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The Best Years Of Our Lives
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Three enlisted men face an uncertain future at the end of World War II.
Banker Al Stephenson comes home to a family that has grown up while he was
away at war and a job where his bosses have little interest in supporting
the men who risked their lives in the name of freedom. Fred Derry faces a
dead end job and a war bride he barely knows. After losing his hands in
battle, Homer Parrish has a harder time adjusting to others' attitudes and
his own fear of pity than any physical challenges. Their challenges
capture the spirit of a country recovering from a war that affected the lives of every American.
The Best Years of Our Lives was the first major Hollywood
production to deal with the problems faced by veterans returning from World
War II. At the time, most producers thought the war-weary public was more
interested in escapist entertainment, but Goldwyn proved them wrong by
turning this into the top-grossing picture of the decade.
Independent producer Sam Goldwyn got the idea for a film about veterans
re-adjusting to home life after World War II when his wife, Francis,
pointed out a photo in the August 7, 1944 issue of Time magazine.
It depicted a group of homecoming Marines leaning out a railway car on
which someone had written "Home Again!" in chalk. The story itself dealt
with the mixed emotions the men would face on returning to their families
and the jobs they held before the war.
Fredric March had worked with Goldwyn twice before, on The Dark
Angel (1935) and the disastrous We Live Again (1934), and wasn't
too keen on leaving Broadway to work with the producer again. When he lost the lead
in Life With Father to William Powell, however, he decided to give
the film a shot. Ironically, neither he nor co-star Dana Andrews had
served in the war, and March had been a frequent target of conservative
commentators for his liberal politics.
Myrna Loy was already considered the screen's perfect wife because of
her Thin Man films at MGM, but had made few films recently because
of her work for the war effort. Unsure about her willingness to take a
secondary role in which she would have a grown daughter, Goldwyn invited
her to his home for dinner, where he charmed her into taking the part. She
had no problems with the role's size or the character's age, but was
concerned about working with William Wyler. "I hear he's a sadist," she
confided in Goldwyn. "That isn't true," he retorted. "He's just a very
mean fellow." She signed for the role anyway, and her agent secured her top
billing.
In the view of most critics, The Best Years of Our Lives is
independent producer Samuel Goldwyn's best film. For all the jokes about
Goldwyn's vulgarity and his mangling of the English language, the picture
is both tasteful and perceptive, the perfect embodiment of what his PR
department would call "The Goldwyn Touch." In truth, that touch was the
product of some of the best filmmakers in Hollywood, including director
William Wyler and cinematographer Gregg Toland, who worked under contract
to Goldwyn. The film was really the last hurrah for The Goldwyn Touch, as
it marked Wyler's last film before breaking out with a production company
of his own.
At 172 minutes, The Best Years of Our Lives was almost twice the
length of the average picture of its era. Goldwyn considered cutting it,
but when he screened it with Wyler it was so tight that he couldn't find
anything to cut. In addition, the time seemed to fly by. That judgment
was reinforced by preview audiences in October 1946, who were so
enthusiastic that he decided not to cut the picture.
The film won seven Oscars®: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor
(Fredric March), Best Supporting Actor (Harold Russell), Best Screenplay,
Best Score and Best Editing. The only category in which it lost was Best
Sound. In addition, Goldwyn received the Irving Thalberg Award, a special
honor for outstanding work in production. Russell's win was a surprise.
Earlier in the evening he was handed a Special Oscar® "for bringing
hope and courage to his fellow veterans." This would make him the only
performer to receive two Oscars® for the same performance.
Director: William Wyler
Producer: Samuel Goldwyn
Screenplay: Robert E. Sherwood
Based on the Verse Novel Glory for Me by MacKinlay Kantor
Cinematography: Gregg Toland
Editing: Daniel Mandell
Art Direction: George Jenkins, Perry Ferguson
Music: Hugo Friedhofer
Cast: Myrna Loy (Milly Stephenson), Fredric March (Al Stephenson), Dana
Andrews (Fred Derry), Teresa Wright (Peggy Stephenson), Virginia Mayo
(Marie Derry), Cathy O'Donnell (Wilma Cameron), Harold Russell (Homer
Parrish), Hoagy Carmichael (Butch Engle), Gladys George (Hortense Derry),
Steve Cochran (Cliff Scully), Ray Collins (Mr. Milton), Roman Bohnen (Pat
Derry)
BW-170m. Closed captioning.
by Rob Nixon
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31 Days of Oscar Highlights for Feb. 17
A baseball player (Robert De Niro) develops a terminal illness in Bang the Drum Slowly (1973), co-starring Vincent Gardenia in an Oscar®-nominated Supporting Actor performance. The lineup also includes Moonstruck (1987), Kramer vs. Kramer (1979), and other Academy honorees.
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