It's a Wonderful Life (1946) Movie REACTION!

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  • Опубликовано: 12 дек 2022
  • (RE-UPLOADED)
    For Film Friday #55, Madison watches "It's a Wonderful Life" for the first time.
    #itsawonderfullife #jimmystewart
    Become a channel member: ruclips.net/channel/UCCRO...
    Become a patron: / madisonkthames
    Website: madisonthames.com
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    Twitter: @madisonkthames
    Facebook: @madisonkthames
    Edited by: @creativeoliverx
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Комментарии • 373

  • @randomtryst5487
    @randomtryst5487 Год назад +84

    I think George didn't realise he'd had a guardian angel with him almost his whole life in the form of his chilldhood sweetheart and when he married her he didn't know how lucky he was. She was always there for him, bought the dilapidated house as a surprise and then worked hard to make it a cosy home. She gave up her honeymoon in an instant to help George out as well as the people who needed money to keep them going for a week. On top of all that she gave him four wonderful kids whilst running the home on a shoestring. She's guaranteed to an Angel First Class, no doubt about it. :)

    • @thomastimlin1724
      @thomastimlin1724 Год назад +2

      So true...

    • @unclebounce1495
      @unclebounce1495 Год назад +5

      ya, nah. that's just called a good wife. don't need to be an angel to be a good person; sort of the point of the whole movie.

    • @josephpaul4548
      @josephpaul4548 7 месяцев назад +3

      If she liked coconut, she'd be the perfect wife.

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 7 месяцев назад +1

      I am an angel and my hero is
      Sexy
      Cla❤rence

    • @EricVoegelin
      @EricVoegelin 7 месяцев назад +3

      Mary is George’s guardian angel. Viz the three Joan of Arc shots after the Pharmacist hits him, after he learns his father has had a stroke, when the bank run begins.

  • @kschneyer
    @kschneyer Год назад +77

    Not a lot of people comment on what a smashing, hit-out-of-the-park job the actors did in playing their alternative selves in the what-if sequence. Mary, Ma Bailey, Ernie, Nick, Violet were all so remarkably different in tone, affect, demeanor, etc. that they might as well have been different people. Mary and Ma Bailey in particular were almost impossible to recognize.

    • @leonardshevlin7260
      @leonardshevlin7260 Год назад +6

      Without George, Ma had no husband, no children, no grandchildren and her brother-in-law was put away.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

    • @lauraw2526
      @lauraw2526 Год назад +6

      @@leonardshevlin7260 Yeah, she really got the worst of it :(

    • @kschneyer
      @kschneyer Год назад +5

      @@timd.3837 The line is, “He’s been in the insane asylum ever since he lost his business.“ I took this to mean that, as you say, Potter, shut down the B, & L, after Peter Bailey’s death, and the strain of losing his brother and his livelihood in the same moment pushed Billy (who was never strong) over the edge.

  • @NPCRR
    @NPCRR Год назад +39

    I'll be 72 in a couple of weeks, and I must say, it truly touches my heart to see young people such as yourself discovering and being moved by these classic films for the first time. These films represent America when it was at its height, during The Greatest Generation. While I wasn't part of that generation, my father was, and he taught me timeless values of personal honor, integrity, duty, compassion, sacrifice, and love of country. George Baily embodied these values (scorned today as oft as not). Kudos to you Madison for being able to feel them in a world circling the drain of narcissism, selfishness, and "influencers" (whatever the hell that means). I enjoy your reviews - especially of classic films. God Bless!!

  • @sharkdentures3247
    @sharkdentures3247 Год назад +71

    That ending makes me tear up Every. Single. Time.
    "Every man on that transport died! Harry wasn't there to save them because you weren't there to save Harry!"
    What a simple & perfect way to say we are ALL tiny pebbles thrown into a lake. Even though all we see is the brief, TINY splash we make, and it might feel irrelevant at times, we send unseen ripples ever outward that can have an impact in ways we will never know.
    EVERY life is precious. Merry Christmas.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,..............

    • @cosmicman621
      @cosmicman621 Год назад +2

      Amen Brother..Amen 🐝🌈💫

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 7 месяцев назад +2

      Tiny Pebbles! - but what about BamBam?😮

    • @BradyQuartermaine
      @BradyQuartermaine 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Steve-gx9ot😊😅😂

    • @woverby1963
      @woverby1963 6 месяцев назад +1

      Beautifully said!

  • @stevejoshua9536
    @stevejoshua9536 Год назад +30

    That scene when George is sitting at the bar at his wit's end, desperately asking God for help . . . I was at that point at one time in my life.
    The circumstances leading up to it weren't the same, but the intensity of my desperation perfectly matched George's desperation.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 7 месяцев назад +2

      Was Clarence Oddbody really 293 years old?
      Looked good for His age!@

    • @annegogh
      @annegogh 7 месяцев назад +6

      I hope all those feelings are now far behind you. So glad you're here, fellow human being.

  • @conureron3792
    @conureron3792 Год назад +82

    Best Christmas movie. Causes me to tear up every time

    • @fynnthefox9078
      @fynnthefox9078 Год назад +4

      Been telling my friend to see this movie with his grandpa. They need it.

  • @DeusExMachina50
    @DeusExMachina50 Год назад +72

    It's a Wonderful Life is my top Christmas movie, but A Christmas Carol (1951) starring Alastair Sim is a close second!

    • @louismarzullo1190
      @louismarzullo1190 Год назад +4

      Couldn't agree more! Takes a helluva movie to edge out Dickens!

    • @alicestephens2233
      @alicestephens2233 Год назад +2

      This is my favorite one also...but A Christmas Carol (1938 with Reginald Owens) was my favorite one of those...dont know why..they are both great but that one just seemed more endearing to me

    • @TheMarcHicks
      @TheMarcHicks Год назад +1

      My favourite Christmas Carol is the Patrick Stewart one from 1999, & Muppet Christmas Carol from 1992.

    • @randomtryst5487
      @randomtryst5487 Год назад +10

      Yes, the Alister Sim version, in black and white is THE version to watch. The others are OK, but if I had to choose which one to watch the 1951 version would be it.

    • @serendipity191
      @serendipity191 Год назад +8

      Completely agree! The Alastair Sim version isn’t shown very often anymore so I think a lot of people don’t get to see how amazing it is. I actually bought it so I could watch it every year. I do love the muppet Christmas Carol too though.

  • @NarnianRailway
    @NarnianRailway Год назад +36

    History of the movie reflects George Baily's life as well. People loved it in '46 but not a box office success and only Capra received an Academy Award. Over the years, it became less remembered until the copyright lapsed in the 70's (an angel 2nd class?). In the public domain it appeared as an annual staple over Christmas. So many people have since fallen in love with a black and white classic and George Baily. One could say "It's A Wonderful Life" is the richest movie in town.
    Your smile at the very end was perfect.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

    • @josephpaul4548
      @josephpaul4548 7 месяцев назад +4

      I believe Capra received a Golden Globe for this, not an Oscar. He lost out to W. Wyler that year - no complaint from me, but both deserved it.
      JS absolutely deserved the Oscar that March won for Best Years. The latter - in a splendid performance - shared screen time with Harold Russell and Dana Andrews whereas JS gave a tour de force performance and was in virtually every scene except the first ten minutes or so. He exhibited every conceivable human emotion in a remarkably poignant and believable way. He left it all out there on the set. Hope Jimmy wasn't hurt too much by the Academy's snub.

    • @dept_of_depressure
      @dept_of_depressure 5 месяцев назад +2

      So it's not too different than "Rocky being its own Rocky Story"? 😮

    • @wonderrob3225
      @wonderrob3225 3 месяца назад +1

      It became beloved by people like me who saw it during that time in the early 80s. There is an episode of cheers where they mention that it's on constantly during Christmas. As you say, it was because the copyright had lapsed at the time

  • @joeyjojo5986
    @joeyjojo5986 Год назад +11

    I think my favorite part is when the man who demanded all his money from his account at the savings and loan was there at the end dropping in money as well. that part always hits me for some reason.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @custardflan
    @custardflan Год назад +7

    So much of this is relevant to the Greatest Generation folks who survived the Great Depression, fought World War II and then helped rebuild America and the world.

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Год назад

      Yes, very true.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 6 месяцев назад

      My grandfathers were WW2 veterans (Navy and Marines respectively) and neither liked the term "Greatest Generation". My mother's father in particular was an amateur historian, and said the people of the Revolutionary War dealt with a lot worse, living in a land occupied by their enemies, while the vast majority of Americans during WW2 lived thousands of miles away from any front line. He also reminded me that more Americans died in the Civil War than WW1 and WW2 combined. He exemplified a lot of the more humble of his generation, who never named themselves "greatest" (I believe it was Tom Brokaw who named them that), and gave credit to those who came before them because he knew his own history better than one or two generations back.

    • @custardflan
      @custardflan 6 месяцев назад

      @rikk319 It's not prideful for us to call them that (yes it was Brokaw) and it's OK to debate who overcame the worst circumstances.

    • @custardflan
      @custardflan 6 месяцев назад

      My Dad and UNCLES WE WWII Vets and I never heard them
      Complain about the term. But I heard lots of stories about the Depression having no meat to eat. My Grandmother was a single mother with four kids in the 30s and never went on assistance. She was very proud of that. My Dad went into the Submarine service only because they got double pay, all of which he sent home to his mother. His brother a Marine paratrooper did the same.

  • @James_511
    @James_511 6 месяцев назад +3

    A classic that does not feel dated in the slightest. I've picked up new details in every rewatch. I'd recommend watching the color version too.

  • @tommywalker3746
    @tommywalker3746 Год назад +30

    Jimmy Stewart movies are great. The one he did called "The man who shot Liberty Valance" is a really good western movie

    • @jeffreyjeziorski1480
      @jeffreyjeziorski1480 Год назад +5

      John WYne, Lee Marvin, Andy Devine. Wotta cast!!!

    • @luvlgs1
      @luvlgs1 Год назад +1

      @@jeffreyjeziorski1480 the beautiful Vera Miles

  • @BlueShadow777
    @BlueShadow777 Год назад +20

    Their house wasn’t previously an hotel. She was just being funny when she said “The Waldorf Hotel”. 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @wiseoldman53
    @wiseoldman53 Год назад +33

    As many other people, this is my favorite Christmas movie and one of my all time favorites! I cry every single time. It lifts my spirits.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @leosarmiento4823
    @leosarmiento4823 Год назад +35

    A holiday classic that, like George Bailey, was given a second chance and was blessed with a Christmas miracle. We in turn, have something that is timeless.
    You presented a wonderful reaction/review. Thank you.
    Merry Christmas to you and yours.

  • @BlueSummers101
    @BlueSummers101 Год назад +20

    If you liked this film and in particular James Stewarts performance then I highly recommend Harvey, made in 1950 he plays an eccentric drunk who's best friend is a giant rabbit/pooka called Harvey that no one else can see.
    Like It's a Wonderful Life, Harvey plays with you perception of what is real and what is fantasy as well as displaying a wide range of emotions and feelings helped in no small part by Stewarts amazing performance.

    • @BDogg2023
      @BDogg2023 Год назад

      “He’s a phantom, an apparition. Second cousin to Harvey the Rabbit…” ~~Andy Dufresne, Shawshank Redemption, on the fake person he created to launder the warden’s money.

    • @lindanicholson950
      @lindanicholson950 Год назад +1

      Harvey is one of my favorite movies. A must see.

  • @DylansPen
    @DylansPen Год назад +25

    I think one of the best movies ever made, Christmas or otherwise. It is a must watch at our house every year as it is for so many. The story never gets old and is as pertinent today as it will be a hundred years from now. Loved your reaction Madison, it seems everyone that sees this for the first time says the same thing, "I can't believe I've never watched this before it is so good."

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @JeffACornell
    @JeffACornell Год назад +4

    17:04 I don't think it was ever an actual hotel. The line "the Waldorf hotel, huh?" was meant somewhat sarcastically to play it up as a romantic spot for their honeymoon. Not that it was ever actually a hotel. It was just a beautiful old house Mary always had a soft spot for.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,..............

  • @ChicagoDB
    @ChicagoDB Год назад +16

    The movie gets me every time…
    Have you seen:
    “Miracle on 34th Street”
    “White Christmas”
    “The Bishop’s Wife”
    All holiday classics 😊

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @patticriss2238
    @patticriss2238 Год назад +10

    It’s not Christmas without this movie. This year I’ve watched it 10 times with reactors like you. Like new again. Thank you. My father used the gesture that George used after shaking hands with potter for the rest of his life when he found something distasteful or sneaky. That’s how he’d tell you. Love that memory. 💙

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................

  • @757optim
    @757optim Год назад +8

    The studio let the copyright expire, so TV networks could show "It's A Wonderful Life" without paying royalties for years. As a result it was shown a ton of times every Christmas and became more well known and loved than ever may have been possible otherwise. The copyright was finally renewed, but I've seen this movie countless times - and it still gets me.
    I agree with you. Best ever.
    If you like Jimmy Stewart, "Harvey" next.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @tomyoung9049
    @tomyoung9049 Год назад +10

    Super reaction. A timeless Christmas classic, and emotional movie full of hope.

  • @hoosieronan
    @hoosieronan Год назад +7

    Truly a variation on Dickens that is an excellent reminder of how we so often forget the impact we all have on each other by appreciating the seemingly simple everyday acts of kindness, charity and love for each other. This and "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" are my all time favorite Christmas movies. Thank you for sharing 🙏

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................

  • @christopherwhite1648
    @christopherwhite1648 6 месяцев назад +1

    I had a friend who is a psychiatrist tell me this movie can be used to detect a sociopathic personality 90% of the time. A person with no empathy will not get choked up. tear up or cry at the end of the movie.

  • @Kasino80
    @Kasino80 Год назад +6

    It's such a good movie. It's so heart breaking and heart warming all at once.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @kingbrutusxxvi
    @kingbrutusxxvi Год назад +4

    I had three posts from channels in my notifications that are re-uploads but before I noticed that I was seriously having deja vu freakout! I kept flipping down the posts thinking, "I swear I watched this already... and this... and this!" ;-)

    • @mckrackin5324
      @mckrackin5324 Год назад

      This is a re-upload, right? I'm not crazy?

  • @joshythehand2960
    @joshythehand2960 Год назад +1

    And for those who don't know.. Jimmy Stewart said doing this movie helped alleviate him from severe ptsd. Stewart was a war hero. He was a bomber pilot in the early stage of ww2 and made all 20 mandatory runs. At the time a bombing crew was the most dangerous job in u.s. military history. Nearly 50% of planes were shot down on their runs.. 50% death rate. So if you made your 20 missions you served your service and could be discharged if wanted.. even if all 20 were in one month. He saw countless hundreds of friends and service members shot down beside him and felt near suicide after the war. He later said this script seemed to be a gift from God. As if it were written to help heal him

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,..............

  • @raymeedc
    @raymeedc Год назад +2

    We’re on the same page as far as Jimmy Stewart goes, Madison, my all time favorite actor, & one with a thankfully long and varied, high quality laden film life 🥳

  • @Deano4322
    @Deano4322 8 месяцев назад +4

    “ Best Christmas movie ever “ no arguments from me it’s a Christmas tradition in our house and always will be , so glad you enjoyed it as much as me and my family do , would love to see your reaction to another favourite of mine , the 1951 movie Scrooge , great reaction 🇬🇧👍

  • @ZestonN
    @ZestonN Год назад +3

    It's A Wonderful Life and Casablanca are the Two Greatest Movies of All Times!
    I Love This Movie, and teared up and laughed along with you, Madison.
    80 years later, and It's A Wonderful Life is still the Most Watched Christmas Movie. :)

    • @gdiaz8827
      @gdiaz8827 Год назад

      Nah I think its Ben Hur but it's less known now

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,..............

  • @Davelakful
    @Davelakful 6 месяцев назад +1

    Beautiful reaction! You will probably cry every Christmas watching this movie. Been crying for decades watching the ending.

  • @custardflan
    @custardflan Год назад +1

    -- Donna Reed, pride of Dennison, Iowa, who won the Oscar for best supporting actress for From Here to Eternity.
    -- Bert and Ernie?
    -- "Well (money) comes in handy down here bub." i've used this line over the years raising four children.
    -- There's a bike shop in my town called Zuzu's Pedals.
    -- My one quibble with this movie is that apparently the worst thing that can happen to a woman is to be an "old maid" librairan.
    -- Not to get theological, but I like that they tap into the belief that there is a God and he responds to prayer.
    -- I appreciate your reaction. I started tearing up almost from the start watching you react. This truly is one of my all time favorites. Back in the '80s it wasn't as well known and we had friends over to our house to watch it together. Now it's a regular classic.

  • @markoconnor995
    @markoconnor995 Год назад +4

    Great reaction for a great movie. Has been a family favorite and tradition for generations. If you like James Stewart as you say, you should check out these classics:
    Anatomy of a Murder
    Winchester 73
    The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
    Man Who knew Too Much

  • @nittyblahblah8939
    @nittyblahblah8939 Год назад +4

    "It's like déjà vu, all over again."

    • @DeusExMachina50
      @DeusExMachina50 Год назад +1

      @@nittyblahblah8939 Is RUclips the grinch who stole Christmas?

  • @EShelby2127
    @EShelby2127 Год назад +2

    Speaking of heroes, I read that the writers/producers of this movie made it mostly for those who were in the service in WW II, and came back with the feeling that their moment of greatness and chance at heroism had past. Most in the service who returned, did not serve on the front lines, they did jobs that supported those who were at the front. They felt emptied by the experience, compared to the headline heroes. This movie was made to show them that they can make a difference in the lives of their communities, A great movie, based on the play "Mr Roberts" should be on your watch list. It tells the story of those who were doing the un-glamorous job of supporting those on the front.
    Thanks for the insight and reaction, loved it!

    • @daveray44
      @daveray44 11 месяцев назад +1

      As a reminder, Mr Stewart was pilot during WEII. He could've skated through the war but not him. Plus, he actually wasn't fit for the Army because of his height to weight ratio. He stayed in the Air Force Reserves and retired as a general.

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 7 месяцев назад +1

      Kinda like grocery store stock clerks that are looked down upon, INTIL SNOBS CANT BUY FOOD!
      Lol maroons❤

  • @hatmanndo
    @hatmanndo Год назад +2

    I need to recommend another James Stewart movie called "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington". Another excellent movie and performance. Not a Christmas movie but it's another one directed by Frank Capra. I'm trying to remember the year. I think it was made in 1937 or '39. Worth the watch. James Stewart was one of the best actors in American film. I'm sure you'll appreciate it as well. Your analysis of this movie was perfect. I think the quality of story and acting shows how a movie should be made. Interactions with each actor is very important to not come off as contrived. Very much in harmony with fellow actors throughout. Have a very Happy New Year!! 🙂

  • @francoisevassy6614
    @francoisevassy6614 Год назад +2

    Thank you for showing this movie.
    There is another Christmas movie which I appreciate very much but not so well known :
    The Bishop’s Wife directed by Henry Koster (1943) starring Cary Grant, Loretta Young, David Niven and other stars ; and also, of course The Shop Around the Corner, the classic Ernst Lubitch’s gem, also starring Jimmy Stewart.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 7 месяцев назад

      You should reach to "The Great Rupert"❤

  • @krazycatz
    @krazycatz 8 месяцев назад

    I would like to add for anyone who has never seen this movie in its entirety (that most reactors skip over) that when George and Mary are talking on the phone with Sam it’s George who talks Sam into starting the factory in Bedford Falls. If I remember the movie correctly there was an old abandoned factory that had went out of business years ago. It would be cheaper for Sam to buy that old building and fix it up for his factory. After providing training for them (which was something business did back then) Sam would be able to provide jobs for most of the unemployed people in Bedford Falls. As this was done at George’s suggestion it shows another way he helped people.

  • @dirtcop11
    @dirtcop11 Год назад +7

    If you want a nice romance with Jimmy Stewart, watch "Bell, Book, and Candle." It is funny and romantic. Not many people know about the movie. But any Jimmy Stewart movie will be great.

  • @raymeedc
    @raymeedc Год назад +1

    You’re so right about pegging George as a life long hero, not just in/for “the” moment❣️

  • @1mespud
    @1mespud Год назад +3

    I heard that the Sesame Street Muppet characters Ernie and Bert is supposedly named after the cab driver and cop.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,..............

  • @lizze490
    @lizze490 Год назад +3

    Agreed, Madison- the BEST Christmas film ever. Merry Christmas and God Bless.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @gerryowen5577
    @gerryowen5577 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for noticing the brilliant job Frank Capra did in contrasting the BIGGER THAN LIFE heroism of Harry Bailey in being awarded the Congressional Metal of Honour and the every-day heroism of Harry Bailey in thousands of barely noticeable acts of kindness and courage. Capra is telling us again and again just how to make America Great Again. Just act every day the way Harry Bailey acted. Care about your neighbours and lend a helping hand with an attitude of kindness! That is when America is truly Great!

  • @JesseOaks-ef9xn
    @JesseOaks-ef9xn 4 месяца назад

    In another review of this movie someone said that Mary was the actual hero of the movie. She was the one who put her pride in her pocket and rallied all his friends to give him money to keep him out of trouble.

  • @matvangogh
    @matvangogh Год назад

    27:50 George said in the beginning" he wanted to travel and do great things"...... but, he didnt have to leave town to accomplish this. George never realized before that he- and he ALONE - kept Potter in check, which prevented the town from turning to vice and misery ... just by taking up his fathers mission,- becoming his successor, he prevented this from happening.Not to mention he saved his brother- a future war hero's life,and prevented a child from dying by a distraught pharmacist.

  • @MBillCylle
    @MBillCylle 7 месяцев назад +1

    There's more than a couple of places in this movie that gets me to tear up, but one that really comes to mind is when he and Clarence get thrown out of the bar and George begins to wonder if maybe what Clarence is telling him is true and he reaches into his watch pocket and then Clarence tells him that they're not there. "What's not there?" "Juju's petals."....What a punch in the gut! Your daughter doesn't even exist! Your whole family, all your loved ones, gone!

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Год назад +1

    In real life for Jimmy it was clerking in his dad's hardware store in Indiana, Pa., Princeton, Hollywood (AA, Best Actor, The Philadelphia Story), war service (he rose from private in the Army Air Corps to eventual brigadier general), and the movies again.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @michaelgreskamp1093
    @michaelgreskamp1093 Год назад +1

    Madison - Heartfelt reaction. I first saw it when I was in my early 30's and could not believe I did not see it earlier. It embodies what the Christmas spirit is all about. Now I make sure my grandchildren see it.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................

  • @artbagley1406
    @artbagley1406 Год назад +1

    The Christmas bow in your hair is absolutely stunning, Madison! Is George picketing at Mary's picket fence? It's a miracle! Clarence's hat remained on his head after jumping into the river! Must agree with you: BCME!

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 7 месяцев назад +1

      Did you know that Angel Clarence actor was an Olympic Swimmer in real life?
      Has that "swimmer's build". Indeed!❤

  • @jowbloe3673
    @jowbloe3673 Год назад +2

    5:02 - "I don't like coconuts either."
    That's what I said, until I was on vacation and actually had some FRESH coconut. Was SOOO good!

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,...........................

    • @tlw1950
      @tlw1950 Год назад

      I love coconut EVERYTHING!

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Год назад +1

    Lionel Barrymore (Drew's great uncle) did play Ebenezer Scrooge, repeatedly, over the years in performances of "A Christmas Carol".

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @LukeLovesRose
    @LukeLovesRose 6 месяцев назад +1

    Not only is Its A Wonderful Life the greatest Christmas, not only is it one of the best movies ever produced, but George Bailey is one of the greatest, most relatable and complex characters ever put on film. This movie wouldnt be so great and powerful if we didnt spend so much of it getting to know George.
    I think Its A Wonderful Life is also a great Christian film. Thats probably why the antichrist organization known as Hollywood trashes this movie so much.

  • @radiofriendly
    @radiofriendly 7 месяцев назад

    Watching it again this year, some thoughts: Imagine writing this script and then the challenge of finding the actors and art/design to make it work. Way more difficult than it may seem. A movie about suicide. Suicide confronted within the first 10 minutes of the film. Child actors, a playful film with a tongue-in-cheek angel. The odds of the film working seem close to zero, if you had never seen the finished film we take for granted. Lastly, so many multi-layered details are done at near perfection. The background extras, many of them almost have a documentary quality. It seems an extraordinary attention to subtle details went in to small elements, even set design. The skull on Potter's desk seems just to be morbid, but later takes on a sinister prophetic quality when Potter tells George, "You're worth more dead than alive..."

  • @martypringle9201
    @martypringle9201 Год назад +2

    Throughtout his life, Sam is a friend to George from the time they were kids. While he has, and uses, what seems to be quirky humor, most of us have known someone like that at one time or another in our circle of friends. The whole 'Hee Haw' phrase Sam Wainwright uses refers to turn of the century (1900s) 'funny pages' (comic strip) characters they'd know. Sam also uses the phrase, “See you in the funny pages (papers)”. The newspapers from the early 1900s through the end of the century and somewaht today, had a section, usually near the back, where they printed cartoons and comic strips to cheer folks up so they would buy the paper again the next day. On Sundays, many newspapers even had a whole special section devoted to just comic strips, often printed in color. Both this section and the daily comics page(s) were known as “the funny pages,” “See you in the funny papers” is a jocular farewell that dates, as far as anyone has been able to determine, to the early years of the 20th century (1900s). “See you” was a common casual farewell in the US at least by the late 1890s, although it may be somewhat older. “See you in the funny papers” almost certainly dates back to the early 1920s because the term “funny papers/pages/sheet” itself apparently didn’t appear in print until roughly that time. A glossary of humor published in 1926 included “See you in the funny sheet,” and William Faulkner also used the phrase in his 1929 novel 'The Sound and the Fury'. One reason that “See you in the funny papers” sounds so dated to us today is because “funny papers/pages/sheets” was eventually largely replaced by the term “comics” for that part of the newspaper, a process that probably began in the 1940s and was complete by the 1960s. The term means “I will see you (or your likeness) when I read the funny papers, as you are a bit of a cartoon-y (acting or looking) character”. It was a very common slang farewell by people born in the 1900s-1930 ish era.The interesting thing about “See you in the funny papers” is that originally it may not have been a very friendly thing to say. Saying “See you in the newspaper” or “See you in jail” when parting, for example, carried the sardonic implication that the person being addressed would next be heard of for committing a crime or attaining some other newsworthy notoriety. Similarly, the original intent of “See you in the funny papers” was probably to imply that the speaker considered the person either so ridiculous or so odd in appearance as to belong in a comic strip (thus making the saying roughly equivalent to “Say hi to the Katzenjammer Kids for me”). By the 1940s, however, “See you in the funny papers” had become so common that it lost whatever hostile edge it had and became a good-natured humorous farewell. Sam, since childhood, using a signature comic book gesture of flapping one of both of his hands with his thumbs in his ears mimicking a braying donkey with big ears while shouting "Hee-haw!", which his friends imitate in response. (Sam keeps his unique calling card in his adult years.)

    • @sparky6086
      @sparky6086 Год назад

      In the old days & even now, in many if not most newspapers, the obituaries were on the same page as the comics, at least during the week, so "See you in the funny papers" although used in a kidding manner, is the person imagining, that they'll probably never see the person to whom they speak, alive again only "seeing" their obituary. "Funny papers" was sort of a funny euphemism for the obituaries.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 7 месяцев назад +1

      What are funny pages. Again?
      I forgot again
      .❤

  • @jameslongest6410
    @jameslongest6410 6 месяцев назад

    Lots of people don't know this but when Mr Gower slaps young George in the pharmacy, the blood you see trickling from George's ear is real. H.B. Warner (Mr Gower) was a Method actor so to get into character he drank a whole bottle of whiskey and was quite drunk at filming. He hit young George ( Bobby Anderson) hard enough to bloody his ear and make him cry during his performance. To H.B's credit, he immediately recognized what had happened and his hug and tears at the end of the scene were genuine. Bobby Anderson said H. B. was actually a very nice person.

  • @wayne3078
    @wayne3078 7 месяцев назад

    It’s such a clever movie it makes you realise just the smallest things that you don’t know or care about can touch another person in such a special way.
    This movie is absolute magic a true masterpiece

  • @tbobthehoss
    @tbobthehoss 7 месяцев назад

    Not sure if anyone mentioned, the young man that opened the gym floor with the pool underneath was actor, Carl Switzer. He was Alfalfa from the "Our Gang" and "Little Rascals" shorts. He was tragically killed over a money dispute, still a young man.

  • @lmsossi6501
    @lmsossi6501 6 месяцев назад +1

    Many of us watch this every year because it's so uplifting and reminds us of what actually matters. ❤

  • @white.lodge.dale.cooper
    @white.lodge.dale.cooper Год назад +3

    I needed a pickmeup today so I rewatched this. It's A Wonderful Life is one of very, very few perfect movies. What a masterpiece.

  • @agemoth
    @agemoth Год назад +1

    The only minor criticism I have about this WONDERFUL movie is that , although human beings will 'be like angels' in Heaven , angels are infact separate beings in their own right.

  • @jonlate4581
    @jonlate4581 Год назад

    The kid that said 'hey' and opened the floor is Alfalfa. And the lady wanting money is Ellen Corby, Grandma Esther Walton.

  • @uncletaylorify
    @uncletaylorify 7 месяцев назад

    Fun fact....at the party scene where drunk Uncle Billy crashes into a row of garbage cans off camera....that was actually a stage hand who dropped a whole bunch of cannisters right during filming that scene. The poor man thought he was going to be fired but the director thought it made the scene s much funnier he gave the guy a bonus.

  • @matthewcostello3530
    @matthewcostello3530 Год назад +2

    Marlo Thomas did a remake that was also pretty good "It Happened One Christmas"

  • @JC-ke7mj
    @JC-ke7mj Год назад +2

    One of my favorites! Thank you!

  • @hedcmac
    @hedcmac 8 месяцев назад

    I love your reaction, and understanding of this movie. We watch this every Thanksgiving weekend to start the holiday season off with a thankful heart, and realizing we do indeed have a wonderful life. You are so right, we can all be quiet Heros. We never know what an impact we make in the lives of others. ❤

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Год назад +1

    Stewart's stock-in-trade was benign rage; no one did it better.

  • @AlbertRod34
    @AlbertRod34 Год назад +2

    Thank You for reacting to this Classic. It truly is The Best Christmas Movie Ever. Hope you watch it every year around this time.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @stevenhenry9605
    @stevenhenry9605 Год назад +1

    I love this movie. Only one thing I'd change about it. If I'd been the screenwriter, I would've had the alternate version of Bedford Falls be called "Pottersfield." The pun is just irresistible to me, with the graveyard association. That would've been perfect.

    • @sophistichistory4645
      @sophistichistory4645 Год назад +1

      That is a clever pun. The one other change I'd make is nixing the term "old maid" for alternate Mary because she never married. That term did not age well.

    • @stevenhenry9605
      @stevenhenry9605 Год назад

      @@sophistichistory4645 agreed. That one rings pretty false on the ear now.

  • @plaidpaisley5918
    @plaidpaisley5918 6 месяцев назад

    I agree; best ever!! Great reaction. You watched intently, no interruptions. One of my favorite reactions to it.

  • @darkenedskiesahead3670
    @darkenedskiesahead3670 Год назад

    Loved your reaction to this old film! One of my personal Christmas favs...❤

  • @braces2
    @braces2 Год назад +1

    Bert and Ernie from Sesame Street were named after Bert and Ernie the policeman and taxi driver in this film.
    Great video btw.

  • @jd-zr3vk
    @jd-zr3vk Год назад

    Our niece, Charlotte, died at the age of 21 years. Her maternal uncle was routed through Charlotte, NC. He bought a bell with Charlotte printed on it. It was placed in her casket she could get her wings right away. We continue that practice, every relative gets a wing bell in the casket. The actor who played Mr. Gower was drunk during the ear slapping scene. He actually drew blood from the poor your actor. Donna Reed played baseball in high school. She hit a window in the old house in the first take. A stage hand knocked over something as Uncle Billy walked off stage, Uncle Billy, without missing a beat, improvised, I’m all right, I’m all right. The proposal scene, Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed skipped 2 pages of dialogue. When that was pointed out, Frank Kapra said, with acting like that who needs dialogue? Mr. Potter was played by Lionel Barrymore who was Drew Barrymore’s great great uncle. Her great grandfather was John Barrymore, he starred in a silent movie, Mr. Jeckle and Mr. Hide. The movie was shot in July and the actors were very hot in winter clothes in the hot weather. Zuzu was a brand of ginger snaps, the company paid for the product placement. I first thought you did not cry, but I heard the sniffle.

  • @wayjamus2775
    @wayjamus2775 Год назад +1

    The March of the Wooden Soldiers aka Babes in Toyland was one of my go-to Christmas movies growing up.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @denniswhitney6147
    @denniswhitney6147 Год назад +1

    I LOVED your reaction. My favorite reaction to my favorite Christmas movie of all time. You touched my heart . MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU AND ALL YOUR LOVED ONES. and may you have A WONDERFUL LIFE.❤💋

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,...........................

  • @dereknight861
    @dereknight861 7 месяцев назад

    “Remember,
    *NO* man is a failure who has friends”

  • @Georgeanne17
    @Georgeanne17 Год назад

    After 20 years this movie still makes me cry, I love it.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Год назад +1

    Gloria Grahame plays blonde Violet Bick. She went on to major stardom, on the big screen and on TV.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,...........................

    • @tlw1950
      @tlw1950 Год назад

      She played Ado Annie in Oklahoma! (1955).

    • @steelers6titles
      @steelers6titles Год назад

      Grahame starred opposite Humphrey Bogart in "In A Lonely Place", considered one of his best films.

  • @serendavies7375
    @serendavies7375 7 месяцев назад

    Happy holidays, Madison 🥰

  • @kissmy_butt1302
    @kissmy_butt1302 Год назад

    The greatest accident for film is It's a Wonderful Life bombed and it's copyright got screwed up so it ended up in public domain. This played for YEARS on multiple stations at Christmas. It became a tradition because it was cheap programming and not a hard movie to love.

  • @robertjewell9727
    @robertjewell9727 Год назад +1

    Great reaction and besides it being a wonderful story, one could discuss how beautifully cinematic director Frank Capra films it because it starts out in the style of a 1930s romantic dram/com, but once George was never born becomes a 1940s film noir and I think Frank Capra was very aware of this himself having traversed those time periods with his films and knowing how the dark effects WWII had on the American populace and underneath it all was telling a story about those effects, but wanting not to make it explicit but as a Christmas fable in modern times.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @barryhickman6911
    @barryhickman6911 7 месяцев назад

    Great reaction and LOVED your closing comments!

  • @louismarzullo1190
    @louismarzullo1190 Год назад +3

    Agreed, Madison, agreed. The G.O.A.T.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @alanonder2955
    @alanonder2955 Год назад +1

    "White Christmas" is also a good Christmas movie.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Год назад +1

    Frank Capra is a target for critics as being overly-sentimental. But he's effective.
    It Happened One Night (AA, Best Picture)
    Mr. Smith Goes To Washington
    A Hole In The Head
    and
    Why We Fight

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................

  • @edjasper92
    @edjasper92 6 месяцев назад

    Great reaction! Merry Christmas!

  • @clurkroberts2650
    @clurkroberts2650 6 месяцев назад

    Best smile ever… you really captured the wonder of 5his film

  • @tgriffin8179
    @tgriffin8179 Год назад

    Merry Christmas- keep’em coming!

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @matthewmarcinko9157
    @matthewmarcinko9157 Год назад

    HAPPY HOLIDAYS, MADISON, WE LOVE YOU, TOO!!!

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,...........................

  • @skylinerunner1695
    @skylinerunner1695 Год назад +1

    Quiet heroism. Lovely phrase.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................

  • @MsDemeanorsMusings
    @MsDemeanorsMusings 9 месяцев назад

    Mary throws a rock, makes a wish, and Georges father dies. That's messed up.
    That being said, it IS the best Christmas movie ever made, and I've seen it well over 100 times.

  • @illbebad
    @illbebad Год назад

    one of the best...post film wrap-ups I've seen. You are right, George was as big a hero as his brother Harry, hadn't thought of that before

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,..............

  • @martypringle9201
    @martypringle9201 Год назад

    Madison, the best complete reaction to this movie on YT. You're tops!

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @devoncooper8296
    @devoncooper8296 Год назад

    Great reaction 🎄🎄 glad you enjoyed it!

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,..............

  • @douglaswenn424
    @douglaswenn424 8 месяцев назад

    Excellent reaction, v human and such a good summing up of the quite heroes of the world.

  • @DavidHayes56
    @DavidHayes56 2 месяца назад

    As many times as I have watched this, I didn't even think about the little musical chimes that played when Clarence disappeared while Burt tried to handcuff him. Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star, how I wonder where you are! Such a nice little detail! Surprisingly, this movie was flop when it was first released.

  • @cjpreach
    @cjpreach Год назад

    Best Christmas Movie. My #1 all-time fave movie of any genre.

  • @conureron3792
    @conureron3792 Год назад +2

    Yes! Watch it every year, do an annual review. We’ll watch along each year.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,......................

  • @chriskelly3481
    @chriskelly3481 Год назад +1

    "Best Christmas movie ever!"
    -Madison Thames
    Correct.

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,...........................

  • @DR-mq1vn
    @DR-mq1vn 8 месяцев назад

    I cry every time I watch this movie! Yes, this is the best Christmas movie ever!

  • @hyacinthlynch843
    @hyacinthlynch843 Год назад

    I'm a huge Jimmy Stewart fan. Here are some other Stewart films you might want to consider viewing:
    You Can't Take It With You
    Mr. Smith Goes To Washington
    Dial North side 777
    Rope
    Vertigo
    Rear Window
    The Man Who Knew Too Much

    • @user-cs3yb5ui1f
      @user-cs3yb5ui1f Год назад

      Get your Xmas present 🎁................................,....................