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Frank Capra

Five Came Back – Hollywood Goes to War

For those who enjoy film, the names John Ford, Frank Capra, George Stevens, William Wyler, and John Huston will be familiar. All are Oscar-winning directors (with a total of 14 Oscars between them). They were also part of the World War II war effort as military filmmakers. Five Came Back is a three-part documentary about these five directors and how they used their filmmaking expertise during the war. The series is streaming on Netflix.

When the U.S. entered World War II after Pearl Harbor, there were many people who left their worlds of safety and comfort to fight in this war. These five filmmakers knew they had talents that could be of import to the war effort. Each volunteered and spent the war in uniform making films for the military. Each had different approaches to the task. For some it took them directly into battle?on Midway and at D-Day, or flying on bombers on combat missions. Others made films that helped American understand why this war had to be fought. But each found a way to serve their nation with the skills they had developed entertaining people with film. Some of their work was essentially newsreel material, often with a good dose of propaganda included. It served to bring the war back to Americans in such a way to keep morale high.

There are some big name directors of today who relate the stories of these earlier filmmakers: Steven Spielberg, Francis Ford Coppola, Guillermo del Toro, Paul Greenglass, and Laurence Kasdan. They understand how difficult it is to make films under the best of circumstances. They relate the hardships and trials (which included pushing to make the films their way) faced by the early group.

The series introduces us to their work before the war, but the bulk of the film focuses on their wartime work. It also shows us how this experience changed them. For example, George Stevens (who filmed D-Day and, eventually, the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp) was known mostly as a director of comedies before the war; after the war he never made another comedy (but some marvelous serious films).

This is an excellent piece of film history, plus a nice bit of the history of the Second World War as seen by these filmmakers. Netflix is also streaming some of the wartime films so that viewers can not only learn the story of these men, but also the stories they brought back with them. Among the ones I?ve added to my list on Netflix are: The Memphis Belle (Wyler), The Battle of Midway (Ford), The Negro Soldier (Capra), Know Your Enemy—Japan (Capra), and Let There Be Light (Huston).

29 Aug 1943, London, England, UK — Image by ? Bettmann/CORBIS

The Best of Christmas Spirit

grinchDo you ever feel like you need to have something jumpstart your Christmas spirit? While I believe that an act of generosity seems to be the most consistent means of unlocking Christmas in the heart of the Grinchiest Grinch, I’ll admit that there are certain films – or shows – that get me in the mood. Having interviewed several luminaries (who will remain nameless) over the last few weeks?who couldn’t name a favorite Christmas movie, it seems appropriate to provide a brief, chronological tutorial in the best of the best … from 1946 to the present. So, with apologies to a host of other films which I won’t mention (How the Grinch Stole Christmas,?A Christmas Story,?Rudolph the Rednosed Reindeer)… here goes nothing.

 

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It’s a Wonderful Life?(1946) might as well be the first Christmas film – with apologies to a Santa Claus movie from 1898 that no one has… ever.. seen. This black and white thriller has spawned a host of other Christmas films, like?The Family Man?and this year’s?It’s a Wonderful Life, but can hardly be replicated. Thanks to the beautiful mind of Frank Capra, and the performance of Jimmy Stewart, we watch George Bailey slowly spiral into a world of despair. Only the intervention of an angel, Clarence, out to earn his wings, and a vision of life without him in it, can help Bailey discover his soul again on Christmas Eve.

 

A-Charlie-Brown-Christmas-image

The classics continue as A Charlie Brown Christmas?(1965) delivered the clear theology of Charles Schultz, complete with a recitation by Linus of Luke 2:8-14, after Charlie Brown struggles with his community’s turn toward commercialism. Powerfully rendered visually (with a sad-sack Christmas tree) and wonderfully characterized, this is the old-school special that’s not to be missed, with apologies to?The Grinch and that rednosed reindeer.

 

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Another TV special,?A Christmas Carol?(1984) starring George C. Scott, proves to be as ‘preachable’ as they come. No animated Jim Carey film carries with it the weight that Scott’s pained performance as Ebenezer Scrooge does. Rather than simply see a world without him, the selfish, hoarding Scrooge is ‘treated’ to a Christmas Eve night with the presence of four ghosts, starting with his dead financial partner, Jacob Marley. The Ghosts of Past, Present, and Future scare the hell out of him – literally – with a joyful Christmas morning that has no comparison.

 

christmasvacation

In?National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation?(1989), Chevy Chase’s Clark Griswold represents the everyman who has wanted to decorate his house, raise his family right, and receive the compensation that he deserves. With a great role by Randy Quaid among a host of other comedic deliveries, Chase’s performance is stellar – his best ever. We learn about not putting the cart before the horse, but even more so, we learn what it means to love your family above all else – and to laugh at the way that Christmas shows up in unexpected places.

 

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A few years ago,?Home Alone?(1990) would never have made my list. But with two small boys, this one has become an annual favorite, as little Kevin (Macauley Culkin) outwits, outfights, and outlasts two bumbling burglars (Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern). In the meantime, he also befriends an elderly neighbor he once thought terrifying, and reminds the old man that while you’re breathing, it’s never too late to reconcile and to tell someone that you love them.

 

Belfast Waterfront?s Auditorium will be transformed into the city?s biggest and grandest cinema this Christmas for a special showing of Elf - the festive movie favourite - on Thursday 23 December at 3pm.

While I wanted to include?The Santa Clause for its pointed reminder that faith matters, I find myself skipping ahead to Will Ferrell’s funniest movie (there, I said it),?Elf (2003). While we had to wait nearly fourteen years for the next great Christmas film, Ferrell’s arrival as a human raised by elves was just hysterical. With Zooey Deschanel singing in the shower, and Buddy the Elf singing loud for all to hear (his Christmas cheer), this one has the perfect blend of Christmas magic and outsized heart to go with Ferrell’s comedic genius.

 

preplanding

Briefly returning to television, I’ll highlight Disney’s?Prep & Landing, that outlandishly funny story of two mismatched elves who must save Christmas as part of Santa’s not-so-famous pre-visit team. Dave Foley’s Wayne steals the show, suffering from his desire to receive a promotion, while secretly wrestling with his true calling to serve in the field, er, snow. With lots of laughs packed into its thirty-minute frame, the original spawned two sequels (with a third in development, supposedly), mashing up calling, laughs, and Christmas in twenty-two minute bursts. [Editor’s note:?Arthur Christmas?(2011) took a swing at Christmas and calling as well, but we’re running on a deadline here!]

 

believe

Two films debuted this year that bear considering for next year’s lineup, and late-breaking additions to your week’s preparation for Christmas. The first is Billy Dickson’s Christmas debut, Believe, that tackles small-town economics and faith at Christmastime, with a bit of whodunit rolled into the script. Funnyman Ryan O’Quinn’s performance will certainly capture your attention, as does Isaac Ryan Brown (Blackish) as a kid who helps our protagonist find his faith again.

 

wishforchristmas

The other, from up-and-coming writer/director partners Alexandra Boylan and John K.D. Graham, is?Wish for Christmas, taking my?first film’s premise – the what if, a life without motif – and using a teenager’s wish to make it happen. When Anna (Anna Fricks) wishes her parents’ faith away, she sets a cascading set of events in motion that threaten to bring her community to its knees. But thanks to the help of a streetwise, homeless Santa (Bill Engvall), she may win back her parents, and discover faith for herself.

So, there’s my Best of …Christmas. What did I miss? What will you argue? [I see you, Lamp-loving, BB Gun-shooting, Tongue-sticking fanboys.] But be careful – I have years of watching to back me up!

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