
Frank Capra was an American director peculiarly associated with
the American Dream. Indeed, some of his work has been labelled as Capra-corn,
which is how people at the time saw his work. However, as Brian Neve
writes,"this image may have distracted audiences from the cutting edges of his
1930's films" (1). It's a Wonderful Life is a film that will always be
associated with yuletide - you would certainly consider it as a Christmas film
if you had only ever seen the ending before. To put it in this light makes it
seem trivial and frivolous. However, one could very well argue that it portrays
a very bleak picture of certain aspects of American life. The two opposing
representations of the American Dream in the film are those of instant
gratification and the family.
It should not be surprising that
throughout his films, Capra was so concerned with the dream. Hughes writes that
"Capra's... autobiography.., suggests... that Capra was more servant than
manipulator of the American Dream, for the symbols and values of that dream
first moulded his aspirations, then found expression in his films" (2). Hughes
goes on to add that Capra created films based on "the classic American success
story". Capra's own life was such a story: he came to America at the age of six
from the Southern Italian town of Palermo. He was determined to be a complete
American, and become successful on American grounds. Using his intelligence and
wit, he was able to go up through promotion from the working class section of
the film industry. The American government recognised him during the Second
World War, when it appointed him to make the 'Why We Fight' series of films.
Capra wrote this for one of them, saying that Americans fought for their country
and an idea:
(1) Film and Politics p.50
(2) Hughes
p.69
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"The idea bigger than the country - without the idea the country
might have remained only a wilderness, without the country the idea might have
remained only a dream" (3). The suggestion is that the American Dream had
already been achieved.
Yet this is not reflected in It's a Wonderful
Life, the story of a man who almost commits suicide because he cannot fulfil his
version of the dream. Brian Neve goes as far as to compare the film with Death
of a Salesman, Miller's bleak play. Although this movie has become very much
part of American culture, the audience stayed away when it opened in 1946.
Perhaps it was not a film they wanted to see after a successful war. The film
reflects back on the thirties, a miserable time for many American people, when
bank runs caused real hardship. It may be that the audience was confused: this
was not a traditional Capra motion picture. Neve covers Mr.Deeds Goes to Town
and Mr.Smith Goes to Washington very well in his discussion of Capra and
Populism. The heroes in those two films came from towns like Bedford Falls, and
stood up to the elitist and monopolistic forces in the corrupt city. George
Bailey, on the other hand, is characterized by his failure to leave the small
town, however much he may want to. It is made very clear that, if anything,
George would rather join the elite hated so much by the Populists. Capra may
have recognised that with the arrival of New Deal and war, that Populism was
dead, since a large, encroaching federal government could never recede. Big
government had overtaken the little man irrevocably.
Perhaps Capra did
not totally give up the themes of his earlier films. A clue can be gathered from
the rich imagery of It's a Wonderful Life. Bert the policeman holds a newspaper
in his hand at one point, and the headline of that paper says "Smith wins
nomination". Could this be the Jefferson Smith of Capra's 1939 film? The opening
titles may
(3) Film and Politics p.49
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have also confused audiences, for with its depictions of
Christmas scenes, including a merry Santa, and its upbeat music, it seems to
suggest that this will be a festive film. Yet immediately, this is countered by
the plea of Mr.Gower for God to save George's life. Any hint of Chistmas is
reserved for the very last part of the film.
It's a Wonderful Life
reveals the American Dream to be the paradox that it really is. How can you
combine instant gratification with the ideal picture of American family life?
George Bailey obviously cannot. He has his own dream: "I'm shaking the dust of
this crummy little town off my feet, and I'm gonna see the world!" The music
that runs throughout the film is the song Buffalo Girls. There is great
repetition of one line:"And dance by the light of the moon." The imagery of the
moon is very important, for it represents George's own American dream. He offers
to lasso it down for Mary Hatch (Donna Reed), but later in the film he realises
that he could not do it for himself. He has done it for Mary however, for her
dream does come true. They make wishes when they throw stones at the house that
will later become their home, 320 Sycamore. Mary refuses to reveal her wish in
case it will not come true. George blurts his out, and so he never realises
it.
Mary could be seen as George's first saviour. After all, the name
'Mary' has fairly obvious religious connotations. Capra does juxtapose two
scenes to encourage this reading. When George and Mary meet at the graduation
party, they fall in the swimming pool underneath the artificial floor, and they
frolic in the water with a spotlight over them. When Clarence, George's guardian
angel, jumps in the falls to `save' him, both are again bathed in light from a
torch. The spotlight and the torch may very well represent the 'feminine' moon.
It is at one of George's moments of doubt that Capra uses a voice-over to remind
us of what he had said in the past. In the same scene, the room is filled with
moonlight as Mary
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announces that she is pregnant.
Capra employs other
juxtapositions to define his hero. George is strongly contrasted with Sam
Wainwright, his successful school friend. Sam has left Bedford Falls and has
embarked on a lucrative career in industry. He goes on trips to Europe, and
always has a new woman on his arm. That George would like to be more like his
friend is revealed when he kicks his car door in frustration after a visit by
Sam to Bailey Park. He becomes so vulnerable that he almost gives into
temptation when Potter offers him a job. This is the same Potter whom a heavenly
voice condemned as "the meanest man in the county." Potter also defines George
by way of contrast, for he is a monster of capitalism.
The American
audience may not have liked such a portrayal of someone who has arguably
achieved what they would all love to achieve. He is presented as a "warped,
frustrated old man" (in George's terms), who cannot bear that others have got
something material that he has not. Therefore, throughout the film, Potter tries
to possess or destroy Peter Bailey's life work, the Building and Loan. George
admires his father's character (if not his business sense), and has Peter's
portrait in his office and at home. The only portrait in Potter's office is one
of himself, revealing him to be a very egotistical man. This is continued later
when George is seen before a picture of Lincoln at home, whereas Potter has
imported a very sombre black bust of Napoleon into his office; these two very
different icons reflect the contrasting characters of the two men.
It's
a Wonderful Life is a great technical achievement on Capra's behalf. He only has
to use the whistle of a train to let us know what George is thinking. Clarence's
character is summed up by the sweet rendition of Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star -
perhaps an example of Capra-corn, but effective nevertheless. There is something
new to see every time you watch the film: it may be the way that Potter has put
a very
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low chair into his office, so that all that come to see him,
even tall Jimmy Stewart, are smaller than him. Or it could be Mary's inventive
way of cooking a chicken on their marriage night (using a gramophone). There are
faults though: apparently George can effect the weather, for it stops snowing as
soon as Clarence shows him what life would be like if he had not been born. How
could he have stopped his brother being buried on the future site of Bailey Park
at the age of twelve? It is Mary who finally saves George, by getting the
"rabble" to rally round him. Her dream of the perfect family home finally wins
out, when George realises how much his many children and his decrepit house mean
to him. He can only survive by sacrificing his dream, which cannot fit in with
Mary's. This film reveals that the American Dream is not a constant: it is a
paradox, because it means different things to different people.
Kevin Mahoney
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Bibliography
Film and Politics in America: A Social Tradition by Brian
Neve.
The Evaluation of Film as Evidence by William Hughes in The
Historian and Film ed. by Paul Smith
Cinema, Politics and Society in America edited by Philip Davies
and Brian Neve.