Christmas Decorating and Christmas Movies
I’m 51 and a grandmother and somewhat capable of
handling things on my own (no, really, I am) but I still want to go home to my parents’ for Christmas and have everything as it always has been. Like the John Deere village my mom puts up — my dad had a John Deere dealership before he retired and now he buys every JD catalogue and ad that comes up for auction anywhere in the world, or at least in Illinois. And like the
ornaments I put on the tree when I was a kid, and now my 20-something-year-old children help me put them on their grandparents’ tree — great-grandson 8-month-old Nolan is no help since he would only eat the hooks. And then there’s the great holiday food that only Grommy — what my children call my mother — can make: TV Mix eaten in 40-year-old wooden bowls, graham crackers covered in butter and brown sugar and hot cocoa stirred from scratch in an ancient heavy saucepan. Grandmas definitely are special, and I’d better get my act together if I’m going to be the same for Nolan. But I’ve had lessons from the best, so hopefully I”ve got a headstart. One of my favorite parts of going home during the holidays is coming back to my house with fresh-cut holly and fir branches from my dad’s nursery — one of his other retirement projects. I cannot keep up with them! At least this year I’m making my own Chex mix – I’ll have to call my mom, though, to talk me through.
And now for No. 4 in my Favorite Christmas Movie list — the 1946 “It’s A Wonderful Life” with Jimmy Stewart and
Donna Reed. I know, I know. It’s a heartwarming American classic. It’s a Frank Capra masterpiece. It’s a multi-layered holiday icon. It’s everybody’s favorite. So why isn’t it No. 1 on my list? Because it used to scare the #$%^ out of me! The drunk pharmacist who boxed young George’s ear and made it bleed, the mean and rowdy crowd at the bar, the cheap and hateful Mr. Potter who caused such misery — these disturbing black-and-white images did not bring me comfort and joy when I was younger. And as I grew older and understood the sacrifices George made and the dreams he lost and the drab and dreary life he felt he was living, it made me sad. George did have a wonderful life but bitterness and regret kept him from realizing it — what a waste for all those years. I mainly feel sorry for him. It’s a good thing Clarence comes along to shake him up because I sort of want to do that myself. And here’s the thing: Where were all George’s friends before the bank shortfall? Why does it take a crisis to bring them together and make them value him? Do these people ever stop by to say “hello” or to eat lunch or go to a ballgame? And will they do that now? Or am I being too cynical? You have to admit, though, it’s the kind of movie that breeds cynicism if you didn’t have a healthy dose of it already. Like me. Come back tomorrow for No. 3 — a bonus two-fer. Can you guess what they are?
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December 9, 2008 - Posted by shoalswriter | family, food, home, Tennessee, Top Five Christmas Movies | Christmas, decorating, family, food, holiday, holidays, It's A Wonderful Life, John Deere, movies
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About
Cathy Wood is a freelance writer and columnist focusing on Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee. She also is the marketing director for the Tennessee Valley Art Association, which oversees the Tennessee Valley Museum of Art, in Tuscumbia, Ala., and the Ritz Theatre, in Sheffield, Ala., and a writing coach/adjunct faculty member at the University of North Alabama in Florence, Ala. For more than 10 years she was a features writer
and columnist for the TimesDaily, in Florence, Ala., after starting there in 1997 as an advertorial writer and then as a clerk. Her writing appeared in many newspapers across the country through the New York Times Regional Newspapers Group. She specializes in style, books, food, decorating, shopping, entertaining, history, local personalities and arts. Her weekly column for the TimesDaily was about her often-chaotic but never-boring life and the shenanigans (does anybody use that word anymore?) of her two 20-something daughters, four cats, two dazzlingly cute grandsons and her husband of seven years, a sports editor who is kind and well-meaning but often befuddled about such things as women’s shoes and which day to take out the garbage. She continues that column at her blog, Coffee with Cathy, and writes food stories for the TimesDaily, a fashion column for Shoals Woman magazine and book reviews and fashion columns for the Crossroads Woman magazine in Corinth, Miss. In addition, she writes online content for design and marketing companies and publicity materials for non-profits. In hopes of becoming rich and famous, she’s dipped her (monthly pedicured) toes into the blogging world. She’s still hoping — but having a blast in the meantime. She’s a 1979 graduate of Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, Tenn., where she was editor of the school newspaper, Sidelines. She also worked at the Manchester Times, in Manchester, Tenn., and the Daily-Post Athenian, in Athens, Tenn. Email cathylwood@gmail.com
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Okay Cathy, just waiting patiently to see if my all time favorite Christmas movie is on your list. You will still be my friend and I will still love you even if it is not included. I will just know you do not have the exceptionally high standards and taste in Christmas movies as I. Here is a hint: “It is goo ooo oood.”
Hmmm … an interesting clue. We’ll have to see! But thanks, Susan, for still being my friend, no matter what!
You make some good points about the Old Reliable.
Somewhere on the Internets there’s a re-edited trailer for “It’s a Wonderful Life” that makes it seem like a horror film. Quite effective, really.
There’s also the 30-second version, with bunnies:
http://www.angryalien.com/1204/wonderful_lifebuns.asp
In 1946, the movie was not a financial success. Indeed, the downbeat nature of much of the story wasn’t what audiences recovering from World War II wanted to see.
No mention of the movie is complete without noting its other important contribution to our culture: George Bailey’ friends, Bert and Ernie, immortalized as Muppets.
Thanks, as always, sweetie, for contributing. I love that you know so much about movies. I’m just a thumbs-up/thumbs-down sort of movie watcher, but you’ve got the background scoop that makes it all so much more fun.