It's a Wonderful Life (1946) Got Me Clapping and Crying at the End - First Time Watching

It's a wonderful life reaction and first time watching. Merry Christmas and happy holidays, guys! It's been a crazy week for me and that's why i couldn't post this video sooner but it's here. What an amazing script, there's no way to watch this movie and not be moved :')
#reaction #moviereaction #itsawonderfullifereaction

Пікірлер: 377

  • @GorramT
    @GorramT6 ай бұрын

    Mary Bailey is probably the greatest wife in cinema.

  • @Finchsterreading

    @Finchsterreading

    6 ай бұрын

    Well, there’s also Nora Charles.

  • @user-mg5mv2tn8q

    @user-mg5mv2tn8q

    6 ай бұрын

    Nora Charles was Nick's wife *and* drinking companion. Those two could really put it away.

  • @trhansen3244

    @trhansen3244

    6 ай бұрын

    Yep. Until Michelle Obama is cast as Mary in the new updated It's a Wonderful Life. No word yet on if Barack will play George or not.

  • @M11969

    @M11969

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@trhansen3244Dear God do not put ideas into anyone's head. This film is perfect, it doesn't need to ever be remade.

  • @user-mg5mv2tn8q

    @user-mg5mv2tn8q

    6 ай бұрын

    @@M11969That ship has sailed. The Family Man, a 2000 theatrical movie with Nicholas Cage, is essentially a retelling of It's a Wonderful Life. The same with a big chunk of Shrek Forever After, in 2010. Marlo Thomas produced and starred in a gender-swapped made-for-TV version in the 70s called It Happened One Christmas, with Orson Welles obviously phoning in a performance as Mr. Potter just for the paycheck. There was another version in the 90s, broadcast live on TV, with Bill Pullman as George, which was actually produced by Jimmy Hawkins, who, as a child actor, had played George's younger son Tommy ("Excuse me! I burped!") in the original movie. The Muppets did a TV special, It's a Very Muppet Christmas Movie, with Kermit in the George role. Quite a few TV shows, such as Fresh Prince of Bel Air and Family Matters have done episodes that called back to It's a Wonderful Life in one way or another. Billy Joel even did a music video for You're Only Human, in which he plays the angel who shows a suicidal man what the world would be like without him.

  • @saxonrains
    @saxonrains6 ай бұрын

    Virginia Patton who played Ruth Baily (Harry's wife) died on August 18, 2022, at age 97. She was the last surviving adult cast member of It's a Wonderful Life

  • @dennisquinn8558

    @dennisquinn8558

    5 ай бұрын

    And she was the niece of a lead American WWII commander, General George Patton.

  • @dewman0269

    @dewman0269

    2 ай бұрын

    Actually the last surviving member Is still alive and her name is Kathryn Grimes... She is the little girl at the end that says, " Look daddy... Every time a bell rings an angel gets it's wings"... Bedford falls was actually a real town but the name of it is Seneca Falls in central ny... It's about 40 miles away from where I live...Kathryn Grimes goes there every year and poses for pictures with people and signs autographs... She is in her 80s so she'll probably do it a few more years I imagine...

  • @wraithby
    @wraithby6 ай бұрын

    At the end, the culmination of the movie, is that George realized and accepted what his father told him at the dinner table in 1928-they weren't just working in a "shabby little office" scraping a few pennies together, they were having a profound impact on people's lives. This is shown by the outpouring of love and support at the end. This is also seen during the bank panic scene in 1932 when George looks at the framed saying his father loved. In the end it's not what you have, but what you give. So, George didn't get to be a great architect and builder, but he gave completely of himself and had a massive impact. The director of the film, Frank Capra, was a penniless Italian immigrant when he arrived in America as a child, he made this movie to show that the contributions of all lives are important, and their true impact is never fully known to us.

  • @izzonj
    @izzonj6 ай бұрын

    This will be the third reaction to this movie I've watched today and the 3rd time I've cried to it today.

  • @amandamiquilena

    @amandamiquilena

    6 ай бұрын

    lmaoo well, i hope you enjoy mine :)

  • @flpndrox

    @flpndrox

    6 ай бұрын

    You're not the only one FWIW.

  • @robertlombardo8437

    @robertlombardo8437

    6 ай бұрын

    You're not the only one by far. I tear up every single time Clarence says that George really did have a wonderful life. If I were to picture myself as Clarence in that moment, the tears would be welling in my eyes as I pleaded with him. Another time is when Martini and Gower and everyone George ever helped suddenly come through in their own ways. Martini even going as far as busting open his jukebox for the spare change. It's just so sweet that not only did they notice George was in trouble, they didn't hesitate to pull out ALL the stops just to make sure he was okay.

  • @SueProv
    @SueProv6 ай бұрын

    George's prayer on the bridge was "I don't care what happens to me just get me back to my wife and kids." He thought it was wonderful that he was going to jail. You said nothing changed. Oh yes it did. His perspective abd he was overjoyed before he knew the town gave him money.

  • @jameskellis3122
    @jameskellis31226 ай бұрын

    Jimmy Stewart, who played George, put his acting career on hold during World War 2 to become a bomber pilot. He went on to retire years later from the Air Force as a Brigadier General. A true American hero!!

  • @lsbill27
    @lsbill276 ай бұрын

    Yes, when he came in to see Mary he had a weird attitude. He was traumatized because he had just had his big dreams dashed by Harry's marriage and new job.

  • @genghispecan

    @genghispecan

    6 ай бұрын

    That and he was feeling railroaded, pushed in a direction counter to his own wishes not just by life in general but by Mary and his own mother.

  • @bryanmyers5620
    @bryanmyers56206 ай бұрын

    He realized that he didn't need his dreams to make him happy. He found true happiness in his family and friends.

  • @LordBloodraven
    @LordBloodraven6 ай бұрын

    George Bailey's actor, James Stewart, also had his character's integrity in real-life. He enlisted in the US Army in February of 1941. That was a full 10 months before Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. During a time when half of the US were isolationists who didn't want to get involved in World War II, James Stewart joined up knowing it would take a lot of good men to help save the world.

  • @greenpeasuit
    @greenpeasuit6 ай бұрын

    29:16 Potter is shocked that George claims that HE lost the money, knowing full well it was the uncle. He clearly can't grasp taking accountability for other's mistakes.

  • @polferiferus1938

    @polferiferus1938

    6 ай бұрын

    He’s shocked but happy to make George suffer as much as possible. He knew George was right when he called him a “warped, frustrated old man”, and it hurt. Potter could only find joy in meanness and petty revenge.

  • @beefsupereme

    @beefsupereme

    6 ай бұрын

    I’m surprised more reactors don’t pick up on this. Even though he’s angry with Billy, even though he swore he wouldn’t take the fall, he did indeed because that’s the man he is

  • @dougsusie2319

    @dougsusie2319

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah, Potter was the Donald Trump of Bedford Falls. 😂 Merry Christmas Peace ❤

  • @nunyabussiness4054

    @nunyabussiness4054

    6 ай бұрын

    you misspelt Biden@@dougsusie2319

  • @EdwardLewisIV
    @EdwardLewisIV6 ай бұрын

    "Life is what happens while you're busy making plans." It's something everyone needs to be reminded of from time to time.

  • @free..to..air..

    @free..to..air..

    6 ай бұрын

    John Winston Lennon..if my memory serves me

  • @bertpunkaficionado8357
    @bertpunkaficionado83575 ай бұрын

    • This was Jimmy Stewart’s (George Bailey) first film after returning from service in World War 2. He was suffering from PTSD having served as a distinguished bomber pilot in Europe. His tears in Martini’s bar and holding his son are deeper knowing he was thinking of his friends who never returned from the war. Stewart was convinced to take the part to help him by none other than the man who plays Mr. Potter, Lionel Barrymore. • Barrymore is in a wheelchair because he actually needed one. Barrymore came from a famous acting family, and actress Drew Barrymore is his grandniece (granddaughter of the legendary John Barrymore, Lionel’s brother). • Director Frank Capra modeled Martini, the bar owner, on his own family. As Italian immigrants, they suffered slurs like the one Potter uses (garlic-eaters). When Martini’s large family moves into their new home, the goat is a representation of the director’s surname: Capra. • The young man who opens the dance floor because George took Mary to dance is Carl Switzer. He was a big child actor in the 1930s playing Alfalfa in the Our Gang/Little Rascal comedy films. • Nick the Bartender is played by Sheldon Leonard who became a big TV producer (The Andy Griffith Show, The Dick Van Dyke Show and more). His name is used for two characters in the show Big Bang Theory: Sheldon and Leonard. • This film was not successful at the box office. It eventually fell into public domain and could be played regularly during the Christmas holiday. This is where it gained popularity as viewers began seeing the beauty of the film. It’s now considered one of the greatest movies ever made.

  • @terrylandess6072
    @terrylandess60726 ай бұрын

    Hearing Jimmy Stewart say 'Bert and Ernie' makes me smile.

  • @glstka5710

    @glstka5710

    Күн бұрын

    I wonder if Sesame Street named two of their characters for them.

  • @RichardM1366
    @RichardM13666 ай бұрын

    George Bailey though his life was hopelessly ruined. A angel came and showed him live was worth it and he had a wonderful life. Everyone he helped came to his rescue and the angel got his wings. My mother loved this movie. She would cry Everytime the bell rang giving Clarence his wings. She passed away in 2011. I still can't watch it without tearing up. She was the best.

  • @monkeyzorr3090

    @monkeyzorr3090

    6 ай бұрын

    Sorry for your loss

  • @ammaleslie509
    @ammaleslie5096 ай бұрын

    She put on a special dress after George's mother told her he was on the way over.

  • @mikehuston3751
    @mikehuston37516 ай бұрын

    Great movie. Jimmy Stewart's acting was terrific. His breakdown after Uncle Billy lost the money was amazing. In the bar when he breaks down was powerful .

  • @yaimavol

    @yaimavol

    6 ай бұрын

    And hs reaction on the bridge when he realizes Bert knows him. The choices he made were all so brilliant and believable. There is not a second of this film he doesn't fill the shoes of the character

  • @Alex-dh2cx
    @Alex-dh2cx6 ай бұрын

    Jimmy Stewart was dealing with PTSD from ww2 when he made this film, he really channeled it in his performance.

  • @zimjun7

    @zimjun7

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes, indeed. aka Method acting.

  • @Hayseo
    @Hayseo6 ай бұрын

    The movie begins in 1919. The pharmacist son died in the worldwide Spanish flu epidemic. The bank panic was during the great depression. And, of course, the end of the movie is during World War II.

  • @jonbruton3557

    @jonbruton3557

    6 ай бұрын

    not during. After.

  • @shawnpatrick1877

    @shawnpatrick1877

    6 ай бұрын

    It's unfortunate that many reactors don't understand any of those history references. Most seem completely confused about the "bank run."

  • @rikk319

    @rikk319

    6 ай бұрын

    @@shawnpatrick1877 History gets longer with each year, but our lives stay relatively the same length as human beings. Unless you're a historian (like me) or interested in it as a hobby, it's unlikely you know the relevance of certain segments of old movies or books without living through it yourself. After 3+ generations, most people can't relate to the language, mannerisms, or cultural events of an old story.

  • @rah2287
    @rah22876 ай бұрын

    Two things 1.) The crow was actually a Raven (a trained bird that appeared in almost every Director Frank Capra film (it is also the same "crow" that landed on the Scarecrow's shoulder in the Wizard of Oz. 2.) James Stewart (George Bailey) was a real war hero as he piloted B-24 Bimbers over Germany and commanded entire bomber squadrons. He remained in the Air Force Reserves after the war attaining the rank of General.

  • @grahamtravers4522
    @grahamtravers45226 ай бұрын

    Many people seem to struggle to understand George during the scene with the telephone. In his mind, he WANTS to leave town and travel, but he can't resist the attraction of Mary. All the time he's trying to persuade himself that he WILL leave town, and is fighting angrily against giving in to his true feelings; but in the end he can't resist his affection for Mary, and she wins the struggle.

  • @LukeLovesRose

    @LukeLovesRose

    6 ай бұрын

    Agreed. But I think George Bailey is too complex for these simpletons today. Yes, George goes off the deep end. He can be rude and insulting. But you never get the feeling that George is a bad person. In the previous scene after Harry's party, George and Mary fall in love. It was never going to be the same between them.

  • @mottorcyle5052

    @mottorcyle5052

    6 ай бұрын

    She ruined George's life with her own wishes .

  • @LukeLovesRose

    @LukeLovesRose

    6 ай бұрын

    @@mottorcyle5052 George shouldnt have opened his mouth about his wishes

  • @catherinelw9365

    @catherinelw9365

    6 ай бұрын

    @@mottorcyle5052 You just don’t get it.

  • @Imyerda
    @Imyerda6 ай бұрын

    Donna Reed (Mary) was the goat wife . Cast was exceptional 👏. Thanks for reaction

  • @michaelbrennick
    @michaelbrennick6 ай бұрын

    Growing up in the USA in the 1960s and 1970s, the two biggest things (at 16, for working class and lower middle class children) were: getting your driver's permit and your "working papers", so you could get a part time job. I had a part time job right when I turned 16. I worked 20 hours a week through the school year and 40 hours in the summers. In 1919 child labor laws had been passed but still allowed some restricted child labor. The banking panic happened in the years between 1930 to 1933 (part of the Great Depression) in the US. Many banks closed and "bank holidays" were declared. During those years legislation was passed to stabilize the banking crisis and the situation finally settled down after 1933. George's building and loan was hit probably in 1932. Potter was able to save his bank by calling in outstanding loans. He was clever enough to still be able to try and take over the building & loan by offering 50% for shares.

  • @castorpollux5972
    @castorpollux59726 ай бұрын

    The historical context of this story is so important. Most of the story happens during the Great Depression and prior to and during WW2. Young reactors miss the history, and thus fail to really understand George - a good man of a specific era. Let's face it, most Millennials and Gen Zs would rather be Mr. Potter or Sam Wainwright, not generous and unselfish like George.

  • @trhansen3244

    @trhansen3244

    6 ай бұрын

    The less said about Gen Z the better.

  • @shawnpatrick1877

    @shawnpatrick1877

    6 ай бұрын

    I've been kind of shocked by how few reactors even know what a "bank run," is, and how even less seemed to know what the Great Depression was at all.

  • @tommyriam8320

    @tommyriam8320

    5 ай бұрын

    '..young _reactors_ ' lol How about, "young *people* " ?

  • @incogneato790
    @incogneato7906 ай бұрын

    Life was hard a century ago, kids worked young, and getting slapped around if you misbehaved was normal and acceptable.

  • @marksardakowski4323
    @marksardakowski43236 ай бұрын

    Giving is always better the receiving, George had a wonderful life❤

  • @drdavid1963
    @drdavid19636 ай бұрын

    It's a wonderful reaction. The Rolling Stones song said it best ' You Can't Always Get What You Want, but if you try some time, you just might find you get what you need.' Being an important person to so many people is more valuable than fulflling your desires that might not be what you need. You might say he has learned this valuable lesson that beause he has been valuable to people, he should finally appreciate that makes a more fulfilling life than travelling to exotic places, and then what? For me, the wonderful ending is earned because the darkness is real and authentic. Being made just after the end of the second world war, it was a deeply moving message of moving out of the darkness and appreciating that life is indeed wonderful.

  • @Tusc9969

    @Tusc9969

    6 ай бұрын

    Well said!!!

  • @cclapew
    @cclapew6 ай бұрын

    Yes Lionel Barrymore's portrayal of Potter was evil but in another Frank Capra movie called You Cant Take It With You also with Jimmy Stewart he absolutely nails that role as the lovable Grandfather.... A testament to his skill and the reason why him and his siblings as well as their parents and grandparents were called the Royal Family of the American Stage.... also he is the great uncle of Drew Barrymore....

  • @polferiferus1938
    @polferiferus19386 ай бұрын

    If you watch the scene again where George says “I don’t want to mary anyone!” they are both becoming intensely close, literally smelling eachother’s hair, etc. It’s all done without words. I won’t tell you what you should think, but it is key to understanding this scene. If you carefully watch it again I don’t think you’ll be confused by it. I say this because I sensed you weren’t noticing it, especially since you seemed so confused by it.

  • @user-mg5mv2tn8q

    @user-mg5mv2tn8q

    6 ай бұрын

    After that scene was filmed, the script assistant reminded the director that James Stewart and Donna Reed had neglected to speak a fair number of the lines thad been written for them. The director said, "With acting like that, who needs dialogue?"

  • @polferiferus1938

    @polferiferus1938

    6 ай бұрын

    I didn’t know that! Explains a lot! Thank you!

  • @timh8324

    @timh8324

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@user-mg5mv2tn8q Yeah - it was all about the struggle that George was facing internally - He saw all his dreams sailing away and was really frustrated and mad and depressed. He really liked Mary but she was stopping him too. So he had an internal struggle. Mary was constant throughout the movie, an anchor for him - she helped him and was able to help him face the life he never wanted. She worked to provide him with whatever she could - you could see that in the honeymoon she put together. When you think about it she is the hero of the movie (at least the human one). I think the part where some people dont see that it is terrible that she became an old maid is that they miss that her dream was the wife/husband/family - and she is the best at it - it was her dream - it was never fulfilled. So if he gave up his life - she would lose her dream as well.

  • @phila3884

    @phila3884

    6 ай бұрын

    It's not Amanda only. The buildup of the romantic tension is lost on some other reactors. Remember, we've seen it tens if not hundreds of times. The other scene which causes (unnecessary) cringing is when he "grabs" Mary after finding her leaving the library. Everyone forgets, she's his "wife" as far as he knows and expects her to react with relief, not terror. Again, 20+ watches, right?

  • @LukeLovesRose

    @LukeLovesRose

    6 ай бұрын

    Exactly. And George has just lost his last chance to do what he really wanted to do. Hes miserable. But then, George found himself again in Mary. Theyve always been drawn to each other

  • @bigdream_dreambig
    @bigdream_dreambig6 ай бұрын

    At the end, you worry that George is living a life he didn't choose, in that he has been unable to travel the world and build grand structures the way he'd first planned. However, you're forgetting that he _did_ choose this life. Every step of the way when he was about to leave town he was faced with a decision and he _chose_ to help his community or family rather than to begin his voyage. Every step, his childhood dream was less important to him than the dream that had essentially been handed down to him from his father. And, through Clarence's miracle, he now knows that those choices weren't a foolish waste, but rather had a powerful positive impact. And I _do_ think George was able to travel places after the events of this film. With all the donations -- including the $25k Sam gave! -- the Savings & Loan is on quite stable financial footing. George and Mary are certain to be able to save and, with the loving support of their community, to travel a bit if they still want to -- maybe even with their children!

  • @jimwoodman8158
    @jimwoodman81586 ай бұрын

    Merry Christmas Amanda, and thank you for all your wonderful content throughout the year. Also, please don't feel embarrassed to sing in the future, your voice is beautiful.

  • @Finchsterreading

    @Finchsterreading

    6 ай бұрын

    I’ve been meaning to say that she also doesn’t need to bother with subtitles. Her English is fine. 😊

  • @lewstone5430
    @lewstone54306 ай бұрын

    This film always makes me tear up. Thanks for the great reaction and for pointing out Venezuela was mentioned! I never caught that before, my cousin-in-law is from Venezuela. He married my Colombian cousin. Merry Christmas Amanda!

  • @greggpangle4385
    @greggpangle43852 ай бұрын

    I'm 55, and I cry every time time I have watched this, which was every year growing up in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. It's harder to find afterwards, as I am poor, no TV, and couldn't afford cable anyway. I watch reactions like yours, instead. And I cry. I'm an artist and musician, I put my emotions into my work. Thank you.

  • @emotionalideas
    @emotionalideas6 ай бұрын

    A great film. BTW-The pool they fell into? That's the Swim Gym at Beverly Hills High School. Graduated there in '81 and used it every day. It's still there!"

  • @fewwiggle
    @fewwiggle6 ай бұрын

    Hi Amanda -- and Merry Christmas!!! George was living his best life -- he just needed to realize it :-)

  • @alanzlotkowski2695
    @alanzlotkowski26956 ай бұрын

    The pool scene: "OH no, the make-up, the dresses, the hair....that's a "no" for me!" I would push you in.

  • @hp9697
    @hp96976 ай бұрын

    Annie stole every scene in which she was involved! Merry Christmas!

  • @jackmars931
    @jackmars9316 ай бұрын

    And thus GoFundMe was born. 🎄🎅☃

  • @jsharp3165
    @jsharp31656 ай бұрын

    No, that was not Lionel Barrymore’s real head. He’s wearing a bald cap. Did you know the actor was Drew Barrymore’s grand uncle?

  • @geoffmower8729
    @geoffmower87296 ай бұрын

    I love how the director used the snow stopping to indicate that George didn't exist anymore. And when George prays to come back the snow starts again.

  • @omgbygollywow
    @omgbygollywow6 ай бұрын

    That is point of the movie. If George had done what he wanted in life, all those other people would not have a better life. Sometimes we sacrifice our own happiness and desires for others.

  • @matjac1966
    @matjac19665 ай бұрын

    I love first time reaction videos... Yours, of this movie, was great. Everybody interprets it a little differently. That's why this movie became a classic. As a boy, I hated this watching this every year, with my mom crying at the end... The older I got though, the more I appreciated the message it was delivering. Now that I'm 57, It's a must watch every holiday season.

  • @ThistleAndSea
    @ThistleAndSea6 ай бұрын

    Wonderful, Amanda. Such a sweet story! Thanks for sharing this one. 🙂

  • @stevenvicijan4338
    @stevenvicijan43386 ай бұрын

    It's movie with so much " corazón " we created the term " corazónovi " to feel overwhelmed. . .

  • @auapplemac1976
    @auapplemac19766 ай бұрын

    Your last statement about George was correct. Not only did he come through this tragedy, but he realized what a great life he had and was able to accept and enjoy the treasures he had - his family, good will of the town, a women he loved and who loved him, and a new prospective about his job and the good he could do. His real nature was to be altruistic.

  • @MagnumGoose
    @MagnumGoose6 ай бұрын

    "She could kill him...and no one would know". That's dark! 😂😂😇 LOL

  • @PurplePete763
    @PurplePete7636 ай бұрын

    I love that Sam Wainright was willing to send him all that money even though he didn't get the girl.

  • @matthewarsenault463
    @matthewarsenault4636 ай бұрын

    The point of the story is he had a wonderful life he just could not realize it but when it was taken away from him then he realized it was a wonderful life in the end he wanted his wife and children back he wasn't praying to go on a trip or an adventure he was praying for his wife and kids to come back

  • @MrJohnTeacher
    @MrJohnTeacher6 ай бұрын

    It was quite normal for children to have jobs decades ago. I got my first job in 1968 at the age of 13.

  • @EShelby2127
    @EShelby21276 ай бұрын

    I've heard that this movie was written to help soldiers and sailors who had returned from WWII, and felt that their moment to be heroes had passed them by. Most who served and returned, were not on the front lines and their stories were of boredom and monotony, uncelebrated. The message was that they could still be heroic, by living a good life and doing what was right. The movie "Mister Roberts" with Henry Fonda and Jack Lemon comes closest to the plight of those whose jobs were vital, but not in the awareness of the public. When they returned, they felt that the chance to shine was past...

  • @thatpatrickguy3446
    @thatpatrickguy34466 ай бұрын

    A great reaction to one of the best movies, not just Christmas movies, of all time in my mind. Even as a bitter and heartless old man (or so I hear) I tear up every time I watch this movie. And for someone who has struggled so much with depression and self-destructive thoughts throughout my life, the lesson of this movie has always been one of the reasons I've never given in to those urges. Jimmy Stewart was pretty much fresh out of serving as the pilot of a B-24 bomber in WWII when this movie started production. After flying so many bombing missions over Germany in the course of his service and seeing all the death and destruction of a world war, he was suffering from what we'd now call PTSD. Lionel Barrymore (the hated Mr. Potter) was the main one who got Jimmy Stewart to take this role when he really didn't want to, and the end result was playing the character that he called his favorite of the ones he played. The movie was therapeutic for him as well. Stewart said that acting out the scenes where George was enraged was cathartic for him. While filming the scene in which George prays in the bar James Stewart was so overcome because of how low he felt in his own life that he began to sob. Frank Capra later re-framed and blew up the shot because he wanted to catch that expression on Stewart's face. It really hammers home the feeling of Stewart BEING George Bailey. James Stewart was such a brilliant actor anyway, but this role might have been great therapy for him as well as a perfect role for him to play. And if nothing else we can be thankful to Mr. Potter for getting Jimmy Stewart to do this movie.

  • @stargazer1682
    @stargazer16826 ай бұрын

    They said that his job at the drugstore was his "after school job". Lots of kids still have part-time after school jobs. He was 12 at the time, which wouldn't be an uncommon age for someone to get a paper route or something.

  • @aliceharper707
    @aliceharper7076 ай бұрын

    That's pretty much my life. I'm 69 years old and I've had all these plans all my life and the things have always turned in other directions. I'm finally learning to just accept what the universe has for me. It hasn't been easy. And I may never get to travel to the places I've always wanted to travel to. But I am a naturopathic doctor and I do touch a lot of lives. I don't make much money doing this but it is my life's calling. I thought I would make more than I am but I have a roof over my head. I have grandchildren and great-grandchildren and a man who loves me very much. So this movie helps put things in perspective. Thank you for your reaction. 42:56

  • @Progger11

    @Progger11

    6 ай бұрын

    "The universe" didn't have other plans for you. The capitalist system is designed to exploit and oppress you, and you unfortunately weren't able to escape the machine. It happens to most, and it's unjust. You should have made your dreams happen, and I'm sorry you didn't. :(

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez23226 ай бұрын

    The actor that played George, Jimmy Stewart, was already a well known actor yet he left the fame and fortune of Hollywood to fly bombers over Europe during WW2. This was extremely hazardous duty. Other actors who left Hollywood for the battlefields of the Pacific, Africa, and Europe were Clark Gable, Eddie Albert, Tyrone Power, David Niven, just to name a few. They exchanged guaranteed fame and fortune for the possibilty of death or being horribly disfigured. How many of today's Hollywood crowd would do the same? It's the difference in the generation mindset. The WW2 generation actors knew there were things bigger - more important than themselves.

  • @emilywolfe7319
    @emilywolfe73196 ай бұрын

    "Was George responsible for her eyesight???" 😆 Good point 💕

  • @user-qp1hh3se3o
    @user-qp1hh3se3o6 ай бұрын

    It's not the galaxy....it's heaven!

  • @christopherhamlet734
    @christopherhamlet7346 ай бұрын

    All right, one big mental hug for you💕🙏🏼🎄❄️God Bless you and have a wonderful and very Nice Christmas ✝️❣️

  • @rikk319
    @rikk3196 ай бұрын

    My grandfather, who served in the Marines in WW2, saw this after he came back, and he told me one of the reasons it probably did so poorly at the box office was that a lot of people had just been through the harsh reality of the war, and the glowing sentimentality of the film clashed with that reality rather strongly, which made a lot of people pan it as too corny and soft. He said that the passage of time softens people's memories, and this made it grow on a lot of his generation over time, but that my parents' generation and mine didn't experience the war, so they only saw it from a perspective of only the wonderful things the past held, and embraced it right away after it went into the public domain and started being shown on TV every Christmas season.

  • @LaborHours
    @LaborHours5 күн бұрын

    Amanda, I love what you did with the Christmas lights on the wall, it makes a perfect border around the screen and is better than any other Christmas light screen border that I've seen.

  • @greenpeasuit
    @greenpeasuit6 ай бұрын

    That is amazing, Amanda. Your tears are so magical, it made the black and white film suddenly turn to color! Ha ha ha!

  • @frankworthen1065
    @frankworthen10656 ай бұрын

    There are other riches in life besides money. The final scene where Harry calls George "the richest man in town" reinforces that George was truly wealthy.

  • @keithmartin4670
    @keithmartin46706 ай бұрын

    No idea about the squirrel, but I do know that Capra was fond of Jimmy the raven and used him in all his movies from 1938 on. You may have seen him already. He played the crow in “The Wizard of Oz”.

  • @roberttaylor3699
    @roberttaylor36996 ай бұрын

    I love your reaction! This is my #1 favorite Christmas movie. "Did George have something to do with her eyesight?", still laughing at that comment...lol

  • @lawrencecumbo2908
    @lawrencecumbo29086 ай бұрын

    I love the ending, her emotions from the song resonated with me as well. ❤😊

  • @CoastalNomad
    @CoastalNomad6 ай бұрын

    Merry Christmas..... Great Reaction..... This is a Christmas Staple (Must Watch)...... This was the First Movie Jimmy Stewart did after serving in WW2, Acting in this Movie helped Jimmy Combat his PTSD from the War.... When George and Mary threw rocks at the "Ole Granville House" the director had someone off camera ready to throw a rock, but Donna Reed, who had played softball in school, made the throw and broke a window on her own. When Drunk Uncle Billy staggers down the sidewalk and you hear a crash.... The actor actually knocked over stuff/items off camera, and Apoligized and they left it in the movie.... Great Movie that shows the "Butterfly Effect" of how the smallest things can have ripple effects that have large effects.... Yes, George's friends, Ernie (Taxi-Driver) and Bert (Cop) were the inspiration for Bert and Ernie on Sesame Street......

  • @WheresWaldo05
    @WheresWaldo056 ай бұрын

    I was born in 1983. I had a paper route in 6, 7 and 8th grades. Then worked at a restaurant as a dishwasher all through highschool. I did so cause i did not like to or feel comfortable asking for things. I felt better working, earning money and buying what i wanted myself. And now i am completely disgusted with the younger lazy and spoiled generations.

  • @TedLittle-yp7uj
    @TedLittle-yp7uj6 ай бұрын

    Thank you for reacting to this great movie. It was made at a time when films told great stories with great actors.

  • @Emilyhildegaard1
    @Emilyhildegaard16 ай бұрын

    It wasn't the "galaxy" that sent George Bailey help. It was God, sending an angel to watch over and help him. People were praying to God at the beginning of the movie, and God was answering their prayers.

  • @michaelmckesson6997
    @michaelmckesson69976 ай бұрын

    Don't kill him. You worried me a little.😂 Merry Christmas

  • @HassoBenSoba
    @HassoBenSoba3 ай бұрын

    This was the BIG ONE for director Frank Capra, who had witnessed the horrors of WWII first-hand as part of a government documentary program. He came back shocked and depressed (as did Jimmy Stewart) and ended up creating this incredible film. Once the trauma of the war years had passed, the national "delayed reaction" set in, and American films took on a much darker tone overall (eg: the rise of the film NOIR genre). "Wonderful Life" was definitely a part of that movement. The RKO studio promoted the film as a "lighter-than-air" romantic comedy, and people expecting that were shocked by its harshness; on the other hand, people who WOULD HAVE appreciated its darker elements had NO IDEA how disturbing it really is, and stayed away. So it didn't do very well at the box office. Thank goodness "Wonderful Life" eventually made its way to TV, and has become recognized as one of the absolute greatest of cinematic masterpieces. I enjoyed your commentary and reaction, which prove once again the timeless, profound beauty and relevance of this film.

  • @mikefoster6018
    @mikefoster60186 ай бұрын

    If you like this one, do check out an earlier, awesome Jimmy Stewart Christmas film called The Shop Around The Corner (1940). It's very different in tone (being more like a Shakespeare comedy, including very dark elements not only laughs) but is so powerful.

  • @robincochran7369

    @robincochran7369

    6 ай бұрын

    Oh, I love that movie. Great suggestion.

  • @bigdream_dreambig
    @bigdream_dreambig6 ай бұрын

    14:07 "That Potter guy should have three angels visiting him on Christmas night." 👏 Good Dickens reference -- but don't forget Marley! (Marley was dead, to begin with.)

  • @victorsixtythree
    @victorsixtythree6 ай бұрын

    4:54 - Mr. Gower's telegram is dated 1919 - the year of the great influenza pandemic. Tens of millions died world wide. I think movie audiences in 1946 would have been very familiar, seeing that telegram.

  • @lexiburrows8127

    @lexiburrows8127

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes. My Grandfather's parents (my Dad's side) both died from the Spanish 'Flu. Despite this, my Grandfather was more fortunate than most, however, as he, his brother and sister were all adopted by one family and not separated from each other.

  • @bigdream_dreambig
    @bigdream_dreambig6 ай бұрын

    22:28 "So he never took the job that Sam offered him?" Sam didn't offer George a job with him, he gave George the chance to invest in Sam's dad's plastics company -- but whenever George had any extra money, he always planned to use it to travel but then eventually used it to keep the Savings & Loan running instead. He never did invest any with Sam.

  • @rxlxviii
    @rxlxviii6 ай бұрын

    Kids had jobs in the 1980s as well and even in the 1990s. Parents didn't buy their kids stuff that weren't necessary other than for presents on special occassion. Kids were expected to earn their own money to buy the things they wanted. Almost all my friends in the 1980s who were under 16 years of age had jobs to pay for their albums, clothes, cars, car insurance, dates, eating out with friends, and to help pay for college.

  • @batape1965

    @batape1965

    6 ай бұрын

    In the US, kids can't work at a normal job until they are 14. It has been that way since 1938.

  • @rxlxviii

    @rxlxviii

    6 ай бұрын

    @@batape1965 I guess you never heard of paperboys. One of my friends was a paperboy hired by the biggest paper (and one of the largest newspapers in the country) in the city at the age of 8. Kids can still work under the age of 14. But, yes, most of my friends and I started working at the age of 14. But some had jobs at age 12.

  • @catherinelw9365

    @catherinelw9365

    6 ай бұрын

    @@batape1965 Wrong. I always had a job in the summer when I was a teen.

  • @batape1965

    @batape1965

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah, and I cut my neighbor's lawn for $10/week. Also not a regular job. @@rxlxviii

  • @melanie62954

    @melanie62954

    5 ай бұрын

    Babysitting, lawn care, paper routes--there were definitely ways to work in the '80s. I started babysitting when I was 12.

  • @bigal480
    @bigal4806 ай бұрын

    Heck yeah, one of my all time favorites

  • @bigdream_dreambig
    @bigdream_dreambig6 ай бұрын

    It's not a "gated community" -- there are no fortress-like walls or gates or guards -- but it probably _is_ what we'd call a "housing development." It's a large plot of land that the Building & Loan owns and on which they build houses to sell to their members.

  • @HARRi81_UK
    @HARRi81_UK6 ай бұрын

    Merry Christmas Amanda!

  • @flpndrox
    @flpndrox6 ай бұрын

    That raven was in all this director's movies, and the Wizard of Oz.

  • @bigdream_dreambig
    @bigdream_dreambig6 ай бұрын

    18:09 "I'm struggling to read this guy." In _George's_ mind, his last chance to travel has just died, what with his brother returning with a job offer which, if he takes it (which George knows would be a good opportunity for him), will mean that there's no one to run the Savings & Loan unless George gives up his dream and stays to keep doing it himself. He's angry and frustrated and feels like he's being tied down to this town. And now his heart is telling him he should further tie himself to Mary, but that's yet one more bond that would bind him to Bedford Falls. Needless to say, he's conflicted.

  • @totomomo18
    @totomomo186 ай бұрын

    t's a Wonderful Life is more than a Christmas movie I am not christen and I love it. It is a feel good movie and one of the first time travel element movies. It is so much about time travel or alternative realities that Back to the future 2 allude to it :). Fun fact the movie was not a financial success when it came out and was forgotten. Only because of a copyright registration error ( Which was fixed decades later) the movie was considered public domain for years and because of the that the Tv Networks aired over and over every Christmas till it became a cult classic. Another fun fact the scene with the uncle that was drunk and fell down was adlib because one of the stage worker dropped something in the middle of filming. I love George speech to Mr Potter about the working class. The actor who plays Mr Potter is by the way Drew Barrymore great uncle. If you want another great Jimmy Stewart movie you should watch Mr Smith goes to Washington and Harvey.

  • @amandamiquilena

    @amandamiquilena

    6 ай бұрын

    Oh wow wow wow, thanks for all these interesting facts :D

  • @yourthaiguy
    @yourthaiguy6 ай бұрын

    Lesson learned…. No man is a failure who has friends…❤

  • @dearally4787
    @dearally47876 ай бұрын

    It was not in the script for George Bailey to cry in the “prayer scene” at the bar director Frank Capra was surprised when Stewart broke down. This is what J. Stewart said about that scene… I remember when I read the first draft of the script, and that scene, the little prayer, affected me. When I did it in the movie it did, and it did the same to me right now. This is a theory that I’ve always had; creating moments in movies, this I think is the important thing. Nobody knows exactly how it happens. What you should do is to prepare yourself as best as you can to make these moments happen. Because in a movie is really not so much the performance, there are moments.”

  • @TheSkootenbeeten
    @TheSkootenbeeten6 ай бұрын

    I'm pausing this before I start watching, as I have a feeling... that I'm going to be left in a mess of emotion and tears by the end. Soooo, I'm taking this opportunity to say this now; Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and sincere joy in this Winter solstice. If I've missed anything... my apologies! BUT. All the best Amanda. I might edit this comment at the end to confirm or deny what I said about being left in a mess of emotion and tears.

  • @shawnpatrick1877
    @shawnpatrick18776 ай бұрын

    George Bailey wasn't still living a life he didn't choose. That's entirely missing the point. He made the choice, every single time, to put the needs of others ahead of his own dreams. No one ever forced anything on him, he simply made the hard choice in every situation. His selfless choices are what defined him and gained him so much love, and in the end, they're what saved him. Those choices had a payoff that let him know he had a wonderful life of meaning after all, one that just traveling and building things probably wouldn't have given him. He realized how much he loved his current life, even happily embracing the flaws like the drafty old house with the loose post on the stair rails.

  • @matthewcostello3530
    @matthewcostello35306 ай бұрын

    that pool in the High School is still in use and so is the floor

  • @DavidB-2268
    @DavidB-22686 ай бұрын

    In his song "Beautiful Boy", John Lennon wrote "Life is what happens when you're busy making other plans." We don't all get to fulfill our childhood fantasies (there'd be a lot more rock stars and astronauts if we did.) George was bitter that he didn't get the life he'd dreamed about. But the life he got was a good one. He just needed to be able to see that.

  • @K9TheFirst1
    @K9TheFirst15 ай бұрын

    Nothing changed in George Bailey's life, only his perspective.

  • @christopherhamlet734
    @christopherhamlet7346 ай бұрын

    Why are you look absolutely amazing in your home attire. Don’t let anybody tell you different.❣️👌💫🎄

  • @Hondo0101
    @Hondo01016 ай бұрын

    The best Christmas movie ever. Great reaction!!!

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux54055 ай бұрын

    The scene where George comes out of his mom's halfway house,Clarence telling him he's gone, the extreme closeup on his face, is a very dark, almost scary scene DiCapra did! Can u even believe, this movie saved his life? From WW2? The mean guy here is the original Lionel Barrymore, Drew Barrymore's great great grandfather. Jimmy was so ate up with PTSD, he didn't want to do movies ever again. Lionel convinced him, to be in this. Can u believe how many movies came from this? Jimmy started out as a ww2 pilot, became an ace, squadron commander, wing commander, and an entire flight operations officer! He had horrible PTSD, until he did this movie. And the biggest crime? The banker....shoulda went to jail! He is the original family royalty, Barrymore! But he belongs in jail!!! Black and white Reese Witherspoon movie? Groundhog Day? Scrooged? Four Christmases? Click? And in some places, very dark!! And his girl, went on to massive acclaim. Movies and the Donna Reed show!! The jim Carrey 50s movie, plus Bruce Almighty, plus beautiful sunlight...plus the Truman show? The impact of this movie, ....u can't count that high! Also watch his incredible movie, Mr Smith goes to Washington! U will never hear references to Clarence, ever again, during Christmas, Angels, miracles, without thinking of this movie!! Pro tip.... SNL did a skit where several of the townspeople confronted Potter, whip his butt, then send him to jail for theft and bank fraud! Pro tip...the ginger snap cookie, was made from this movie, when George called Zuzu, gingersnap!!

  • @wingedbuffalo4670
    @wingedbuffalo46703 ай бұрын

    Hi Amanda ... This is my favorite movie of all time (or at least it has been for over 40 years since I first saw it), and I never tire of watching it. It also provides wonderful and MUCH NEEDED lessons for today's world. Life isn't about being "entitled" to "get" (or even necessarily to be able to pursue) whatever you "want;" it's about doing your DUTY, being a good and decent person to serve and help others, and always doing "the right thing." THAT is our truest, best destiny on our path to Heaven. As for the actors, the male lead (adult George Bailey) was played by Jimmy Stewart -- a true hero in real life. Jimmy Stewart gave up his successful Hollywood career to enlist in the U.S. Army Air Corps (the precursor to what would later in 1947 become the newly independent separate U.S. Air Force) upon the U.S. entry into WW II, even though he was older and "did NOT "have" to serve. Jimmy served as a B-24 pilot and flew many bombing missions against the Nazis and their allies. When the war ended, he had risen to the rank of full Colonel, but the war aged him terribly and psychologically damaged him with PTSD and depression from losing so many men under his command who had been shot down and killed. This movie was Jimmy's first after returning to Hollywood after the war, and you can clearly see how he tapped into his PTSD during the scenes showing his broken desperation and near mental crack-up (i.e., when he "snaps" in his family parlor and kicks over/destroys the model suspension bridge he had built, and when he's "at the end of his rope" praying to God in Martini's Bar). Jimmy Stewart remained in the Air Force Reserves and retired as a Brigadier General (1-star), and then years later President Ronald Reagan gave him an honorary promotion to Major General (2-star).

  • @Eowyn187
    @Eowyn1876 ай бұрын

    16:45 He came into Mary's house with a weird attitude because he knew he was about to commit to her, and life there, rather than going abroad. He was scared. He hasn't learned yet, what was most important in life.

  • @tommyriam8320

    @tommyriam8320

    5 ай бұрын

    A huge segment of the human population _are_ simpletons...these things i.e., the otherwise plainly obvious, must be ''spelled out'' for them.

  • @CrownlessKing88
    @CrownlessKing886 ай бұрын

    He was conflicted because he loved Mary but he knew marrying her would mean being stuck in Bedford Falls. So that’s why he was hard to read in that scene where they’re on the phone and he shakes her angry and kisses her.

  • @keithmartin4670
    @keithmartin46706 ай бұрын

    Funny you should refer to Scrooge. Lionel Barrymore used to do Scrooge on the radio every Christmas for around 20 years or so. I bet you could find a recording on line. He has *two* stars on the Walk of Fame, one for radio and one for films.

  • @burnout_2017
    @burnout_20176 ай бұрын

    Merry Christmas Amanda 🎄🎅⛄ i hope you understand the positive effects you have on all of us. ❤

  • @okeefe757
    @okeefe7576 ай бұрын

    $5000 in 1919 is worth about $90000 today.

  • @EllisThings
    @EllisThings6 ай бұрын

    Let's roll it! Happy holidays!

  • @amandamiquilena

    @amandamiquilena

    6 ай бұрын

    Happy Holidays! I like your profile pic 😄

  • @EllisThings

    @EllisThings

    6 ай бұрын

    @@amandamiquilena haha thank you - one of my all time fave images lol And loved the video, you could say... It's A Wonderful Reaction

  • @seanmcmurphy4744
    @seanmcmurphy47446 ай бұрын

    18:00 “Is he angry? I’m struggling to understand” In the 1920s there was no birth control (except condoms), and no daycare for children. So when a man got married children and responsibilities came quickly. George cant travel with Mary, he must have a steady job to support her and the kids. George loves Mary, but he knows that marrying her means giving up his dream forever.

  • @johannesvalterdivizzini1523
    @johannesvalterdivizzini15236 ай бұрын

    Feliz Nochebueno, Amanda!

  • @jeremymerrifield7244
    @jeremymerrifield724410 күн бұрын

    James Stewart was suffering with PTSD during the making of this move. Perhaps thats why he is Breaking it looks so real

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