A prolonged bout of man-flu meant that I had little energy for much apart from lying in bed reading and watching films over the last week or so. (Fully recovered now, thanks.) So that takes me to The Best Years Of Our Lives, winner of the 1947 Oscar for Best Motion Picture, with another seven (eight by some counts) Oscars on the night - Best Director, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor, Best Writing, Best Supporting Actor, Best Editing, Best Music, an honorary award to Harold Russell for the role which also won him Best Supporting Actor and arguably also earning Sam Goldwyn his Irving Thalberg Memorial Award. It was the highest-grossing film in both the USA and the UK since
Gone With the Wind. I had not heard of it. Russell, the only actor ever to receive two Oscars for the same role, is not depicted on the promotional poster (probably because it was his first ever film role - in fact I think his first professional acting job).
Both IMDB rankings have The Best Years Of Our Lives ranked fourth of all films of 1946 (
here and
here), with It’s A Wonderful Life and The Big Sleep ranked ahead of it in both cases. Poorly educated as I am in cinema, I have not seen either of them, nor as far as I can tell have I seen any other film released in 1946. Here’s a contemporary trailer, which, in a bold approach to spoilers, leads off with the wedding scene at the very end of the film.
Click to view
Following on from last year’s
The Lost Weekend, it’s another harsh dose of contemporary reality, as three servicemen, demobbed after the war, return to their home city and face agonies of readjustment, as do the women they love. We’ve seen two of those women before - ten years ago, Myrna Loy was the second wife of
The Great Ziegfeld, and four years ago, Teresa Wright was the daughter-in-law of
Mrs Miniver. Although only thirteen years apart in age, this year they are playing mother and daughter.
As usual I’m going to run through the film starting with areas of weakness. The biggest: it’s 172 minutes long, which possibly explains why it didn’t get shown much on holiday TV schedules when I was a child. It was obviously a labour of love from the director, William Wyler; I don’t really think it needed three hours to tell the three male leads’ stories.
I don’t believe I spotted a black speaking part, though there are several black extras in the background both of the army and the drugstore scenes. (This in contrast to the original text which has a mulatto (sic) barman named Nat.)
Of the three leads, Dana Andrews as Air Force vet Fred Derry is meant to be the central character, and doesn’t quite pull it off to the extent that the other two do. One obvious issue is that Fred Derry is written to be in his early 20s (explicitly 21 in the original story) and Dana Andrews was 36 in 1945. It weakens the impact of the storyline of his impulsive marriage, now regretted by both him and his wife Marie (played by Virginia Mayo).
He does get a brilliant moment at the end with the mothballed warplanes, already relics from the war that he can’t escape.
Poor Myrna Loy as Milly, who was the biggest star in the film when it came out, doesn’t get to do much more than smouldering concern about her husband Al, an Oscar-winning performance by Fredric March, and their daughter Peggy, as played by Teresa Wright, who falls in love with Dana Andrews’ Fred. March however is very good as Al, a respectable banker who only made it to sergeant in the war, and is deeply disoriented by the return to civilian life. The first hour of the film covers the first day home of the three men, and Al in particular self-medicates horrifically with alcohol, not for the last time; a call-back to last year’s The Lost Weekend.
The show is stolen by Harold Russell as Navy Petty Officer Homer Parrish, who had himself lost both his hands in the war and had become incredibly nimble with his prosthetic steel hooks, to the point of signing his name on a form and playing Chopsticks with Hoagy Carmichael's Uncle Butch Engle.
As noted above, this is the only case in Oscar history of an actor receiving two awards for the same role - the Academy decided to give him a special award, on the grounds that the members were hardly going to vote for him as Best Supporting Actor; but the members duly did so. The scene where he struggles with himself to negotiate a future with his girlfriend Wilma (Cathy O'Donnell) is particularly memorable. (It is their wedding that the trailer leads with.)
In general the cinematography and music are good too - impressive use of depth (as you can see from several of the above screenshots), and a warm Oscar-winning score by Hugo Freiedhofer. You can find most of the good tracks on YouTube (
here,
here, here,
here,
here,
here and
here); this is the incidental music for the scene with Homer and Wilma.
Click to view
I was really impressed by this film, and I am ranking it ahead of last year's The Lost Weekend and just behind that other great war film, All Quiet on the Western Front. You can
get it here. Next is Gentleman's Agreement, of which I know nothing.
I think this is the only work of poetry adapted to become an Oscar-winning film - Glory For Me was MacKinlay Kantor's 276-page blank verse response to Sam Goldwyn's commission for the screenplay that became the film. The second paragraph of the third section, reflecting Fred Derry's experience, is:(It’s hard to think that you are young when you are seventeen.
It’s hard to think that you could ever be just seventeen,
When you look back from twenty-one,
And know that you have killed a hundred men or more.)
The biggest change made for the screen is that the original Homer had PTSD and brain damage affecting the motor system on one side of his body; when Russell appeared on the scene, the character's disability was changed to the physical loss of his hands. Having said that, the character arc is pretty similar, though more dramatic, with Homer attempting suicide with Fred's gun and Wilma then talking him round to continued life, with her support.She held the book
Squeezed precious in her hands.
“About a man ... he used to be like you.
He wrote this book himself-a man named Carlson.
And I’ve read Helen Keller, too. But Carlson knows
Just how it feels to be like you,
And worse. He crawled around;
He couldn’t walk, and he was born that way.
That’s how he got the title for his book,
He calls it ‘Born That Way.’ You see,
It’s better, Homer, if it happens to you late:
You have a pattern formed. He says
You have to re-establish it-the pattern.
All the motions that you make,
You have to will them-think them out.
And you can do it, Homer. Yes, you can.”
In general the poem has more drama (perhaps even more plot), though one early and significant divergence is that Fred and Marie decide their marriage is over the night he gets back, rather than trying to make a go of it as they do for most of the film. He is far from blameless - he has had several love affairs during the war, including one with an aristocratic Englishwoman, and he hits Marie when he discovers that she has been doing the same.“You file for the divorce,” he said.
“It’s easy in this State. I socked you:
That’s enough. But don’t you spend too much.
Look-here’s a hundred bucks-”
He brought some money out
And counted off five Twenties.
“That’ll be enough.
It’s all you’ll get from me. No alimony, babe.
And do it quick. And if you don’t
I’ll go myself, and file, and tell
Just what I found when I came back-”
And Fred and Peggy get somewhat better closure than on screen (in that they definitely bonk, but in a poetic way).
The poetic form allows Kantor to sum up the point of the story with a vivid metaphor, much more so than is possible on screen:WHEN YOU come out of War to quiet streets
You lug your War along with you.
You walk a snail-path. On your back you carry it-
A scaly load that makes your shoulders raw;
And not a hand can ever lift the shell
That cuts your hide. You only wear it off yourself-
Look up one day, and vaguely see it gone.
You do not see yourself in malformation.
The men and girls who have no shells
Of War upon their backs-You count them well deformed.
You recognize the other snails by eyes or ribbons;
You speak your perfect language to their ears,
And they to yours. You look with solemn eye
On those without a shell. You do not scorn,
You do not hate, you do not love them for it.
You only say, “They have no shell.”
With other snails you crawl the quiet street
And wonder why you’re there,
And think of folks who aren’t.
You polish up your shell for pride
Until you tire of it.
And one day it is gone if you are wise.
You can
get it here.
1920s:
Wings (1927-28) |
The Broadway Melody (1928-29)
1930s:
All Quiet on the Western Front (1929-30) |
Cimarron (1930-31) |
Grand Hotel (1931-32) |
Cavalcade (1932-33) |
It Happened One Night (1934) |
Mutiny on the Bounty (1935, and
books) |
The Great Ziegfeld (1936) |
The Life of Emile Zola (1937) |
You Can't Take It with You (1938) |
Gone with the Wind (1939, and
book)
1940s:
Rebecca (1940) |
How Green Was My Valley (1941) |
Mrs. Miniver (1942) |
Casablanca (1943) |
Going My Way (1944) |
The Lost Weekend (1945) |
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) |
Gentleman's Agreement (1947) |
Hamlet (1948) |
All the King's Men (1949)
1950s:
All About Eve (1950) |
An American in Paris (1951) |
The Greatest Show on Earth (1952) |
From Here to Eternity (1953) |
On The Waterfront (1954, and
book) |
Marty (1955) |
Around the World in Eighty Days (1956) |
The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) |
Gigi (1958) |
Ben-Hur (1959)
1960s:
The Apartment (1960) |
West Side Story (1961) |
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) |
Tom Jones (1963) |
My Fair Lady (1964) |
The Sound of Music (1965) |
A Man for All Seasons (1966) |
In the Heat of the Night (1967) |
Oliver! (1968) |
Midnight Cowboy (1969)
1970s:
Patton (1970) |
The French Connection (1971) |
The Godfather (1972) |
The Sting (1973) |
The Godfather, Part II (1974) |
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) |
Rocky (1976) |
Annie Hall (1977) |
The Deer Hunter (1978) |
Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)
1980s:
Ordinary People (1980) |
Chariots of Fire (1981) |
Gandhi (1982) |
Terms of Endearment (1983) |
Amadeus (1984) |
Out of Africa (1985) |
Platoon (1986) |
The Last Emperor (1987) |
Rain Man (1988) |
Driving Miss Daisy (1989)
1990s:
Dances With Wolves (1990) |
The Silence of the Lambs (1991) |
Unforgiven (1992) |
Schindler's List (1993) |
Forrest Gump (1994) |
Braveheart (1995) |
The English Patient (1996) |
Titanic (1997) |
Shakespeare in Love (1998) |
American Beauty (1999)
21st century:
Gladiator (2000) |
A Beautiful Mind (2001) |
Chicago (2002) |
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) |
Million Dollar Baby (2004, and
book) |
Crash (2005) |
The Departed (2006)