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Thread: 'It's a Wonderful Life': Rare Photos From the Set of a Holiday Classic

  1. #1

    Exclamation 'It's a Wonderful Life': Rare Photos From the Set of a Holiday Classic

    'It's a Wonderful Life': Rare Photos From the Set of a Holiday Classic

    http://time.com/3613817/its-a-wonder...liday-classic/

    Ben Cosgrove

    Nov 26, 2013

    Far more than a mere plot device heralding George Bailey's dark night of the soul (and his joyful return to the land of the living), softly falling snow is something of a central character in Frank Capra's 1946 holiday classic, It's a Wonderful Life. But the cheap "fake snow" so often used on movie sets back in the day -- often just cornflakes painted white -- simply would not do; Capra wanted real snow, or something as close to the real thing as he and his prop department could get.

    Here, LIFE.com documents the use of a revolutionary new snow-making process employed during the making of It's a Wonderful Life -- a process that, for the first time, allowed filmmakers to produce and control remarkably realistic onscreen snowfall, drifts, flurries and landscapes.
    The look and feel of holiday movies would, quite simply, never be the same again.

    Movie snow in the early decades of film-making was, quite frankly, a snow job: the stuff just never looked or sounded authentic. The most common stand-in for delicate crystalline precipitation -- white-coated cornflakes, sometimes mixed with shaved gypsum -- produced so much audible crunching and crackling when actors walked across it that dialog was often over-dubbed afterwards. For It's a Wonderful Life, Frank Capra, who was trained as an engineer, and RKO studio's special effects wizard, Russell Sherman, developed their own artificial snow, one befitting the hushed beauty of a winter night in the fictional town of Bedford Falls.

    Utilizing technology made available after World War II, Sherman's crew mixed foamite -- the material used in fire extinguishers and sometimes marketed under the brand name Phomaide -- with sugar and water (or, by some accounts, with soap flakes) to create a substance that could be sprayed virtually anywhere, tucking tiny Bedford Falls under a wintery blanket of white.

    The foamite solution was pumped at high pressure through a wind machine to create the look of freshly fallen snow on trees, streets and in drifts against buildings. Some 6,000 gallons of this new pseudo-snow were used in the making of It's a Wonderful Life, and the RKO Effects Department received a Technical Award from the Motion Picture Academy for the development of the new white stuff. The artificial snow even clung convincingly to clothing and created picture-perfect footprints, while generating nothing like the sound of trod-upon breakfast cereal. This enabled Capra to record the film's sound live, lending yet another layer of authenticity to the finished movie.

    Capra's vision for an authentic film experience, meanwhile, extended beyond a formula for better manufactured snow. The set for Bedford Falls was also an engineering marvel. Constructed in two months, it was one of the longest sets ever made for an American movie. It covered four acres of the RKO ranch and included 75 stores and buildings; a tree-lined center parkway with 20 fully grown oak trees; a factory district and residential areas. Main Street was 300 yards long, or three full-length city blocks.

    What many movie buffs don't know is that George Bailey's bleak Christmas Eve was actually shot during a series of 90-degree days in June and July in 1946 on RKO's ranch in Encino, California. The days were so hot that Capra gave the cast and crew a day off during filming to recover from heat exhaustion. In the famous scene on the bridge, before he saves Clarence the angel from the dark, swirling waters below, a suicidal George Bailey is clearly sweating -- although Jimmy Stewart's wonderful acting convinces us that fear and dread might well be the reason for that.

    Stewart once said that of all the films he made over the course of his six-decade career, It's a Wonderful Life was his favorite -- no small praise for a film that didn't even win an Oscar. (It was nominated for five.) Stewart, who had recently returned from distinguished service in World War II, almost passed on the role of George; it was Lionel Barrymore -- who so brilliantly played the villainous, money-mad Mr. Potter in the film -- who convinced him to take the part.

    Made for $3.7 million, the movie was a hugely expensive production in the mid-1940s, especially considering its initial box office run only earned $3.3 million. It also happened to be the first and only time Frank Capra produced, financed, directed and co-wrote one of his films.
    The disappointing box-office numbers doomed Capra's production company, and the director soon found himself out of favor with the changing tastes of postwar audiences. But the movie -- and its director -- gained newfound fame and esteem as later generations were introduced to, and fell in love with, the movie on television.

    "It's the damnedest thing I've ever seen," Capra once said. "The film has a life of its own now and I can look at it like I had nothing to do with it. I'm like a parent whose kid grows up to be president. I'm proud . . . but it's the kid who did the work. I didn't even think of it as a Christmas story when I first ran across it. I just liked the idea."

    Finally, it's worth pointing out that in notes taken on the set of It's a Wonderful Life by LIFE's Helen Robinson -- for an article that never ran in the magazine -- one throw-away line stands out to contemporary readers. In addition to foamite, "[the whitish mineral] dolomite and asbestos were other old standbys used to dress the set." That's right, folks: asbestos was used as a stand-in for snow on more than a few Hollywood movie sets in the 1930s and '40s.
    “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.” - Arnold Toynbee



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  3. #2

  4. #3
    Great flick... don't make 'em like that no more.

    Don't need a weather man to know which way the wind blows

  5. #4
    It would have been awesome building sets for the old movies, especially when they went crazy with epics like Ben-Hur.

  6. #5


    "..............A discontented, lazy rabble instead of a thrifty working class."
    Last edited by sparebulb; 10-23-2017 at 05:02 PM.

  7. #6
    Yes , late at night in front of my fire while playing with some silver halves and sipping a double shot of bourbon I like to do my Mr Potter imitation . My five year old grand daughter likes it .
    Do something Danke

  8. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by oyarde View Post
    Yes , late at night in front of my fire while playing with some silver halves and sipping a double shot of bourbon I like to do my Mr Potter imitation . My five year old grand daughter likes it .
    AF is a romantic.
    "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." - Albert Einstein

    "for I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man. - Thomas Jefferson.

  9. #8
    Capra's "lost" ending to his movie!




    Quote Originally Posted by TheCount View Post
    ...I believe that when the government is capable of doing a thing, it will.
    Quote Originally Posted by Influenza View Post
    which one of yall fuckers wrote the "ron paul" racist news letters
    Quote Originally Posted by Dforkus View Post
    Zippy's posts are a great contribution.




    Disrupt, Deny, Deflate. Read the RPF trolls' playbook here (post #3): http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthr...eptive-members



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  11. #9
    I've always heard good things about this movie but never watched it. We didn't have a tv until the late 80s so...

  12. #10
    The entire movie is on Youtube. It beats the NBC commercial fest run every year around Christmas. I'll bet a lot of the NBC commercials are for retirees. lol
    Quote Originally Posted by TheCount View Post
    ...I believe that when the government is capable of doing a thing, it will.
    Quote Originally Posted by Influenza View Post
    which one of yall fuckers wrote the "ron paul" racist news letters
    Quote Originally Posted by Dforkus View Post
    Zippy's posts are a great contribution.




    Disrupt, Deny, Deflate. Read the RPF trolls' playbook here (post #3): http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthr...eptive-members

  13. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by Natural Citizen View Post
    I've always heard good things about this movie but never watched it. We didn't have a tv until the late 80s so...
    Quote Originally Posted by NorthCarolinaLiberty View Post
    The entire movie is on Youtube. It beats the NBC commercial fest run every year around Christmas. I'll bet a lot of the NBC commercials are for retirees. lol
    The Christmas movie trifecta, as far as I'm concerned:



    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2c1woo - Christmas Carol starring Alastair Sim

    And It's a Wonderful Life...

  14. #12
    Christmas bump

  15. #13
    Love It's a Wonderful Life? You Need to Buy This House



    http://www.countryliving.com/real-es...ul-life-house/


    ETA:

    24 Things You Didn't Know About "It's a Wonderful Life"
    http://www.countryliving.com/life/g2...e-movie-facts/
    “The spirits of darkness are now among us. We have to be on guard so that we may realize what is happening when we encounter them and gain a real idea of where they are to be found. The most dangerous thing you can do in the immediate future will be to give yourself up unconsciously to the influences which are definitely present.” ~ Rudolf Steiner



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