the miserly Mr. Potter with supreme and delectable nastiness, one of Hollywood's most memorable villains.

Despite a less-than-favorable history, "It's a Wonderful Life" has reached its broad audience to find a home in everyone's hearts, with its wonderful storytelling, instantly likeable characters, and warm message about life. It takes risks in that it doesn't hide the hardships from view, but rather shows them in a most eerie and frightening manner, and this juxtaposition of gloom and happiness is the movie's biggest success. That, and its status as a great American film, a timeless classic which keeps us coming back for another slice of George Bailey's life each holiday season.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Re Discover The Magic
Review: I watched this movie today for the first time in two years. This is the best movie ever made in my opinion. It is especially great to watch during the Christmas season. If you own one movie on VHS or DVD, this is the one. My VHS tape is the 45th Anniversary edition. It includes the original trailer. The trailer does not do this film justice. If I had seen that trailer at the theater in 1946, I would have passed on this film. I miss the mulitple airings of Christmas past. If you have never seen this movie or have not seen it in a while, watch it this year.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One Of The Greatest American Films Of The 20th Century
Review: "It's A Wonderful Life" surely must rank as one of the finest American movies ever made. It is one of my favorite holiday movies during the Christmas season, and certainly the one with the best acting. Jimmy Stewart is absolutely incredible as George Bailey, whose unlikely encounter with an angel Clarence (Henry Travers) allows Bailey to see how he's helped so many of his neighbors. Essentially, this film is a warm-hearted version of Dickens' "A Christmas Carol", replete with much American optimism. It's also a subtle cinematic ode to friendship, family and faith. Aside from Travers, the supporting cast, including Donna Reed and Lionel Barrymore, is superb. Without a doubt it's a popular film during Christmas that ought to be required viewing throughout the year.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Simply the Best!
Review: I LOVE this movie! It is my favorite and there is simply no point in telling the story since I don't think there is one single person on the planet that hasn't seen it at least once. From beginning to end, this is the greatest movie ever made. Why? For the simple way it sends a powerful and important message. It has the message that we all must appreciate life in all its richness and fullness, with all the struggles and triumphs, with all the sadness and joy, life is always worth living for the love we give and the love we receive. Every time I see this movie it always reminds me that no matter what struggles I may be facing in my life, I should always think myself lucky and be thankful for the things I do have, the love of my family and friends which make me feel rich indeed.

This movie has it all, a talented cast, memorable scenes, great lines and a wonderful story. From beginning to end, this movie is sure to move you to laughter, it will make you think and it is guarantee to make you shed tears of sadness and at the end, tears of joy.

Don't just watch the televised version, get this on video to enjoy as many times as you want (without those annoying commercial interruptions) during the holiday season or at any other time of the year.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: As Honest A Performance As You Will Find
Review: It seems kind of pointless reviewing a film as well known and often-seen as It's A Wonderful Life, but I would like to throw in what I think makes this film so great: The performance of James Stewart. This film has become such a Holiday fixture I think it's easy to lose sight of just what he did in this film. It's an amazing performance, so full of honesty and emotion. It's perhaps one of the most real performances ever given on film, and it certainly stands the test of time. I've read the original story that this film was based on, and as good as it is, the film surpasses it. It's an excellent adaptation, fleshing out the characters more and adding so much more conflict and detail. The supporting cast is terrific, with such reliable actors as Lionel Barrymore, Beulah Bondi, Donna Reed, Thomas Mitchell, Gloria Grahame, Ward Bond, and of course, the wonderful Henry Travers. The story reminds us of the impact each of our lives has on those around us, an impact we might not even appreciate. And at a time like Christmas, when we think of family and friends, it's something we need to be reminded of.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "No man is a failure who has FRIENDS"
Review: One of the greatest single lines in any movie ever made, and a source of inspiration to me when times have been bad. Even today, when George opens Clarence's book and reads that line, it still gets me! A superb film that puts all of our lives in perspective, whether we are kings or paupers. Ah, what I wouldn't give for the chance to see what the world would be like without me, and what kind of impact I've made on the people in my life . . .

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Greatest Holiday Film Of All-Time!
Review: Frank Capra's "It's A Wondeful Life" is a holiday masterpiece. One to be enjoyed by all across the world! There are only a few films I can think of right now than manage to swell up the feeling of emotion that this film does. I think it's actually safe to say that nearly every single person has seen this movie at least once in their lifetime, and with that, I feel there is no need for me to go into detail about the plot. All I want to say is that, if there ever was a time for families to sit down and enjoy this film, now is the time. I've always come away with something whenever I've watched this film. It makes me think more about my family and loved-ones, and how at times I may avoid them, or say harsh things. "It's A Wonderful Life", after now, just over 50 years, still has the power to do that to me! If that alone is not enough to call this a great film, well, then there's James Stewart's performances. How at the time of release this film did not manage to sweep the Oscars is beyond. If Stewart doesn't get you to pull for him by the very end of the film, then I'm just the biggest fool walking around. You actually honestly start to care not only about him, but his family as well. If someone can tell me, they don't get a little misty at the end, when everyone comes to George Bailey's house with the money the town has collected, then you just have no heart. In this time we are living in right now, I honestly feel we need more film like this. Films that tell us to help each other out, stay close to your family and loved-ones, and always do the best YOU can do to make YOURSELF a better person. "It's A Wonderful Life" will always have a firm place in my heart and has someone once said, it's just not Christmas without this movie. God bless, and Happy Holidays to all!


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