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Best Years of Our Lives

tonyc June 16, 2004
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Read Time:2 Minute, 42 Second

The Best Years of Our Lives is loaded with star power and a message

that’s still important to understand today. Fredric March, Myrna Loy, Dana Andrews,

Virginia Mayo, and Gladys George all give stellar performances as families who were

separated for almost five years during World War II and now have to get used to each

other and normal lives.



The story follows three returning soldiers from

the same small town. Al Stephenson (Fredric March) was a banker who fought his way

across the Pacific. His daughter and son have now both grown up, and he finds he can

barely find anything to talk to them about. When he returns to the bank, his new view on

life makes it hard for him to work within a system that was once second nature to him.




The second of the returning soldiers, CPT Fred Derry (Dana Andrews) had

lived in the slums and had run the soda fountain at the local drugstore before he left to

become a bombardier in Europe. He had gotten married before he went overseas, and he

returns to find his wife wanting a lavish lifestyle that he can’t afford. While he was

gone, the drug store was bought out by a national chain, and one of the janitors had been

promoted to assistant manager.



The third veteran in this drama is Homer

Parrish (Harold Russell), a sailor who lost his hands in a fire aboard his ship. He

comes home to a family that has never been exposed to anyone with a handicap. His

girlfriend lived next door to him and wants to continue the relationship, but he can’t

find the ability to let her.



This is a long movie—longer than some people

may be willing to sit through. Still, it’s one that we all need to watch. It’s one of

the few films that deals with what veterans have to deal with when they come home.

Director William Wyler does a masterful job of showing the distance these men developed

not only with their families but with the rest of society, too. He shows the problems

they have with work, with the men who didn’t fight in the war, and with themselves—and he

shows the closeness they feel toward each other, even though they didn’t serve in the

same unit.



I could go on for hours about how good this movie is—about

the scenes that are dead on target emotionally or about the quality of the actor’s

performances. In scene after scene you feel like you’re watching a black and white

version of real life. Every line has a meaning, and each camera angle is framed to near

perfection. And it’s no surprise that the movie went on to win the 1946 Oscars for Best

Picture, Director, Actor, and Supporting Actor, to name a few.



This

movie is just as good today as it was in 1946, right after the war itself. I recommend

this movie to everyone—but especially to anyone who has a family member or friend who’s

away from home serving our country. No matter how hard they try, none of them can come

back to the world they left.

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tonyc

tonycald@gmail.com
http://www.tctheterrible.com/blog/
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