This is director Frank Capra 's classic bittersweet comedy/drama about George Bailey ( James Stewart ), the eternally-in-debt guiding force of a bank in the typical American small town of Bedford Falls. As the film opens, it's Christmas Eve, 1946, and George, who has long considered himself a failure, faces financial ruin and arrest and is seriously contemplating suicide. High above Bedford Falls, two celestial voices discuss Bailey's dilemma and decide to send down eternally bumbling angel Clarence Oddbody ( Henry Travers ), who after 200 years has yet to earn his wings, to help George out. But first, Clarence is given a crash course on George's life, and the multitude of selfless acts he has performed: rescuing his younger brother from drowning, losing the hearing in his left ear in the process; enduring a beating rather than allow a grieving druggist ( H.B. Warner ) to deliver poison by mistake to an ailing child; foregoing college and a long-planned trip to Europe to keep the Bailey Building and Loan from letting its Depression-era customers down; and, most important, preventing town despot Potter ( Lionel Barrymore ) from taking over Bedford Mills and reducing its inhabitants to penury. Along the way, George has married his childhood sweetheart Mary ( Donna Reed ), who has stuck by him through thick and thin. But even the love of Mary and his children are insufficient when George, faced with an $8000 shortage in his books, becomes a likely candidate for prison thanks to the vengeful Potter. Bitterly, George declares that he wishes that he had never been born, and Clarence, hoping to teach George a lesson, shows him how different life would have been had he in fact never been born. After a nightmarish odyssey through a George Bailey-less Bedford Falls (now a glorified slum called Potterville), wherein none of his friends or family recognize him, George is made to realize how many lives he has touched, and helped, through his existence; and, just as Clarence had planned, George awakens to the fact that, despite all its deprivations, he has truly had a wonderful life. Capra's first production through his newly-formed Liberty Films, It's a Wonderful Life lost money in its original run, when it was percieved as a fairly downbeat view of small-town life. Only after it lapsed into the public domain in 1973 and became a Christmastime TV perennial did it don the mantle of a holiday classic. — Hal Erickson
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James Stewart | George Bailey |
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Donna Reed | Mary Hatch |
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Lionel Barrymore | Mr. Potter |
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Thomas Mitchell | Uncle Billy |
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Henry Travers | Clarence |
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Beulah Bondi | Mrs. Bailey |
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Frank Faylen | Ernie |
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Ward Bond | Bert |
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Gloria Grahame | Violet |
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H.B. Warner | Mr. Gower |
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Frank Albertson | Sam Wainwright |
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Todd Karns | Harry Bailey |
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Samuel S. Hinds | Pa Bailey |
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Mary Treen | Cousin Tilly |
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Virginia Patton | Ruth Dakin |
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Charles Williams | Cousin Eustace |
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Sarah Edwards | Mrs. Hatch |
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William Edmunds | Mr. Martini |
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Lillian Randolph | Annie |
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Argentina Brunetti | Mrs. Martini |
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Robert J. Anderson | Little George |
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Ronnie Ralph | Little Sam |
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Jeanne Gail | Little Mary |
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Jeanine Ann Roose | Little Violet |
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Danny Mummert | Little Marty Hatch |
| Director | Frank Capra |
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| Writer | Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett, Frank Capra, Jo Swerling, Philip Van Doren Stern, Michael Wilson | |
| Producer | Frank Capra | |
| Musician | Dimitri Tiomkin | |
| Photography | Joseph F. Biroc, Joseph Walker, Victor Milner | |
| Packaging | Keep Case |
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| Nr Discs | 1 |
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Edition Release Date | Nov 03, 2009 |
| Regions | A |