George Bailey's secret life A Christmas classic deconstructed

Deneen, Patrick J

GEORGE BAILEY'S SECRET LIFE Patrick J. Deneen Thanks to countless television reruns each holiday season, It's a Wonderful Life has become a permanent feature of our Christmas celebration. Frank...

...As we watch It's a Wonderful Life this year, I'd like to suggest that we pay more attention to what the vindication of George Bailey's life actually entails...
...It is a town with a deep sense of place and history...
...As he grows up, his ambitions change: he wants "to build things, design new buildings, plan modern cities...
...But young George Bailey hates this town...
...Bailey embodies the energy and vision of postwar America...
...Bailey's brave new world is unencumbered by permanence and not confined to a merely human scale...
...We like this movie because, like "Cheers," Martini's bar is a place where everybody knows our name...
...Potter...
...Like the nation as a whole, Bailey is eager to uproot nature and to alter the landscape, to re-engineer life for mobility and swiftness...
...Not only does George raze trees and transform landscapes, but he commits an unspeakable sacrilege: He obliterates a sacred symbol of our connection with the past...
...For Bailey, in fact, destroys the town that saves him in the end...
...Gower's drug store as a place to meet neighbors over an ice cream, not merely a place where one is treated as a faceless consumer buying an endless variety of pain-killers...
...In truth, Bailey Park is little more than an antiseptic suburban sprawl, especially when compared to the organic unity of Bedford Falls...
...Potter is evil, yes, but that does not necessarily make Bailey's actions laudable...
...In contrast to Bedford Falls, the subdivision is empty, almost devoid of human presence...
...He is the fourth generation to live in his house...
...When George's car crashes into a tree, the owner berates him: "My greatgrandfather planted this tree...
...Moreover, we don't notice George's animus toward the town that sustained him, I think, because we find nothing aberrant about his vision: after all, it is largely our own vision...
...But is Bailey's subdivision worthy of admiration in itself...
...Residents are presumably hidden behind the unwelcoming doors of their modern houses or relaxing on their back yard patios...
...In Bailey Park all the trees have been plowed under to make room for wide streets, large yards, and garages...
...Bailey very much represents all that is good and decent about the American dream...
...We like this movie because it portrays Mr...
...Potter...
...As it happens, George Bailey only grudgingly comes to realize the value of his own life by witnessing, thanks to the interventions of an angel, what terrors might have occurred had he never lived...
...Bailey's well-intentioned vision of a modern America eliminates our links with our forebears, covers up the evidence of death, supplies us with private retreats of social isolation, and all at the expense of a living, intimate community...
...Yet, It's a Wonderful Life captures the dark side of America as well...
...It is an America long dead: displaced first by Woolworth's, then K-Mart, then Wal-Mart...
...The modern city of Bailey's dreams is contrasted to the confinements of Bedford Falls: Bailey's future is to be open, fast, glittering, kaleidoscopic...
...Toward the end of the film we learn something more sinister...
...Bedford Falls has an intimate town center, and blocks of houses with front porches where people sit and greet their neighbors...
...mercilessly restructured to serve the automobile...
...Rather, George Bailey himself-Bailey the optimist, the adventurer, the builder, the man who craves nothing else but to get out of Bedford Falls and remake the world-exhibits a little-remarked-upon dark side...
...Frank Capra's delightful film features Jimmy Stewart as George Bailey, an Everyman who saves his small town from an evil Scrooge...
...Our hero's dreams are famously thwarted by fate and accident: he ends up managing the family Building and Loan...
...One doubts that anyone will live in these houses for four generations, much less one...
...drained of life by uniform architecture, interstate highways, and the ever-expanding suburbs...
...There are no front porches in Bailey Park-life is led in private, not in the intermediate public spaces that link the street to the home...
...No, it's not simply the Scrooge-like banker Mr...
...Potter...
...Above all, he is a family man beloved by his community...
...The movie's first scene pictures an idyllic Bedford Falls covered in freshly fallen snow, people strolling on sidewalks, a few cars meandering, healthy storefronts comfortably framing tree-lined streets...
...We tend not to notice these aspects of It's a Wonderful Life, partly because Bailey is a decent man, and we're always rooting for him against Mr...
...He wants to escape its limiting clutches, ideally to visit distant and exotic lands...
...However, George Bailey's story should serve not only as a Christmas treat, but also as a reminder of what modern prosperity seemingly insists on depriving us...
...Bailey Park, it is revealed during George's time travels with the angel Clarence, has been built atop the old town cemetery...
...His motives are noble: by creating "Bailey Park," a modern subdivision of single-family houses, he allows hundreds of families to escape the greedy and malignant clutches of Mr...
...Yet his grandiose designs are not forgotten...
...George craves "to shake off the dust of this crummy little town" to build "airfields, skyscrapers one hundred stories tall, bridges a mile long...
...Rather, they are channeled into the only avenue available: Bailey remakes Bedford Falls...

Vol. 124 • December 1997 • No. 22


 
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