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William Wyler’s Love Letter to His Comrades in Arms: The Best Years of Our Lives

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In the opening shot of William Wyler’s The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), CAPT Fred Derry walks into an airport terminal in hopes of catching a flight home to Boone City, USA. Upon reaching the clerk at the counter, Fred learns there is a several day wait for a commercial flight, even though he’s a returning war hero. A wealthy middle-aged businessman then charges up next to Fred, interrupts his conversation with the airline clerk, and confirms his seat on the next flight regardless of the extra cost. He barely acknowledges CAPT Derry, no nod or a “thank you for your service.” The air is thick with rotten apathy, and it’s this scene that signals the audience is in for a different kind of war movie. William Wyler, himself a WWII veteran, saw America’s shift in attitude immediately following the war. The wells of patriotism had been tapped dry and those keeping the fires burning on the home front were tired of making sacrifices. Once the servicemen returned home, the warm welcome was short lived. After fighting for years in the Pacific and Europe, these soldiers were expected to resume life as normal almost immediately. Definitely easier said than done. The transition back to civilian life was difficult for many of the soldiers displaced by the war, and Wiliam Wyler wanted to pay tribute to their post-war struggles.

The Best Years of Our Lives follows the homecoming and initial period of adjustment of three servicemen: Air Force Captain Fred Derry (Dana Andrews), Army Sergeant Al Stephenson (Fredric March), and Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Homer Parrish (Harold Russell).When Fred is turned away from the ticket counter at the airport terminal, he makes his way over to the Army Air Forces Air Transport Command terminal. It’s here that Fred meets Homer, who acts a bit tired and withdrawn. When Fred and Homer’s names are called to the counter because their flight is ready, each one has to sign off on a form. Homer, who’s had his hands in his pockets up to this point, reveals that he has lost both hands and instead has hooks. Without skipping a beat, he grabs a pen and signs the document.

Clerk: “Here, I’ll do it for you.”
Homer: “What’s the matter, think I can’t spell my own name?”

Fred learns that Homer, too, is from Boone City, and they will be on the same flight headed home. The pair head over to their plane and meet Al Stephenson, who’s also from their hometown. The three men board a bomber, which is similar to what Fred flew in during his service in Germany. Once in the air, the trio get to know one another; talking about their service, families, what they missed about home. Al is considerably older than Fred and Homer, as he explains he has a wife of twenty years waiting on him, along with two grown children. Fred is married too, but a newlywed in every sense of the word when he was shipped off to war. As such, he’s quite eager to return home to his bride. Homer also has a girl waiting on him, and they are to be married. He says she knows about his injury, but he’s afraid she won’t be able to handle it once she sees him. Once they land, the three share a cab ride through their hometown. They call out all the familiar places and what’s changed since they were away. The smiles on their faces are barely masking the intense anxiety they each feel upon their return home. As the cab pulls in front of Homer’s house and white picket fence, he turns to Fred and Al asking if they want to head over to his Uncle Butch’s bar for a quick drink. Al turns to Homer and says “You’re home now, kid.”

Homer’s family rushes out to greet him, and his little sister runs next door to get Wilma (Cathy O’Donnell). Some of the hedges in between the two houses are worn down a little, as you can imagine both Homer and Wilma going back and forth in happier days. Wilma couldn’t be happier to see Homer and immediately kisses and embraces him, but Homer keeps his arms to his side, something that Wilma can’t help but notice. The cab pulls away taking Fred and Al to their next stop. Homer raises his arm to wave, giving his family their first glimpse of the hooks that have replaced his hands.

Fred: “You gotta hand it to the Navy, they sure trained that kid how to use those hooks.”
Al: “They couldn’t train him to put his arms around his girl, to stroke her hair.”

The Best Years of Our Lives was adapted for the screen by Robert E. Sherwood and based on a novel by MacKinlay Kantor. For the film, Director William Wyler and Sherwood chose three men of different ages, different branches of the military, and different socio-economic situations. You have the former quarterback Homer with his family literally straight out of a Norman Rockwell painting. Al is a banker, solidly upper-middle class, and enjoys a spacious condominium downtown. Fred the former soda jerk comes from a poor background, with his home being a hovel under the railroad tracks. His father, likely a Forgotten Man of WWI, likes to hit the bottle. His step-mother, one of the nicest women in his life, probably has a questionable past. Once enlisted, the three servicemen find their lives jumbled, with Al becoming a sergeant in the Army, Homer relegated to the midship, and Fred becoming a decorated bombardier. Now that they’ve returned home, the men are suffering from a bad case of whiplash. For example, Al’s view of banking has been drastically altered with him now valuing people who work with their hands for a living. He copes with the horrors of his past service and the apathy he sees with his banking colleagues by drinking heavily. Fred has to come to the harsh realization that his citations and ribbons mean nothing in the civilian world and that it’s back to soda jerking for a living. On top of this, Fred has haunting flashbacks, what today we would identify as post-traumatic stress disorder. Homer faces the hardest adjustment because of the physical transformation in the loss of both hands, and ultimately the loss of complete independence. He struggles with the burden he feels he’s placed on everyone who cares for him, especially his childhood sweetheart Wilma. There’s a sick irony in that the star athlete doesn’t even get to see the enemy who takes his hands from him.

The Best Years of Our Lives won seven Academy Awards, plus a special Honorary Oscar for real-life veteran Harold Russell (who also won the Best Actor in a Supporting Role award). Fredric March won for Best Actor in a Leading Role, which was the second and final Academy Award he would win in his long career. Although he is often criticized as having a rather wooden acting style, Dana Andrews gives one of the greatest performances of his career. It’s a shame he wasn’t recognized by the Academy for this performance. Although Best Years focuses on the three servicemen and their struggles, their story wouldn’t have the same impact without the women standing beside them. Myrna Loy’s Millie Stephenson has kept her family intact through many rough patches. Loy’s performance is understated, but brilliant. Teresa Wright is Al and Millie’s daughter Peggy. Like many during the war, she had to grow up fast. Peggy has a caring spirit and is drawn toward Fred. When he has nowhere else to go, Fred turns to Peggy for support. Although Homer turns her away, Wilma is persistent, loving, willing to do anything for him. Cathy O’Donnell’s performance as Wilma is one of the finest in the film. The rest of the cast is rounded out by excellent performances from Virginia Mayo, Hoagy Carmichael, Ray Collins, Gladys George, and Roman Bohnen.

Warner Brothers released The Best Years of Our Lives on Blu-ray on November 5, 2013, and it looks amazing. One of the fears with many  classic films on Blu-ray is that rear projection and special effects look out of place. This is not the case with this release. The special features included on the disc are from previous DVD editions. They include an introduction from Virginia Mayo and interviews with Mayo and Teresa Wright.

 

Get The Best Years of Our Lives on Blu-ray starting November 5, 2013 

 

 

 

 

 


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