Today is the first day that Allison and I are going to be
providing you with the best of the best and the worst and worst-best Christmas
movie fare.
You’ll be here at A Fair Substitute for Heaven on Dec 1, 8, 14, 20, 26 and over at Allison's 4, 11, 17, 23, 29
Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. James 1:17
For me, the ultimate Christmas classic is a film that has
been appropriated by the season. Long in the public domain, a film that had not specifically been made for Christmas is a beacon of remembrance for many. One of hope, second chances, a Dickensian
flare for a visiting angel and a sweet, resonating love story. Indeed, its Dickensian tropes: from a small
village adorned with the Christmas emblems made popular in the Victorian age to
the snatching, creeping Scrooge-like Potter are easy for fans of the great
British author to see. Unfortunately,
unlike Scrooge’s tale, Potter is left without redemption (horrible old spider
that he is). But fear not, for
redemption is nigh and borne of sacrifice. Here, when George Bailey gives up
his dreams of traveling the world and shaking the dust of Bedford Falls off his
boots; when George and Mary disperse of their honeymoon money when there is a
raid on the bank, when George steps up to Mr Potter in the stead of his
absent-minded Uncle Billy who has lost the deposit.
I cannot even write of these moments without tearing up.
Zuzu's Petals
Hee-Haw
Buffalo Gals
the National Geographic Society
"George Bailey, I'll love you 'til the day I die..."
A love story not just between George Bailey and the
sweet-faced Mary Hatch (Donna Reed) but a love story between George and Mr.
Gower, the druggist overcome with grief at his son’s loss, and George and the memory of his father, George and Bedford Falls, the town he gives
up everything for, George and his Uncle Billy, George and his brother Harry
whom he rescues, sacrificing his hearing and risking his life . To wit,
it is also a love story between a community post-war and post-depression that
needs something to believe in. Some
optimism subversive to the long-stretching clutches of the wily Mr. Potter.
It’s a Wonderful Life advocates thanksgiving and redemption
and grace. But it also asserts a perfectly plotted narrative emblemizing the
web that we spin and the lives that we touch. For writers, this expert plotting and perfect characterization allow us to fall so deeply into Bedford Falls' spell that at the end, as George runs through the snowy Main Street unaccustomed to being treated as a stranger, so we, too, are surprised that our new friends are not embracing them. We know Nick Martini, we know Mary. We know George's mother. We know Annie the housekeeper. We know them all. We have seen them through George's eyes and subsequently have embraced them as he has.
It also is expert in symbolism and technique. Consider George's family business: helping families build the homes that will become the foundations of the Christmas hearth gatherings and traditions so brilliantly evoked in the film's iconic closing scene.
As a child I was taught that even those things not
specifically crafted with Christian resonance, if good and pure, could be yet
another emblem of the Maker’s craftsmanship and there is so much of the divine
in It’s A Wonderful Life. More than the hokey “Every time a bell rings…” line
that my brother Jared mocks every year; but ingrained in its stronger thematic
resonance.
Share redemption, sacrifice and grace. Harken back to a time when idealism reined
supreme and Capra-esque optimism patched up a nation late of War.
(and get all this goodness and light out of your system,
‘cause the Lifetime and Hallmark fare shall soon rear it’s wonderfully ugly
head! )
4 comments:
For me, THE moment in the movie that just kills me..."I don't care about plastics, or ground floors...oh, Mary! Mary!" on the phone. I can't even breathe through that scene.
So excited about this series!
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