It’s a Wonderful Life
is arguably the most classic of classic Christmas movies. What’s not to like?
It’s got the talented directing of Frank Capra, the endearing acting of Jimmy
Stewart, a compelling plot device that invites viewers to imagine what
the world would be like without them, and plenty of feel-good sentiment.
Or, at
least, there’s plenty of feel-good sentiment at the end. The other parts of the
movie though . . . well I’d long noticed that the bulk of the film actually
made me feel rather frustrated and depressed — really, rather sad for George
Bailey.
After
watching it again recently, I’ve been thinking more about why that is, and have
come to the following conclusion: George Bailey is a truly tragic figure — an
overly passive man whose sacrifices and sufferings aren’t entirely necessary,
even from an ethical and moral standpoint.
When
George’s father dies and the board of the Bailey Brothers Building & Loan
Association votes to keep it going as long as George will take the reins, his
deciding to accept the position — to get things in order, avoid a disruption in
services, continue his father’s legacy — is arguably the ethically upstanding
thing to do. At least for a time. George makes the very sensible, practically-wise
compromise between following his dream of traveling the world and going to
college, and not wanting to see the Building & Loan dissolved by Mr.
Potter, by striking a deal with his brother, Harry: George will run the
association for now, and Harry will go to college; then, after Harry graduates,
he’ll come back and take over, and George will go to school.
The
decision George makes later on to use his and Mary’s honeymoon savings to cover
a bank run is also an ethically generous choice. One can argue that enabling
people to own a home, rather than rent — the enabling of what is more of a
modern privilege than a basic human need — doesn’t rise to the level of a moral
obligation. But, it’s still a thoroughly decent thing to do.
But let’s
visit a decision which comes in between these two, and that, had it been done
differently, wouldn’t have even put George in the position of having to make
that second decision, and to deal with all the other dream-crushing,
spirit-suffocating episodes that follow.
When Harry
returns from college with a job offer from his new father-in-law to work as a
researcher for a glass factory, he says he’s willing to fulfill his and
George’s agreement, and take over the Building & Loan as planned, but . . .
but . . .
While with the aforementioned dilemmas, there was more moral weight on one
side of the equation than the other, that isn’t so in this case. Harry is said
to have a genius for research, but George’s own father says he has a talent for
architecture. Neither brother has a greater or lesser claim on following their
vocational desires. Neither is more or less obligated to give up on the path
they wish to pursue.
Perhaps
it’s “nice” of George to decide to sacrifice his dream to enable Harry to
pursue his, but it seems that he does so less out of moral conviction, than the
inability to have a
difficult conversation with his brother. George accepts Harry’s implicit
dismissal of their deal without even an attempt to talk about it. He’s afraid
of confrontation and unable to assert
himself.
Better it
would have been for George to try to hold Harry to their agreement. If Harry
had pushed back, if both brothers steadfastly and understandably did not want
to take over the Building & Loan, together they then could have decided on
another plan. Maybe George would stay on a year longer, with the agreement that
over that time, he and Harry would find a suitable, non-familial replacement
willing to run the organization. Maybe he and Harry would decide that while
providing affordable loans and housing would add something of value to the world,
fulfilling the vocations for which their particular talents were uniquely
suited would add value to the world as well, in a different way; maybe they
would decide that putting their unique talents to use was itself a moral
obligation, and that squandering those talents was in fact the immoral choice
to make. They may also have reasoned, quite reasonably, that — even if the film
suggests otherwise — the closing of the Bailey Brothers Building & Loan
would not have invariably led to the rise of Pottersville.
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