Friday, December 24, 2010

Every Time a Bell Rings

Here's a review of "It's a Wonderful Life I did for the school newspaper, which ended up not coming out because of all the power cuts. Hopefully I did this movie some justice.

Since it never snows here, and this year it’s not even pleasant out, I’ve really appreciated the other, less weather-dependant events that signal the arrival of Christmas. Setting up the plastic tree is entertaining, as is making sure every branch is bent to reach maximum realism. Christmas cookies are delicious. Who can help belting “Santa Claus is Coming to Town” at some point in December? Near the top of the list, though, come the Christmas movies, and reigning supreme among those has to be “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

Starring Donna Reed, and Jimmy Stewart’s in arguably his best and most famous role, “It’s a Wonderful Life” is about the life of a truly selfless man (Stewart) and a fateful night where his world seemingly comes crashing down and he contemplates suicide. Hopefully most have seen it, but if you haven’t, I’ll leave it at that.

Every character from Mr. Gower to Zuzu is well-played, but Jimmy Stewart goes from bliss to depression to insanity and back again in a convincing way that you can watch year after year and still be amazed by.

Even the bad guy is excellent. Mr. Potter is less iconic but more evil than Vader. It’s rare that any villain be portrayed as so thoroughly rotten, but Potter is one that you abhor more by the year.

And to cap it all off—it’s funny. Really funny. Normally humor has the shelf life of bread, but somehow a film made in 1946 makes me annually laugh out loud. I know exactly what they’re going to say, yet the situations (pool under the gym floor, anyone?), the endearing (seriously—Jimmy Stewart is incredible), and the lines themselves (“No man is a failure who has friends”), prove timeless.

However, it has a tendency to fall into one of those book cover judging deals—it’s in black and white (don’t bother with the colorized version), and the sound quality is less than stellar, but let me assure you that has nothing to do with the quality of the movie. Don’t write it off because it wasn’t ever converted into 3D.

The movie is not only entertaining but filled to the brim with moral values. Right from the beginning of the movie George Bailey is shown willing to sacrifice for the good of others, and the value placed on human life as a God-given gift has rarely been seen, if ever, in a movie this popular since then.

It’s really got everything: a loveable protagonist, a truly evil villain, romance, comedy, and a whole heap of wholesome. As far as movies go, and especially at Christmas, you can’t go wrong with “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

Merry Christmas!!

-Will


"Remember, George: no man is a failure who has friends."

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