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  • #46
    (Stogie @ Nov. 17 2008,17:51) I don't like eggnog and I hate that annoying tosser Jimmy Stewart
    There was an interesting review of the movie in Thursday's NY Times. Below on some excerpts:

    The bucolic small town is replaced by a smoky, nightclub-filled, boogie-woogie-driven haven for showgirls and gamblers, who spill raucously out into the crowded sidewalks on Christmas Eve. It's been renamed Pottersville, after the villainous Mr. Potter, Lionel Barrymore's scheming financier.

    Here's the thing about Pottersville that struck me when I was 15: It looks like much more fun than stultifying Bedford Falls €” the women are hot, the music swings, and the fun times go on all night. If anything, Pottersville captures just the type of excitement George had long been seeking.


    Gary Kamiya, in a funny story on Salon.com in 2001, rightly pointed out how much fun Pottersville appears to be, and how awful and dull Bedford Falls is. He even noticed that the only entertainment in the real town, glimpsed on the marquee of the movie theater after George emerges from the alternate universe, is "The Bells of St. Mary's."

    Now that's scary.

    I'll do Mr. Kamiya one better, though. Not only is Pottersville cooler and more fun than Bedford Falls, it also would have had a much, much stronger future. Think about it: In one scene George helps bring manufacturing to Bedford Falls. But since the era of "It's a Wonderful Life" manufacturing in upstate New York has suffered terribly.

    On the other hand, Pottersville, with its nightclubs and gambling halls, would almost certainly be in much better financial shape today. It might well be thriving.

    I checked my theory with the oft-quoted Mitchell L. Moss, a professor of urban policy at New York University, and he agreed, pointing out that, of all the upstate counties, the only one that has seen growth in recent years has been Saratoga.

    "The reason is that it is a resort, and it has built an economy around that," he said. "Meanwhile the great industrial cities have declined terrifically. Look at Connecticut: where is the growth? It's in casinos; they are constantly expanding."

    In New York, Mr. Moss added, Gov. David A. Paterson "is under enormous pressure to allow gambling upstate because of the economic problems."

    "We ease up on our lot of cultural behaviors in a depression," he said.

    What a grim thought: Had George Bailey never been born, the people in his town might very well be better off today.

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