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The Best Years of Our Lives

The Best Years of Our Lives (also known as Glory for Me and Home Again) is a 1946 American drama film directed by William Wyler and starring Myrna Loy, Fredric March, Dana Andrews, Teresa Wright, Virginia Mayo and Harold Russell. The film is about three United States servicemen re-adjusting to societal changes and civilian life after coming home from World War II. The three men come from different services with different ranks that do not correspond with their civilian social class backgrounds.

The Best Years of Our Lives
Theatrical release poster
Directed byWilliam Wyler
Screenplay byRobert E. Sherwood
Based onGlory for Me
1945 novella
by MacKinlay Kantor
Produced bySamuel Goldwyn
Starring
CinematographyGregg Toland
Edited byDaniel Mandell
Music by
Production
company
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Release date
Running time
172 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2.1 million[1] or $3 million[2]
Box office$23.7 million[3]
Standing (left to right): Fredric March, Myrna Loy, Dana Andrews, Teresa Wright; seated at piano: Hoagy Carmichael

The film was a critical and commercial success. It won seven Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Director (William Wyler), Best Actor (Fredric March), Best Supporting Actor (Harold Russell), Best Film Editing (Daniel Mandell), Best Adapted Screenplay (Robert E. Sherwood), and Best Original Score (Hugo Friedhofer).[4]

In addition, Russell was also awarded an honorary Academy Award, the only time in history that two such awards were given for a single performance.

It was the highest-grossing film in both the United States and United Kingdom since the release of Gone with the Wind, and is the sixth most-attended film of all time in the United Kingdom, with over 20 million tickets sold.[5]

In 1989, The Best Years of Our Lives was one of the first 25 films selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Film Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[6][7]

Plot edit

At the end of World War II, three veterans meet on a flight to their midwestern hometown of Boone City: USAAF bombardier captain Fred Derry, U.S. Navy petty officer Homer Parrish, and U.S. Army sergeant Al Stephenson. The three veterans had very different lives before the war:

Fred Derry was a drug store soda jerk who lived with his parents in the poorer part of town. Shortly before shipping out, Fred married Marie after a whirlwind romance; she has since been working in a nightclub, and enjoyed the extra income that Fred's military pay afforded her, without much thought to her husband.

Al Stephenson was an executive at the local bank and lived in an upscale apartment with his wife Millie and their children Peggy and Rob.

Homer Parrish was a star high school athlete living with his middle-class parents and younger sister. Homer had also been dating his next-door neighbor Wilma, whom he intended to marry upon his return.

Each man faces challenges integrating back into civilian life. Homer lost both hands in the war and though he has become quite functional in the use of his mechanical hooks, he cannot believe that Wilma will still want to marry him. Al, tired and jaded from the war, returns to the bank and is given a promotion, but wrestles with alcohol. Though highly decorated, Fred suffers from PTSD flashbacks by night, is unable to find a better job than soda jerk and returns to the same drug store.

Fred and Peggy develop an attraction for each other, which ultimately puts the married Fred at odds with Al. Although proficient in managing the challenges of his disability, Homer is frustrated by his loss of independence and adjusting to his relationship with Wilma, who loyally remains by his side. Al continues to struggle with re-entry into normal life. Widely respected by the bank's senior management for his past business acumen, Al approves an unsecured loan to a farmer and fellow veteran who wants the loan to buy forty acres, but has no collateral for the purchase. His behavior is made worse by his excessive drinking.

When Homer visits Fred at the drug store, another customer criticizes U.S. involvement in the war and tells Homer his injuries were not necessary. Homer responds in anger, and Fred intervenes on Homer's behalf, punching the customer and then being fired for it. Meanwhile, Fred's wife, Marie, frustrated with his lack of financial success and missing her past nightlife, tells Fred she is getting a divorce. Bitter, and seeing no future in Boone City, particularly with Al telling Fred to stay away from Peggy, Fred decides to pack up and catch the next plane out. While waiting at the airport, Fred walks into an aircraft boneyard, where he climbs into one of the decommissioned B-17 bombers. Sitting in the bombardier's seat, Fred has another flashback. He is roused out of his stressful memories by a work crew foreman, who informs him that the planes are being demolished for use in the growing pre-fab housing industry. Fred asks him if they need any help in the budding business, and is hired.

Al, Millie, and Peggy attend Homer and Wilma's wedding, where Fred is best man. Now divorced, Fred reunites with Peggy after the ceremony. Fred expresses his love but tells her things may be financially difficult if she stays with him. Peggy's smile makes it clear she will remain committed to Fred.

Cast edit

Casting brought together established stars as well as character actors and relative unknowns. The jazz drummer Gene Krupa was seen in archival footage, while Tennessee Ernie Ford, later a television star, appeared as an uncredited "hillbilly singer" (in the first of his only three film appearances).[Note 1] Blake Edwards, later a film producer and director, appeared fleetingly as an uncredited "Corporal". Wyler's daughters, Catherine and Judy, were cast as uncredited customers seen in the drug store where Fred Derry works. Sean Penn's father, Leo, played the uncredited part of the soldier working as the scheduling clerk in the Air Transport Command Office at the beginning of the film.

Teresa Wright was only thirteen years younger than her on-screen mother, played by Myrna Loy. Michael Hall (1926-2020), at the time of his death the last surviving credited cast member, with his role as Fredric March's on-screen son, is absent after the first third of the film. The reason was that Hall's contract with Goldwyn ended during filming, but the producer was reluctant to pay extra money to rehire him.[8]

Production edit

Samuel Goldwyn was inspired to produce a film about veterans after reading an August 7, 1944, article in Time about the difficulties experienced by men returning to civilian life. Goldwyn hired former war correspondent MacKinlay Kantor to write a screenplay. His work was first published as a novella, Glory for Me, which Kantor wrote in blank verse.[9][10][11][12] Robert E. Sherwood then adapted the novella as a screenplay.[12]

Director Wyler had flown combat missions over Europe in filming Memphis Belle (1944), and worked hard to get accurate depictions of the combat veterans he had encountered. Wyler changed the original casting, which had featured a veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, and sought out Harold Russell, a non-actor, to take on the exacting role of Homer Parrish.[13]

For The Best Years of Our Lives, he asked the principal actors to purchase their own clothes, in order to connect with daily life and produce an authentic feeling. Other Wyler touches included constructing life-size sets, which went against the standard larger sets that were more suited to camera positions. The impact for the audience was immediate, as each scene played out in a realistic, natural way.[13]

Recounting the interrelated story of three veterans right after the end of World War II, The Best Years of Our Lives began filming just over seven months after the war's end, starting on April 15, 1946, at a variety of locations, including the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden, Ontario International Airport in Ontario, California, Raleigh Studios in Hollywood, and the Samuel Goldwyn/Warner Hollywood Studios.[13]

In The Best Years of Our Lives cinematographer Gregg Toland used deep focus photography, in which objects both close to and distant from the camera are in sharp focus.[14] For the passage of Fred Derry's reliving a combat mission while sitting in the remains of a former bomber, Wyler used "zoom" effects to simulate Derry's subjective state.[15]

The fictional Boone City was patterned after Cincinnati, Ohio.[11] The "Jackson High" football stadium seen early in aerial footage of the bomber flying over the Boone City, is Corcoran Stadium located at Xavier University in Cincinnati. A few seconds later Walnut Hills High School with its dome and football field can be seen along with the downtown Cincinnati skyline (Carew Tower and Fourth and Vine Tower) in the background.[16]

After the war, the combat aircraft featured in the film were being destroyed and disassembled for reuse as scrap material. The scene of Derry's walking among aircraft ruins was filmed at the Ontario Army Air Field in Ontario, California. The former training facility had been converted into a scrap yard, housing nearly 2,000 former combat aircraft in various states of disassembly and reclamation.[13]

Reception edit

Critical response edit

Upon its release, The Best Years of Our Lives received extremely positive reviews from critics. Shortly after its premiere at the Astor Theater, New York, Bosley Crowther, film critic for The New York Times, hailed the film as a masterpiece. He wrote,

It is seldom that there comes a motion picture which can be wholly and enthusiastically endorsed not only as superlative entertainment, but as food for quiet and humanizing thought... In working out their solutions, Mr. Sherwood and Mr. Wyler have achieved some of the most beautiful and inspiring demonstrations of human fortitude that we have had in films." He also said the ensemble casting gave the "'best' performance in this best film this year from Hollywood".[17]

 
Director Wyler and cinematographer Toland used deep focus to keep Fred visible in the far background of the frame.

French film critic André Bazin used examples of Toland's and Wyler's deep-focus visual style to illuminate his theory of realism in film—going into detail about the scene in which Fred uses the phone booth in the far background while Homer and Butch play piano in the foreground. Bazin explains how deep focus functions in this scene:

The action in the foreground is secondary, although interesting and peculiar enough to require our keen attention since it occupies a privileged place and surface on the screen. Paradoxically, the true action, the one that constitutes at this precise moment a turning point in the story, develops almost clandestinely in a tiny rectangle at the back of the room—in the left corner of the screen.... Thus the viewer is induced actively to participate in the drama planned by the director.[18]

Professor and author Gabriel Miller discusses briefly the use of deep-focus in both the bar scene and the wedding scene at the end of the picture in an article written for the National Film Preservation Board.[19]

Several decades later, film critic David Thomson offered tempered praise: "I would concede that Best Years is decent and humane... acutely observed, despite being so meticulous a package. It would have taken uncommon genius and daring at that time to sneak a view of an untidy or unresolved America past Goldwyn or the public."[20]

The Best Years of Our Lives has a 97% "Fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes, with an average rating of 8.9/10, based on 97 reviews. The critical consensus states: "An engrossing look at the triumphs and travails of war veterans, The Best Years of Our Lives is concerned specifically with the aftermath of World War II, but its messages speak to the overall American experience."[21] On Metacritic, the film holds a weighted average score of 93 out of 100 based on 17 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[22]

Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert put the film on his "Great Movies" list in 2007, calling it "... modern, lean, and honest".[23]

Popular response edit

The Best Years of Our Lives opened to the public at the Astor Theatre in New York City on November 22, 1947. It grossed $52,236 in its first week. Its length restricted the film to six shows a day and it initially suffered by having a top midweek ticket price of $2.40. It opened at the Woods Theatre in Chicago on December 18 before a roadshow theatrical release in Boston and Los Angeles, starting on the evening of Christmas Day.[24] After 12 weeks at the Astor, the film had grossed $584,000 and at that point had grossed $1.37 million from 6 theatres in five cities from 45 play weeks.[25]

It was a massive commercial success, earning an estimated $10 million in theatrical rentals at the U.S. and Canadian box office during its initial theatrical run,[26] not only making it the highest-grossing film of 1946, but also the highest-grossing film of the 1940s decade. It benefited from much larger admission prices than the majority of films released that year which accounted for almost 70% of its earnings.[27] When box office figures are adjusted for inflation, it remains one of the top 100 grossing films in U.S. history.

Among films released before 1950, only Gone With the Wind, The Bells of St. Mary's, The Big Parade and four Disney titles have done more total business, in part due to later re-releases. (Reliable box office figures for certain early films such as The Birth of a Nation and Charlie Chaplin's comedies are unavailable.)[28]

However, because of the distribution arrangement RKO had with Goldwyn, RKO recorded a loss of $660,000 on the film.[29]

Russell Academy Award edit

Despite his Oscar-nominated performance, Harold Russell was not a professional actor. As the Academy Board of Governors considered him a long shot to win, they gave him an Academy Honorary Award "for bringing hope and courage to his fellow veterans through his appearance". When Russell in fact won Best Supporting Actor, there was an enthusiastic response. He is the only actor to have received two Academy Awards for the same performance. In 1992, Russell sold his Best Supporting Actor statuette at auction for $60,500 ($126,200 today), to pay his wife's medical bills.[30]

Award Category Nominee(s) Result
Academy Awards Best Motion Picture Samuel Goldwyn (for Samuel Goldwyn Productions) Won
Best Director William Wyler Won
Best Actor Fredric March Won
Best Supporting Actor Harold Russell Won
Best Screenplay Robert E. Sherwood Won
Best Film Editing Daniel Mandell Won
Best Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Hugo Friedhofer Won
Best Sound Recording Gordon E. Sawyer Nominated
Academy Honorary Award Harold Russell Won
Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award Samuel Goldwyn Won
Bodil Awards Best American Film William Wyler Won
British Academy Film Awards Best Film from any Source Won
Brussels World Film Festival Best Actress Myrna Loy Won
Cinema Writers Circle Awards Best Foreign Film Won
Golden Globe Awards Best Picture Won
Special Achievement Award Harold Russell Won
Karlovy Vary International Film Festival Crystal Globe William Wyler Nominated
Best Director Won
Best Screenplay Robert E. Sherwood Won
National Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films Won
Best Director William Wyler Won
National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry Inducted
New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Film Won
Best Director William Wyler Won
Best Actor Fredric March Nominated
Online Film & Television Association Awards Hall of Fame – Motion Picture Won

In 1989, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[7]

American Film Institute included the film as number 37 in its 1998 AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies, as number 11 in its 2006 AFI's 100 Years...100 Cheers, and as number 37 in its 2007 AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition).

Radio adaptations edit

In 1947 and 1949, there were four separate half-hour adaptations from Hedda Hopper's This Is Hollywood, The Screen Guild Theater (two) and Screen Directors Playhouse. In all four cases, various actors reprised their film roles.[31][32]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ At the time the film was shot, Ford was unknown as a singer. He worked in San Bernardino as a radio announcer-disc jockey.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Thomson 1993, pp. 490–491.
  2. ^ "Variety (January 1947)". 1947.
  3. ^ " 'Best Years of Our Lives' (1946)." Box Office Mojo. Retrieved: February 4, 2010.
  4. ^ "The 19th Academy Awards (1947) Nominees and Winners." oscars.org. Retrieved: November 20, 2011.
  5. ^ . British Film Institute. November 28, 2004. Archived from the original on August 3, 2012. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
  6. ^ "ENTERTAINMENT: Film Registry Picks First 25 Movies". Los Angeles Times. Washington, D.C. September 19, 1989. Retrieved April 22, 2020.
  7. ^ a b "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. Retrieved May 19, 2020.
  8. ^ "In memory of Michael Hall, a committed connoisseur and an unforgettable character". June 16, 2020. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  9. ^ Kantor, MacKinlay (1945). Glory for Me. Coward-McCann. OCLC 773996.
  10. ^ Easton, Carol (2014). "The Best Years". The Search for Sam Goldwyn. Carl Rollyson (contributor). Univ. Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-62674-132-4. Andrews looked at the onionskin pages and asked, 'Mac, why did you write this in blank verse?' 'Dana', said Kantor with a wry smile, 'I can't afford to write in blank verse, because nobody buys anything written in blank verse. But when Sam asked me to write this story, he didn't tell me not to write it in blank verse!'
  11. ^ a b Orriss 1984, p. 119.
  12. ^ a b Levy, Emanuel (April 4, 2015). . Emanuel Levy: Cinema 24/7. Archived from the original (review) on January 18, 2017. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  13. ^ a b c d Orriss 1984, p. 121.
  14. ^ Kehr, Dave. "'The Best Years of Our Lives'." The Chicago Reader. Retrieved: November 6, 2022.
  15. ^ Orriss 1984, pp. 121–122.
  16. ^ "Trivia: 'The Best Years of Our Lives'." Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved: November 6, 2022.
  17. ^ Crowther, Bosley. The Best Years of our Lives. The New York Times, November 22, 1946. Retrieved: April 26, 2007.
  18. ^ Bazin, André (1997). "William Wyler, or the Jansenist of Directing". In Cardullo, Bert (ed.). Bazin at Work: Major Essays & Reviews from the Forties & Fifties. New York: Routledge. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-0-415-90018-8.
  19. ^ Gabriel Miller, The Best Years of Our Lives, https://www.loc.gov/static/programs/national-film-preservation-board/documents/best_years.pdf Accessed 11/14/2022
  20. ^ Thomson, 2002, p. 949. 4th Edition; the first edition was published in 1975. See Thomson, David (1975). A Biographical Dictionary of the Cinema. London: Secker & Warburg. OCLC 1959828.
  21. ^ "The Best Years of Our Lives". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved August 13, 2023.
  22. ^ "The Best Years of Our Lives Reviews". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved August 13, 2023.
  23. ^ Ebert, Roger. "The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)." Chicago Sun Times, December 29, 2007. Retrieved: May 1, 2021.
  24. ^ "Goldwyn Points to Wow 'Best Years' Biz To Refute Selznick Nix of 'Problem' Pix". Variety. January 15, 1947. p. 9. Retrieved January 12, 2024 – via Internet Archive.
  25. ^ "'Best Years' 750G Take In 5 Cities". Variety. January 15, 1947. p. 9. Retrieved January 13, 2024 – via Internet Archive.
  26. ^ "All-Time Top-Grossers". Variety. Variety Publishing Company. January 18, 1950. p. 18. Retrieved January 13, 2024 – via Internet Archive.
  27. ^ "Upped Scale Films Cop 'Win, Place, Show' Spots in Gross Sweepstakes". Variety. January 7, 1948. p. 63. Retrieved June 11, 2019 – via Archive.org.
  28. ^ "All-time Films (adjusted)." Box Office Mojo. Retrieved: September 19, 2010.
  29. ^ Richard B. Jewell, Slow Fade to Black: The Decline of RKO Radio Pictures, Uni of California, 2016
  30. ^ Bergan, Ronald. "Obituary: Harold Russell; Brave actor whose artificial hands helped him win two Oscars." The Guardian, February 6, 2002. Retrieved: June 12, 2012.
  31. ^ "The Best Years of Our Lives". Classic Movie Hub.
  32. ^ "Those Were the Days". Nostalgia Digest. Vol. 38, no. 4. Autumn 2012. p. 35.

Sources edit

  • Dolan, Edward F. Jr. Hollywood Goes to War. London: Bison Books, 1985. ISBN 0-86124-229-7.
  • Eagan, Daniel. The Best Years of Our Lives, in America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry. A&C Black, 2010 ISBN 0826429777, pp. 399–401.
  • Flood, Richard. "Reel crank – critic Manny Farber." Artforum, Volume 37, Issue 1, September 1998. ISSN 0004-3532.
  • Hardwick, Jack and Ed Schnepf. "A Viewer's Guide to Aviation Movies", in The Making of the Great Aviation Films. General Aviation Series, Volume 2, 1989.
  • Kinn, Gail and Jim Piazza. The Academy Awards: The Complete Unofficial History. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal, 2008. ISBN 978-1-57912-772-5.
  • Orriss, Bruce. When Hollywood Ruled the Skies: The Aviation Film Classics of World War II. Hawthorn, California: Aero Associates Inc., 1984. ISBN 0-9613088-0-X; OCLC 11709474.
  • Thomson, David. Showman: The Life of David O. Selznick. London: Abacus, 1993. ISBN 978-0-2339-8791-0.
  • Thomson, David. "Wyler, William". The New Biographical Dictionary of Film. 4th Edition. London: Little, Brown, 2002. ISBN 0-316-85905-2.
  • Tibbetts, John C., and James M. Welsh, eds. The Encyclopedia of Novels Into Film (2nd ed. 2005) pp. 152–153.

External links edit

Streaming audio

best, years, lives, other, uses, disambiguation, also, known, glory, home, again, 1946, american, drama, film, directed, william, wyler, starring, myrna, fredric, march, dana, andrews, teresa, wright, virginia, mayo, harold, russell, film, about, three, united. For other uses see The Best Years of Our Lives disambiguation The Best Years of Our Lives also known as Glory for Me and Home Again is a 1946 American drama film directed by William Wyler and starring Myrna Loy Fredric March Dana Andrews Teresa Wright Virginia Mayo and Harold Russell The film is about three United States servicemen re adjusting to societal changes and civilian life after coming home from World War II The three men come from different services with different ranks that do not correspond with their civilian social class backgrounds The Best Years of Our LivesTheatrical release posterDirected byWilliam WylerScreenplay byRobert E SherwoodBased onGlory for Me1945 novellaby MacKinlay KantorProduced bySamuel GoldwynStarringMyrna Loy Fredric March Dana Andrews Teresa Wright Virginia MayoCinematographyGregg TolandEdited byDaniel MandellMusic byHugo Friedhofer composer Emil Newman musical director ProductioncompanySamuel Goldwyn ProductionsDistributed byRKO Radio PicturesRelease dateNovember 21 1946 1946 11 21 New York City premiere Running time172 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 2 1 million 1 or 3 million 2 Box office 23 7 million 3 Standing left to right Fredric March Myrna Loy Dana Andrews Teresa Wright seated at piano Hoagy CarmichaelThe film was a critical and commercial success It won seven Academy Awards Best Picture Best Director William Wyler Best Actor Fredric March Best Supporting Actor Harold Russell Best Film Editing Daniel Mandell Best Adapted Screenplay Robert E Sherwood and Best Original Score Hugo Friedhofer 4 In addition Russell was also awarded an honorary Academy Award the only time in history that two such awards were given for a single performance It was the highest grossing film in both the United States and United Kingdom since the release of Gone with the Wind and is the sixth most attended film of all time in the United Kingdom with over 20 million tickets sold 5 In 1989 The Best Years of Our Lives was one of the first 25 films selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Film Registry for being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 6 7 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Critical response 4 2 Popular response 4 3 Russell Academy Award 5 Radio adaptations 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 7 Sources 8 External linksPlot editAt the end of World War II three veterans meet on a flight to their midwestern hometown of Boone City USAAF bombardier captain Fred Derry U S Navy petty officer Homer Parrish and U S Army sergeant Al Stephenson The three veterans had very different lives before the war Fred Derry was a drug store soda jerk who lived with his parents in the poorer part of town Shortly before shipping out Fred married Marie after a whirlwind romance she has since been working in a nightclub and enjoyed the extra income that Fred s military pay afforded her without much thought to her husband Al Stephenson was an executive at the local bank and lived in an upscale apartment with his wife Millie and their children Peggy and Rob Homer Parrish was a star high school athlete living with his middle class parents and younger sister Homer had also been dating his next door neighbor Wilma whom he intended to marry upon his return Each man faces challenges integrating back into civilian life Homer lost both hands in the war and though he has become quite functional in the use of his mechanical hooks he cannot believe that Wilma will still want to marry him Al tired and jaded from the war returns to the bank and is given a promotion but wrestles with alcohol Though highly decorated Fred suffers from PTSD flashbacks by night is unable to find a better job than soda jerk and returns to the same drug store Fred and Peggy develop an attraction for each other which ultimately puts the married Fred at odds with Al Although proficient in managing the challenges of his disability Homer is frustrated by his loss of independence and adjusting to his relationship with Wilma who loyally remains by his side Al continues to struggle with re entry into normal life Widely respected by the bank s senior management for his past business acumen Al approves an unsecured loan to a farmer and fellow veteran who wants the loan to buy forty acres but has no collateral for the purchase His behavior is made worse by his excessive drinking When Homer visits Fred at the drug store another customer criticizes U S involvement in the war and tells Homer his injuries were not necessary Homer responds in anger and Fred intervenes on Homer s behalf punching the customer and then being fired for it Meanwhile Fred s wife Marie frustrated with his lack of financial success and missing her past nightlife tells Fred she is getting a divorce Bitter and seeing no future in Boone City particularly with Al telling Fred to stay away from Peggy Fred decides to pack up and catch the next plane out While waiting at the airport Fred walks into an aircraft boneyard where he climbs into one of the decommissioned B 17 bombers Sitting in the bombardier s seat Fred has another flashback He is roused out of his stressful memories by a work crew foreman who informs him that the planes are being demolished for use in the growing pre fab housing industry Fred asks him if they need any help in the budding business and is hired Al Millie and Peggy attend Homer and Wilma s wedding where Fred is best man Now divorced Fred reunites with Peggy after the ceremony Fred expresses his love but tells her things may be financially difficult if she stays with him Peggy s smile makes it clear she will remain committed to Fred Cast editMyrna Loy as Milly Stephenson Fredric March as Technical Sergeant Al Stephenson Dana Andrews as Captain Fred Derry Teresa Wright as Peggy Stephenson Virginia Mayo as Marie Derry Cathy O Donnell as Wilma Cameron Hoagy Carmichael as Butch Engle Homer s uncle Harold Russell as Petty Officer 2nd Class Homer Parrish Gladys George as Hortense Derry Roman Bohnen as Pat Derry Ray Collins as Mr Milton Minna Gombell as Mrs Parrish Walter Baldwin as Mr Parrish Steve Cochran as Cliff Dorothy Adams as Mrs Cameron Don Beddoe as Mr Cameron Marlene Aames as Luella Parrish Charles Halton as Prew Ray Teal as Mr Mollett Howland Chamberlain as Thorpe Dean White as Novak Erskine Sanford as Bullard Michael Hall as Rob Stephenson Victor Cutler as Woody Merrill Casting brought together established stars as well as character actors and relative unknowns The jazz drummer Gene Krupa was seen in archival footage while Tennessee Ernie Ford later a television star appeared as an uncredited hillbilly singer in the first of his only three film appearances Note 1 Blake Edwards later a film producer and director appeared fleetingly as an uncredited Corporal Wyler s daughters Catherine and Judy were cast as uncredited customers seen in the drug store where Fred Derry works Sean Penn s father Leo played the uncredited part of the soldier working as the scheduling clerk in the Air Transport Command Office at the beginning of the film Teresa Wright was only thirteen years younger than her on screen mother played by Myrna Loy Michael Hall 1926 2020 at the time of his death the last surviving credited cast member with his role as Fredric March s on screen son is absent after the first third of the film The reason was that Hall s contract with Goldwyn ended during filming but the producer was reluctant to pay extra money to rehire him 8 Production editSamuel Goldwyn was inspired to produce a film about veterans after reading an August 7 1944 article in Time about the difficulties experienced by men returning to civilian life Goldwyn hired former war correspondent MacKinlay Kantor to write a screenplay His work was first published as a novella Glory for Me which Kantor wrote in blank verse 9 10 11 12 Robert E Sherwood then adapted the novella as a screenplay 12 Director Wyler had flown combat missions over Europe in filming Memphis Belle 1944 and worked hard to get accurate depictions of the combat veterans he had encountered Wyler changed the original casting which had featured a veteran suffering from post traumatic stress disorder and sought out Harold Russell a non actor to take on the exacting role of Homer Parrish 13 For The Best Years of Our Lives he asked the principal actors to purchase their own clothes in order to connect with daily life and produce an authentic feeling Other Wyler touches included constructing life size sets which went against the standard larger sets that were more suited to camera positions The impact for the audience was immediate as each scene played out in a realistic natural way 13 Recounting the interrelated story of three veterans right after the end of World War II The Best Years of Our Lives began filming just over seven months after the war s end starting on April 15 1946 at a variety of locations including the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden Ontario International Airport in Ontario California Raleigh Studios in Hollywood and the Samuel Goldwyn Warner Hollywood Studios 13 In The Best Years of Our Lives cinematographer Gregg Toland used deep focus photography in which objects both close to and distant from the camera are in sharp focus 14 For the passage of Fred Derry s reliving a combat mission while sitting in the remains of a former bomber Wyler used zoom effects to simulate Derry s subjective state 15 The fictional Boone City was patterned after Cincinnati Ohio 11 The Jackson High football stadium seen early in aerial footage of the bomber flying over the Boone City is Corcoran Stadium located at Xavier University in Cincinnati A few seconds later Walnut Hills High School with its dome and football field can be seen along with the downtown Cincinnati skyline Carew Tower and Fourth and Vine Tower in the background 16 After the war the combat aircraft featured in the film were being destroyed and disassembled for reuse as scrap material The scene of Derry s walking among aircraft ruins was filmed at the Ontario Army Air Field in Ontario California The former training facility had been converted into a scrap yard housing nearly 2 000 former combat aircraft in various states of disassembly and reclamation 13 Reception editCritical response edit Upon its release The Best Years of Our Lives received extremely positive reviews from critics Shortly after its premiere at the Astor Theater New York Bosley Crowther film critic for The New York Times hailed the film as a masterpiece He wrote It is seldom that there comes a motion picture which can be wholly and enthusiastically endorsed not only as superlative entertainment but as food for quiet and humanizing thought In working out their solutions Mr Sherwood and Mr Wyler have achieved some of the most beautiful and inspiring demonstrations of human fortitude that we have had in films He also said the ensemble casting gave the best performance in this best film this year from Hollywood 17 nbsp Director Wyler and cinematographer Toland used deep focus to keep Fred visible in the far background of the frame French film critic Andre Bazin used examples of Toland s and Wyler s deep focus visual style to illuminate his theory of realism in film going into detail about the scene in which Fred uses the phone booth in the far background while Homer and Butch play piano in the foreground Bazin explains how deep focus functions in this scene The action in the foreground is secondary although interesting and peculiar enough to require our keen attention since it occupies a privileged place and surface on the screen Paradoxically the true action the one that constitutes at this precise moment a turning point in the story develops almost clandestinely in a tiny rectangle at the back of the room in the left corner of the screen Thus the viewer is induced actively to participate in the drama planned by the director 18 Professor and author Gabriel Miller discusses briefly the use of deep focus in both the bar scene and the wedding scene at the end of the picture in an article written for the National Film Preservation Board 19 Several decades later film critic David Thomson offered tempered praise I would concede that Best Years is decent and humane acutely observed despite being so meticulous a package It would have taken uncommon genius and daring at that time to sneak a view of an untidy or unresolved America past Goldwyn or the public 20 The Best Years of Our Lives has a 97 Fresh rating at Rotten Tomatoes with an average rating of 8 9 10 based on 97 reviews The critical consensus states An engrossing look at the triumphs and travails of war veterans The Best Years of Our Lives is concerned specifically with the aftermath of World War II but its messages speak to the overall American experience 21 On Metacritic the film holds a weighted average score of 93 out of 100 based on 17 critics indicating universal acclaim 22 Chicago Sun Times film critic Roger Ebert put the film on his Great Movies list in 2007 calling it modern lean and honest 23 Popular response edit The Best Years of Our Lives opened to the public at the Astor Theatre in New York City on November 22 1947 It grossed 52 236 in its first week Its length restricted the film to six shows a day and it initially suffered by having a top midweek ticket price of 2 40 It opened at the Woods Theatre in Chicago on December 18 before a roadshow theatrical release in Boston and Los Angeles starting on the evening of Christmas Day 24 After 12 weeks at the Astor the film had grossed 584 000 and at that point had grossed 1 37 million from 6 theatres in five cities from 45 play weeks 25 It was a massive commercial success earning an estimated 10 million in theatrical rentals at the U S and Canadian box office during its initial theatrical run 26 not only making it the highest grossing film of 1946 but also the highest grossing film of the 1940s decade It benefited from much larger admission prices than the majority of films released that year which accounted for almost 70 of its earnings 27 When box office figures are adjusted for inflation it remains one of the top 100 grossing films in U S history Among films released before 1950 only Gone With the Wind The Bells of St Mary s The Big Parade and four Disney titles have done more total business in part due to later re releases Reliable box office figures for certain early films such as The Birth of a Nation and Charlie Chaplin s comedies are unavailable 28 However because of the distribution arrangement RKO had with Goldwyn RKO recorded a loss of 660 000 on the film 29 Russell Academy Award edit Despite his Oscar nominated performance Harold Russell was not a professional actor As the Academy Board of Governors considered him a long shot to win they gave him an Academy Honorary Award for bringing hope and courage to his fellow veterans through his appearance When Russell in fact won Best Supporting Actor there was an enthusiastic response He is the only actor to have received two Academy Awards for the same performance In 1992 Russell sold his Best Supporting Actor statuette at auction for 60 500 126 200 today to pay his wife s medical bills 30 Award Category Nominee s ResultAcademy Awards Best Motion Picture Samuel Goldwyn for Samuel Goldwyn Productions WonBest Director William Wyler WonBest Actor Fredric March WonBest Supporting Actor Harold Russell WonBest Screenplay Robert E Sherwood WonBest Film Editing Daniel Mandell WonBest Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Hugo Friedhofer WonBest Sound Recording Gordon E Sawyer NominatedAcademy Honorary Award Harold Russell WonIrving G Thalberg Memorial Award Samuel Goldwyn WonBodil Awards Best American Film William Wyler WonBritish Academy Film Awards Best Film from any Source WonBrussels World Film Festival Best Actress Myrna Loy WonCinema Writers Circle Awards Best Foreign Film WonGolden Globe Awards Best Picture WonSpecial Achievement Award Harold Russell WonKarlovy Vary International Film Festival Crystal Globe William Wyler NominatedBest Director WonBest Screenplay Robert E Sherwood WonNational Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films WonBest Director William Wyler WonNational Film Preservation Board National Film Registry InductedNew York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Film WonBest Director William Wyler WonBest Actor Fredric March NominatedOnline Film amp Television Association Awards Hall of Fame Motion Picture WonIn 1989 the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 7 American Film Institute included the film as number 37 in its 1998 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movies as number 11 in its 2006 AFI s 100 Years 100 Cheers and as number 37 in its 2007 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movies 10th Anniversary Edition Radio adaptations editIn 1947 and 1949 there were four separate half hour adaptations from Hedda Hopper s This Is Hollywood The Screen Guild Theater two and Screen Directors Playhouse In all four cases various actors reprised their film roles 31 32 References editNotes edit At the time the film was shot Ford was unknown as a singer He worked in San Bernardino as a radio announcer disc jockey Citations edit Thomson 1993 pp 490 491 Variety January 1947 1947 Best Years of Our Lives 1946 Box Office Mojo Retrieved February 4 2010 The 19th Academy Awards 1947 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved November 20 2011 The Ultimate Chart 1 100 British Film Institute November 28 2004 Archived from the original on August 3 2012 Retrieved June 11 2019 ENTERTAINMENT Film Registry Picks First 25 Movies Los Angeles Times Washington D C September 19 1989 Retrieved April 22 2020 a b Complete National Film Registry Listing Library of Congress Retrieved May 19 2020 In memory of Michael Hall a committed connoisseur and an unforgettable character June 16 2020 Retrieved November 6 2022 Kantor MacKinlay 1945 Glory for Me Coward McCann OCLC 773996 Easton Carol 2014 The Best Years The Search for Sam Goldwyn Carl Rollyson contributor Univ Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 62674 132 4 Andrews looked at the onionskin pages and asked Mac why did you write this in blank verse Dana said Kantor with a wry smile I can t afford to write in blank verse because nobody buys anything written in blank verse But when Sam asked me to write this story he didn t tell me not to write it in blank verse a b Orriss 1984 p 119 a b Levy Emanuel April 4 2015 Oscar History Best Picture Best Years of Our Lives 1946 Emanuel Levy Cinema 24 7 Archived from the original review on January 18 2017 Retrieved January 16 2017 a b c d Orriss 1984 p 121 Kehr Dave The Best Years of Our Lives The Chicago Reader Retrieved November 6 2022 Orriss 1984 pp 121 122 Trivia The Best Years of Our Lives Turner Classic Movies Retrieved November 6 2022 Crowther Bosley The Best Years of our Lives The New York Times November 22 1946 Retrieved April 26 2007 Bazin Andre 1997 William Wyler or the Jansenist of Directing In Cardullo Bert ed Bazin at Work Major Essays amp Reviews from the Forties amp Fifties New York Routledge pp 14 15 ISBN 978 0 415 90018 8 Gabriel Miller The Best Years of Our Lives https www loc gov static programs national film preservation board documents best years pdf Accessed 11 14 2022 Thomson 2002 p 949 4th Edition the first edition was published in 1975 See Thomson David 1975 A Biographical Dictionary of the Cinema London Secker amp Warburg OCLC 1959828 The Best Years of Our Lives Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved August 13 2023 The Best Years of Our Lives Reviews Metacritic Fandom Inc Retrieved August 13 2023 Ebert Roger The Best Years of Our Lives 1946 Chicago Sun Times December 29 2007 Retrieved May 1 2021 Goldwyn Points to Wow Best Years Biz To Refute Selznick Nix of Problem Pix Variety January 15 1947 p 9 Retrieved January 12 2024 via Internet Archive Best Years 750G Take In 5 Cities Variety January 15 1947 p 9 Retrieved January 13 2024 via Internet Archive All Time Top Grossers Variety Variety Publishing Company January 18 1950 p 18 Retrieved January 13 2024 via Internet Archive Upped Scale Films Cop Win Place Show Spots in Gross Sweepstakes Variety January 7 1948 p 63 Retrieved June 11 2019 via Archive org All time Films adjusted Box Office Mojo Retrieved September 19 2010 Richard B Jewell Slow Fade to Black The Decline of RKO Radio Pictures Uni of California 2016 Bergan Ronald Obituary Harold Russell Brave actor whose artificial hands helped him win two Oscars The Guardian February 6 2002 Retrieved June 12 2012 The Best Years of Our Lives Classic Movie Hub Those Were the Days Nostalgia Digest Vol 38 no 4 Autumn 2012 p 35 Sources editDolan Edward F Jr Hollywood Goes to War London Bison Books 1985 ISBN 0 86124 229 7 Eagan Daniel The Best Years of Our Lives in America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry A amp C Black 2010 ISBN 0826429777 pp 399 401 Flood Richard Reel crank critic Manny Farber Artforum Volume 37 Issue 1 September 1998 ISSN 0004 3532 Hardwick Jack and Ed Schnepf A Viewer s Guide to Aviation Movies in The Making of the Great Aviation Films General Aviation Series Volume 2 1989 Kinn Gail and Jim Piazza The Academy Awards The Complete Unofficial History New York Black Dog amp Leventhal 2008 ISBN 978 1 57912 772 5 Orriss Bruce When Hollywood Ruled the Skies The Aviation Film Classics of World War II Hawthorn California Aero Associates Inc 1984 ISBN 0 9613088 0 X OCLC 11709474 Thomson David Showman The Life of David O Selznick London Abacus 1993 ISBN 978 0 2339 8791 0 Thomson David Wyler William The New Biographical Dictionary of Film 4th Edition London Little Brown 2002 ISBN 0 316 85905 2 Tibbetts John C and James M Welsh eds The Encyclopedia of Novels Into Film 2nd ed 2005 pp 152 153 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Best Years of Our Lives nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Best Years of Our Lives The Best Years of Our Lives at IMDb nbsp The Best Years of Our Lives at AllMovie The Best Years of Our Lives at Filmsite org The Best Years of Our Lives at Reel Classics The Best Years of Our Lives at Rotten Tomatoes The Best Years of Our Lives at National Film Registry The Best Years of Our Lives at the TCM Movie Database The Best Years of Our Lives at American Music Preservation The Best Years of Our Lives at the American Film Institute CatalogStreaming audioThe Best Years of Our Lives on Screen Guild Theater November 24 1947 The Best Years of Our Lives on Screen Directors Playhouse April 17 1949 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Best Years of Our Lives amp oldid 1203825682, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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