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alternative: a choice; one thing instead of something else
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“building and loan”: like a bank, but willing to make money available to
more people (see the “proper nouns” section below)
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cop: police officer
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(to be) cooped up: to feel like you are trapped in a place, as if you were
a bird in a cage
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drunk/drunkard: as a noun, it means someone who chooses to stay drunk
(i.e., so he doesn’t have to face the challenges of life; many “drunks”
are also jobless and homeless)
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hard drinks: alcohol that makes you drunk fast (as opposed to wine or beer
that many people only drink a little of—not enough to get drunk)
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the homefront (in the movie, it is called “the battle of Bedford Falls”):
things people do “back home” in a time of war; how non-soldiers help their
country to win a war by recycling things, not wasting resources, buying
war bonds, etc.
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honeymoon: a short vacation couples often take right after they are
married; a “Bridal Suite” is an expensive room in a nice hotel, reserved
for people on their honeymoon
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luggage: suitcases and other bags used when traveling (sometimes used in
movies to symbolize “travel” or the desire to travel)
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old maid: a woman who has never married (this term isn’t used anymore
because it is considered impolite)
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rabble: a negative term for a crowd, used to insult people who don’t have
money or social status
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a run (on the bank): when many fearful people want to take out their money
at the same time (remember that banks don’t keep your money in a safe;
they loan it to businesses and to your neighbors so they can build
homes—if too many people want to take their money out at the same time, it
forces the bank to go out of business)
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slum: a place where poor people live, and usually it is very hard to “move
out” to become a part of the middle class
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stroke: a medical emergency when blood can’t flow to the brain; this is
how George’s father dies
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suicide: to kill yourself; in the movie this is called “throwing away
God's greatest gift" (that is, your life)
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50 cents on the dollar: half price; you paid a dollar, but I’ll buy it
from you for 50 cents (this only sounds like a “good deal” if you think no
one else would want to buy it at all)
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George Bailey (the center of the story)
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Peter Bailey: George’s father, a kind man who runs a type of “people’s
bank” called the Bailey Brothers’ Building and Loan
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Bailey Brothers’ Building and Loan Office: Peter and Billy Bailey run this
“alternative bank,” where people can save money by buying “shares” that
allow neighbors to borrow money to be used to build small homes; the
town’s bank is run by a self-centered man (Mr. Potter) who only wants to
make money—not to help people
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Billy Bailey (or “Uncle Billy”): Peter’s brother and George’s uncle;
kind-hearted but disorganized and forgetful (symbolized by pieces of
string tied to his fingers, each one representing something he is supposed
to remember!)
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Mary Hatch: one of George’s childhood friends (she eventually marries
George)
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Zuzu: George and Mary have four children; this is the youngest daughter’s
name
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Harry Bailey: George’s younger brother (“kid brother”); at the beginning
of the movie, George saves his life; at the end of the movie Harry is
getting America’s highest award (The Congressional Medal of Honor) for
saving many lives during World War 2.
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Mr. Gower (also called “Old man Gower”): runs the drug store; George
worked there as a teenager
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Mr. Martini: an Italian immigrant; Mr Potter used to charge him a lot of
money to live in a rented apartment, but George helped him (and countless
others) get out of “Potter’s slum” and build his own home, and even to
build his own restaurant
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Nick: a nice man who works for Mr. Martini (in George’s dream, Nick has a
mean personality)
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Clarence Odbody: an angel who is sent from Heaven to help George (in
answer to the prayers of many of George’s friends—these prayers are the
first thing you hear in the movie); he is described as being simple-minded
(he has the “IQ of a rabbit” but also has “the faith of a child”)
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Ernie and Bert: two of George’s childhood friends, who grow up to be a
taxi driver and a cop
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Sam Wainwright: one of George’s childhood friends (we can recognize him
because he greets people by saying "Hee Haw"); when he grows up he gets
rich by running a plastics business
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Violet Bick: one of George’s childhood friends (we see her as a child and
as an attractive young woman)
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Henry F. Potter: the “bad guy” in this movie, described as "the richest
and meanest man" in the county”; he runs the bank, and wants the Bailey
Building and Loan Office to go out of business
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Bedford Falls, New York: the (fictional) city where the story takes place
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the Granville house: we first see it as a run-down, deserted house (George
says that even if he were a ghost he wouldn’t want to live there), but
later it becomes George’s home
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Bailey Park: an area where the Bailey’s sell land and help people build
inexpensive homes
|
Timeline
(this film uses a flashback point of view; to understand the story, here
is a timeline of the main character’s life)
1907—George Bailey is
born
1919—12-year-old George
Bailey and friends are sledding when his little brother Harry falls
through the ice. George saves his life, but gets very sick and becomes
deaf in one ear. Mr. Gower’s son dies of influenza; Mr. Gower accidentally
puts poison in medicine, but George discovers this and refuses to deliver
the “medicine”—this saves another life, and keeps Mr. Gower from going to
jail.
1924—George graduates
from High School and starts working for his dad at the Building and Loan
1928—Harry (George’s kid
brother) graduates from high school; George has now saved enough money to
go to college, but his plans to travel for the summer end because his
father died of a stroke. In the fall, he has to choose between going to
college or keeping the Building and Loan in business (the Board chose him
to take over the company). He accepts the appointment and uses his money
to send his brother to college.
1932—Harry graduates from
college and he is supposed to come run the Building and Loan. But instead
he marries Ruth, whose father gives Harry a good research job in another
city. For years, George has tried to leave Bedford Falls (he also avoids
Mary, though inside he loves her). Now he realizes that he will never
leave, and he decides to marry Mary. It is in the Great Depression—a time
of economic crisis and intense bank instability. George and Mary cancel
their honeymoon and use George’s savings to keep the Building and Loan
running (they also make the run-down Granville house their home).
1935?—George’s old friend
Sam “Hee Haw” Wainwright is now rich, while George still struggles to pay
his bills. Mr Potter tries to convince George to work for him; it would
mean a very big salary, but the Building and Loan would close and common
people could no longer get loans to build houses. George rejects the offer
for the sake of “the people”; he and Mary have their first of four
children.
1942?—George’s brother
and his friends join the army to serve in World War 2, but the military
“draft board” rejects George because he is deaf in one ear.
1945—Harry Bailey becomes
a hero because (as a pilot) he saves many lives.
1945—Christmas eve (when
most of this story takes place). “Uncle Billy” and George are very proud
because the town is going to celebrate Harry’s heroism. Absentminded Uncle
Billy accidentally misplaces several thousand dollars (in fact, he puts it
in a newspaper and gives it to Mr. Potter by mistake). When the money
can’t be found, George says to Billy: “Do you realize what this means? It
means bankruptcy and scandal and prison.”
After a
careful search, they still can’t find the money. To make matters worse,
his daughter Zuzu is sick (she won a rose in school and was too excited
about it to think about dressing warmly). Without thinking, George insults
Zuzu’s teacher Mrs. Welch, so Mr. Welch hits George. Very depressed,
George decides that he can get people out of trouble by killing himself
(if it looks like an accident, they will get money from his life insurance
policy).
All of his
friends pray for George, and Heaven sends help in the form of a
simple-minded angel named Clarence (who can “earn his wings” if he
succeeds in helping George). In desperation, George says he wishes he had
never been born, and Clarence grants this wish.
As George
sees how different the town is without him, Clarence says: "You've been
given a great gift, George: a chance to see what the world would be like
without you. Strange, isn't it? Each man's life touches so many other
lives, and when he isn't around he leaves an awful hole, doesn't he?"
Discussion
1. Look back at what
George said are “the three most exciting sounds in the world.” What did
Billy say? Do you agree with George or Billy, or do you have a different
answer? (Billy said “Breakfast is served,” “Lunch is served,” “Dinner is
served.”)
2. Look back at what
George’s mom said about Mary. What makes you “light up like a
firefly”?
3. Look back at the
“blessing” said when Mr. Martini got a new house. What do you think of it?
Tell us about a Chinese custom, such as when someone gets a new house or
when someone gets married.
4. The website
http://www.filmsite.org/itsa.html (Tim
Dirks) lists many of the things that would be different in Bedford Falls
if George had never been born. See how many you can think of. Here are
some points to help you get started:
a. What would have
happened to Harry as a child, and how would that effect others?
b. What might have
happened to Mr. Gower, the drug store owner?
c. How might Mr.
Potter have changed Bedford Falls?
d. How would it
have affected George’s wife and children?
e. What might have
happened to George’s mother and uncle?
5. Look back at the motto
for the Building and Loan. What had George “given away” during his life?
Do you agree with this motto? Why or why not?
6. Mr. Potter was very
rich and powerful. Why do you think he was so unhappy and selfish? What
are some of the good and bad things about having a lot of power and/or
money?
7. Clarence wrote this in
the book he gave George: “Remember, no man is a failure who has friends.”
Do you agree? Why? How would you define “failure” and “success”?
(To see more information about Christmas, see these other pages: the
traditional Christmas story,
who is Santa?, the pre-Christmas
Advent season; other Christmas movie study
guides on this website: A Snoopy/Charlie Brown
Christmas, Last Holiday,
White Christmas, It's
a Wonderful Life)