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Fredric March

 
 
 
   
 
 

THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES

RKO, 1946.  Directed by William Wyler.  Camera:  Gregg Toland.  With Dana Andrews, Fredric March, Harold Russell, Myrna Loy, Teresa Wright, Virginia Mayo, Roman Bohnen, Gladys George, Cathy O'Donnell, Hoagy Carmichael, Ray Collins, Steve Cochran, Minna Gombell.

 

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It was appropriate and heartening that the first important post-war Hollywood film was a mature, engrossing drama about the return of servicemen to civilian life, a familiar cross-section estimation of the ways in which representatives of three significant types phase out of their war-conditioned thinking and back to standard peacetime frames of mind.  The film was William Wyler's perceptive The Best Years of Our Lives, from a screenplay by Robert E. Sherwood, which Samuel Goldwyn produced.  At the time it was released in November 1946, this impulsively sympathetic picture of servicemen home from the war was fully and accurately reflective of the sentiments and ethos of the times—so much so that it was warmly hailed by critics of all persuasions as the best picture of the year and was quickly inflated by the public into a big box-office hit.

It tells of three men of different ages, social backgrounds and military roles who return to the same home town together and, in their various ways, face the difficulties of readjustment that their separate circumstances impose.  The eldest is a graying Army sergeant who had been a successful banker before the war and is returning to a wife, two full-grown children and a comfortable banking job, but whose capitalistic concepts have been jolted by his leveling experiences.  Next is an Air Force captain, a much-decorated bombardier, who had been a mere drugstore soda jerk before going away to war; he is returning to a virtually unknown bride he had married just before he was shipped abroad and to the realization that he has no education for anything but jerking sodas and dropping bombs.  And the youngest is a former high-school student who serves as a Navy machinist's mate and has lost both hands in an explosion; they were replaced with mechanical hands, or "hooks."

Wyler, who had been a colonel in the Air Force and had been chief of the unit that made the excellent Eighth Air Force documentary, The Memphis Belle, had seen an Army-made film called Diary of a Sergeant, which gave a stringently factual picture of how a paratroop sergeant who had lost both hands in a dynamite explosion had been outfitted with such "hooks" and trained to use them so that he could perform most of the manual functions of a normal person.  Then he discovered that the amputee was a young man named Harold Russell who, though not a professional actor, was so right in appearance for the role and so eager to take it that he persuaded Sherwood and Goldwyn to let him sign Russell.

The move was providential, for a major climactic scene is one in which the troubled sailor demonstrates in literal detail to his girl, the high-school sweetheart whose reaction to his injury he most profoundly dreads, how he has to get out of his harness every night when he goes to bed and thus be rendered helpless and perhaps physically repulsive to her.  This scene, with its accumulated tension of uncertainty between the boy and the girl and its simply stated realization of their mutual discomfort, was one of the most affecting and compelling at the time the film was released.  It gained an undoubted accretion of emotional impact and sympathy from audience awareness that Russell was a veteran and a genuine amputee.  Thus did Wyler sustain, even briefly, his feeling, acquired while making The Memphis Belle, that some of the most convincing screen behavior could be got from people not trained to perform.

The Best Years of Our Lives is essentially a drama of the isolation and reserve of the returning veteran.  It recollects and clarifies how he resists casting off his attachment to the service and the security it gave, and a bit about how the homefolk either help or resist him.

The psychological dilemma is superbly stated in the opening scene of the three men hitching a ride back to their home town in a retiring Air Force bomber.  Here they are, clustered together in the Plexiglas nose of the plane, nervous and excited, still very much servicemen feeling themselves apart and alienated from the people at home.  They are intensely and volubly conscious of their separateness and inwardly scared of their own individual capacities to face up to "rehabilitation."  Though they talk a bit too glibly and boastfully of their desires to get out of their uniforms and again be normal, inconspicuous civilians, they fear the transition.  Everything they do and say betrays their impulse to hang onto their distinctions, to the codes and esprit of the military caste, and signifies their skepticism toward the civilian frame of mind.

In this excellent scene in the bomber, we are quickly introduced to our men:  Al, the most articulate, a sharp and sardonic older guy, played with appropriate ostentation and just the right shade of insecurity by Fredric March; Fred, the bombardier, whom Dana Andrews endows with a flat, formless voice and an air of reserve that barely cover his bristling watchfulness and instability; and Homer, played by Russell with an appealingly boyish clumsiness that makes all the more impressive the dexterity he displays with his "hooks."

It is remarkable how shrewdly Wyler and Sherwood have constructed the film to keep impressing by visual data the lonely isolation of these men-by showing their detachment and aloofness as they peer from the nose of the plane as it approaches their town, spotting landmarks, noting people playing golf on the local course "as though nothing had happened," sighting an unfamiliar "graveyard" for junked planes; and then by recording their amazement as they ride through town in a taxicab, catching significant changes:  a used-car lot, a bunch of reckless kids riding in jalopies, a new neon sign on Butch's place, the bar run by Homer's uncle which is to be their later place of rendezvous.

   

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Indicative of the obstructions each man has to surmount are the discomfort and embarrassment each feels within a few hours after getting home.  Homer can't endure sitting sweetly and talking with his parents and his expected father-in-law, who is blunt and insensitive in referring to his handicap and his limited prospects for a job.  Al is confused by his wife and daughter and miffed that his high-school son is politely but firmly uninterested in the war souvenirs he has brought home.  Fred has been unable to locate his wife.  Soon they have all gravitated to the masculine sanctuary of Butch's bar, seeking that place designated as a familiar haven for lonely servicemen—even though Al, in his confusion, does bring his wife and daughter along.

It is interesting and provocative that Al is the heaviest drinker of the lot, that he starts within a few minutes after he gets home and is sloppily drunk by the time they reach Butch's bar.  One begins to wonder about his relation to his wife and his environment before he left - whether possibly he went into the service because he was restless, bored; whether maybe he enjoyed his greatest sense of "belonging" in the service, and that's why he is loath to give it up.

The constant refrain is the reluctance of the serviceman to take up where he left off, to resume his previous status and function in his environment.  Invariably he feels that his experience has changed his outlook and privileges.  Homer has lost motivation.  He isn't interested in looking for a job.  He feels that his disability entitles him to live on a pension of $100 a month.  Al resists the urging of the bank president to return to his old job.  Scornfully, he mocks the cruel compulsion:  "Last year it was 'kill Japs,' this year it's 'make money.' " And when he does settle back into harness in charge of the small loans department at the bank, his crucial gesture of defiance is to give a small loan, without collateral, to a sturdy young former Seabee who wants to buy a farm.

Fred's resistance is tougher, more complex and justified.  He doesn't want to go back to being a soda jerk in the now chain-controlled drugstore and jimcrack novelty emporium where he used to work.  He feels that his experience and his service as a warrior qualify him for more.  But he does go back, on the pretext of being an assistant manager filling in at the old job, until he finally takes a poke at a customer who talks scornfully about the worthiness of the war.

Worse for him, however, is the fact that his "war bride" wife has little respect for him and, indeed, finds him unromantic out of uniform.  She cheats on him with another fellow and eventually demands a divorce.

But his hardest and most discouraging letdown is when his supposed friend Al, now returned to normal, puts him in his place by ordering him to stay away from his daughter, whom Fred has been seeing fitfully since that first night home, when she soothed him and showed him sympathy.  One of the strongest scenes in the picture is one in Butch's bar, when Al, suddenly very bourgeois, brutally puts it on the line:  "I want my daughter to marry a decent guy."  And then, in a stunning composition, we see Fred in a telephone booth at the end of the room, calling the daughter to tell her he will not see her again, while Al stands in the foreground by the piano, watching Homer, accompanied by his uncle, play "Chopsticks" with his "hooks."  All the irony of the dissolution of the service man's esprit is in this one shot.

Then the nadir of Fred's self-pity and desolation is conveyed in a memorable scene in which he wanders, on the verge of leaving town, through the "graveyard" of old junked bombers, standing stripped and forlorn, waiting for the junkman's sledgehammer, symbols of a glory that is gone.  He climbs into the nose of a dead B-17 bomber and all the anguish of his lot comes over him.  That is to say, it comes over the viewer, who is feeling with him.  It is a poetic evocation of valorous and proud memories, and it sums up the evanescence of the wartime repute of the serviceman.

This is, indeed, the climax and ultimate statement of the film.  Al has accomplished his transition by making that unsecured loan to an ex-Seabee and then telling his skeptical associates at a welcome-home dinner that we didn't win battles in the Pacific by first demanding collateral.  That is enough propitiation for his shallow sense of rectitude.  Homer has shown his sweetheart what it will mean to endure a man with "hooks," and has received her gentle reassurance.  Evidently he has crossed his bridge.

But Fred is the one left hanging.  He is the one revealed as having reached a peak in the service that he will never come up to again.  And we know he won't, despite an effort by Sherwood and Wyler to force a happy prospect for him by giving him a small job with the junkman and making it look as though Al's daughter will "wait for him."  We know he's the sort of fellow who truly had his "best years" in the war.  It is too bad the ending of the picture is not that last shot of him in the junked plane.

Because he has the best role, the most forthright and meaningful, Dana Andrews is privileged to give the best performance in the film.  His Fred is a poignant reflection of simple virtues and complex weaknesses, a clear and classic victim of the forces of an ironic fate.  Ironically, his performance was the one that was not recognized by the Academy Awards.  Fredric March as Al is excellent as what he was not first recognized to be—a voluble, superficial, two-faced mediocrity. His basic insincerity and fraudulence are aptly camouflaged by characteristic clowning and delivery of glib, colloquial lines.

Wyler aptly used Gregg Toland's camera to get the texture and tone of the American scene, and some very effective implications are in Hugo Friedhofer's musical score.

Later films were to look further into particular problems of ex-servicemen.  Edward Dymtryk's Crossfire (1947) is about a veteran faced with anti-Semitic prejudice.  Stanley Kramer's Home of the Brave (1949) is about a Negro soldier who becomes psychopathic because of the manner in which he is abused.  But first and most extensive is The Best Years of Our Lives.  It is a moving, valuable addenda to the cinema's body of contemplations of the consequences of war.

The Great Films, by Bosley Crowther
G.P. Putnam's Sons,
New York, 1967

 

Additional Background

The working titles of the film were Glory for Me and Home Again.  In the opening credits, actor Fredric March's name is spelled correctly, but in the end credits, his given name is spelled "Frederic."  Hollywood Reporter news items, the film's press kit and other contemporary sources reconstruct the evolution of the film from Aug 1944:  After reading an August 7, 1944 Time magazine article, "The Way Home," on apprehensions and adjustment problems that were facing some soldiers returning from World War II, producer Samuel Goldwyn's wife Frances suggested that the men's story would be a good basis for a film.  Taking the title of the proposed film from the handwritten "Home Again" sign in a photograph accompanying the article, Goldwyn decided to go ahead with the project.  That same night, Goldwyn contacted MacKinlay Kantor, who had written a number of novels that had been adapted for the screen, to write a treatment.  In January 1945, Kantor turned in the first part of the story, which was more than 100 pages of blank verse.  Given the go-ahead to continue, Kantor eventually completed his story in more than four hundred pages and submitted it under the title Glory for Me. The novel was published in 1945.

When frequent Goldwyn collaborator William Wyler returned from his own war service, Goldwyn brought him onto the project.  According to both contemporary and modern sources, Wyler was somewhat reluctant to film the project, in part because he had just started his own company, Liberty Films, along with fellow veterans and filmmakers Frank Capra, George Stevens and Samuel Briskin.  Wyler, who a September 11, 1945, article in Hollywood Reporter quoted as saying that he wanted to resume his career with "socially significant" films instead of "pure escapist" ventures, soon agreed to direct the story, and together with Goldwyn worked with Robert E. Sherwood to adapt Kantor's blank verse novel into a shooting script.  Sherwood's adaptation, which had significant differences from Kantor's novel, was entitled The Best Years of Our Lives. According to a June 1947 article in HCN, Kantor was very vocal in his irritation over changes from his original novel and the film, particularly over the title change.

One major change from the novel was that the disabled soldier in the book was spastic, while in the film, he is an amputee who has lost both hands.  Wyler had seen a short educational army film, "Diary of a Sergeant," featuring Harold Russell, a soldier who lost both hands in a training mishap in 1944.  Russell's ease using the metal prosthetics that replaced his hands, and his naturalness in front of the camera, convinced Wyler and Goldwyn that Russell could play a major role ("Homer Parrish") in their film, which marked his feature film debut.

According to a Hollywood Reporter news item in August 1944, Goldwyn planned to cast Teresa Wright, Dana Andrews, David Niven, Farley Granger, Walter Brennan and Constance Dowling, but only Wright and Andrews were in the released film.  A Hollywood Reporter news item on August 27, 1945 includes George Davis in the cast, but his appearance in the released film has not been confirmed.  A January 1946 Hollywood Reporter news item noted that June Haver was being borrowed from Twentieth Century Fox as a "leading lady," but she was not in the film.  Drummer Gene Krupa and singer Georgia Kane are seen performing very briefly in the nightclub montage; the shots were outtakes from other films.  Cathy O'Donnell, who portrayed "Wilma," made her motion picture debut in the film.

   

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Various news items indicate that some backgrounds and aerial shots were filmed in the Southern part of the United States and that Sacramento, CA was to be used as the fictional town of Boone City.  It is unlikely that much, if any, Sacramento footage was used in the film, though.  According to the film's press kit, Cincinnati, OH was the prototype (but not location site) for Boone City.  Many of the exterior scenes in the film were shot in and around Los Angeles.  The apartment building in which "Al Stephenson" and his family live is located on Beverly Blvd. near La Brea Avenue in Los Angeles, not far from the Goldwyn studios.  A pre-production news item indicated that songwriter-actor Hoagy Carmichael was to compose two songs for the film.  Although Carmichael did appear in the film, the film's principal song, "Among My Souvenirs," which he played on the piano in the film, was a 1927 song bought to lend a nostalgic atmosphere to the picture.  According to various news items, scheduling problems arose during production because Virginia Mayo was appearing concurrently in The Best Years of Our Lives and another Goldwyn picture, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.  Although a July 22, 1946 Hollywood Reporter new item announced that shooting might shut down for twenty days to accommodate Mayo's schedule, later news items indicate that no significant shut-downs or delays took place on The Best Years of Our Lives.

Contemporary news items and feature articles stated that to publicize the picture, Goldwyn switched advertising agencies from Donahue & Coe to Foote, Cone & Bleding, who were handling the film's $500,000, six-month ad campaign. The Hollywood Reporter news items from August through November 1946 indicate that the film's planned 21 November 1946 premiere at the Astor Theatre in New York became problematic because United Artists was suing the theater owners to have the British-made Caesar and Cleopatra forcibly withdrawn prior to the premiere of The Best Years of Our Lives. The theater's management was threatening to leave the theater "dark," but the suit was settled in mid-November when New York State Supreme Court Justice Levy ruled that Caesar and Cleopatra would stay at the theater until just before the Goldwyn picture's debut.  The New York premiere for The Best Years of Our Lives was held as a benefit for the Lighthouse, an organization that aided the blind.  Road show engagements began in several cities in December, and the film opened at the Fox Beverly Theatre in Los Angeles on Christmas Day, for a limited engagement for 1946 Academy Award consideration.

The film received outstanding reviews in trade and consumer publications, both in the United States and abroad.  The FD reviewer wrote that the film "comes close to being the perfect film—as close indeed as you've ever seen."  A Variety reviewer called it "one of the best pictures of our lives."  Bosley Crowther of the New York Times stated, "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 thought.  Yet such a one is The Best Years of Our Lives."  The film won many critical awards, including Best Picture of the Year by the New York film critics, Look magazine's Industry Award, New York Times 's and Time 's Best Picture award.  The film won the BAFTRA award for Best Picture of the Year in Britain and won Academy Awards in the following categories:  Best Picture; Best Director (William Wyler); Best Actor (Fredric March); Best Supporting Actor (Harold Russell); Film Editing (Daniel Mandell); Music (Hugo Friedhofer for scoring a dramatic or comedy picture); and Best Screenplay (Robert E. Sherwood).  In addition, a special Academy Award was given to Russell "for bringing hope and courage to his fellow veterans through his appearance" in the film and Samuel Goldwyn was given the Irving Thalberg Award.  The film received one additional nomination, for Sound Recording.  March earned his second Best Actor Academy Award for the film; his first was for the 1932 Paramount production Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

Articles in FD and MPH just after the Academy Awards ceremony indicated that touting the film's "nine Oscars" early in the film's run, when it had yet to open in many cities in the U.S., would significantly increase the film's box office grosses, which had thus far amounted to $5,000,000.  To capitalize on the large number of Academy Awards, Goldwyn produced a new campaign book and press kit for exploitation of the film.  The new publicity materials prominently displayed pictures of the awards and called The Best Years of Our lives "The most honored Picture of All Time...the only picture ever to receive nine Oscars and such an avalanche of honors from all over the world."  New one-sheet and three-sheet posters with a picture of an Oscar and the tag line "The Academy Award Picture! Winner of 9 Academy Awards" were also distributed, both to theaters already showing the picture and to future venues.

The new ad campaign was one of the first examples of a studio's capitalization on winning Academy Awards to further promote a film still in release.  Despite the fact that ads seemed to promote the idea that The Best Years of Our Lives had earned more Oscars than any previous film, in fact, it did not.  The "nine" Oscars mentioned in the ads included the special award for Russell and Goldwyn's Thalberg Award.  Gone With the Wind was still the film with the most Academy Awards, having earned eight regular awards, plus one scientific and technical award and one special award, thus bringing its overall total to ten, not including David O. Selznick's Thalberg Award that year.

According to a modern source, The Best Years of Our Lives went on to earn over $11,300,000 dollars at the North American box office.  An April 19, 1948 Variety news item reported that the film earned $8,000,000 in Britain in its initial release.  The picture was re-released in 1953 in "first run" houses, according to the Hollywood Reporter and the New York Times, to tie-in with the homecoming of soldiers returning from the Korean War.  Reviews upon the picture's re-release were excellent, with many critics pointing out that time had not diminished the film's emotional impact.

Shortly after the film's completion, the Hollywood Reporter reported that Wyler was being banned from the Goldwyn lot after a heated argument with the producer.  Although biographies of both Wyler and Goldwyn indicate that the two continued to have an on-again, off-again social relationship, Wyler never made another picture for Goldwyn, for whom he had directed a number of important films from the mid-1930s through 1941, including Dodsworth, These Three, Wuthering Heights, and The Little Foxes.  In 1958, Wyler sued Goldwyn for $408,356.  That amount, Wyler claimed, was owed to him based on his 1939 contract with Goldwyn, which entitled him to twenty percent of the profits from all films he directed for Goldwyn.  In a July 1, 1958, Los Angeles Times article, columnist Hedda Hopper quoted Goldwyn as saying, "...if Willy feels that he has been mistreated by being paid such a 'paltry' sum as $1,400,000 for directing that picture, he is certainly entitled to the great American privilege of going to court."  A May 4, 1962 DV article stated that Wyler's suit was set to go to court on September 11, 1962, but the exact disposition of the suit had not been determined.

In July 1992, Harold Russell announced his intention to sell one of his two Oscars—the one for Best Supporting Actor—at auction.  Russell, who only appeared in one other picture, Inside Moves (1980) and a few television programs, needed what he termed a "financial cushion" beyond his military and disability pensions.  According to a feature article in People magazine, incumbent AMPAS president Karl Malden urged Russell not to sell his award because the Oscars "should not become objects of mere commerce."  Despite the protests of AMPAS and considerable publicity, Russell's award was sold on August 6, 1992 for $60,500.

American Film Institute Catalog