Film
1039: It's a Wonderful Life
Trivia:
As Uncle Billy is leaving George's house drunk, it sounds as if he stumbles
over some trash cans on the sidewalk. In fact, a crew member dropped some
equipment right after Uncle Billy left the screen. Both actors continued with
the scene ("I'm all right, I'm all right!") and director Frank Capra decided to use
it in the final cut. He gave the clumsy stagehand a $10 bonus for
"improving the sound."
For the
scene that required Donna Reed
to throw a rock into the window of the Granville House, Frank Capra hired a marksman
to shoot it out for her on cue. To everyone's amazement, Donna Reed broke the
window with true aim and heft without the assistance of the hired marksman.
Reed had played baseball in high school and had a strong throwing arm.
The gym
floor that opens up to reveal a swimming pool was real and was located at
Beverly Hills High School in Los Angeles.
Films
made prior to this one used cornflakes painted white for the falling snow
effect. Because the cornflakes were so loud, dialogue had to be dubbed in
later. Frank Capra wanted to
record the sound live, so a new snow effect was developed using foamite (a
fire-fighting chemical) and soap and water. This mixture was then pumped at
high pressure through a wind machine to create the silent, falling snow. 6000
gallons of the new snow were used in the film. The RKO Effects Department
received a Class III Scientific or Technical Award from the Motion Picture Academy
for the development of the new film snow.
Ranked
as the #1 Most Powerful Movie of All Time by the American Film Institute
(2006).
The only
film in history to originate from a greetings card.
Two of Sesame Street (1969)'s
Muppets, Bert and Ernie, share their names with the film's cop and cab driver,
respectively, but it's believed to be just a coincidence. While Karolyn Grimes, who played
Zuzu, claimed that the two Muppets were named after the characters because the
movie was Jim Henson's
favorite, according to longtime Muppets head writer Jerry Juhl in an interview
with The San Francisco Chronicle, Ernie and Bert were not named after the
movie's characters. Juhl said, "I was not present at the naming, but I was
always positive [the rumor] was incorrect. Despite his many talents, Jim
[Henson] had no memory for details like this. He knew the movie, of course, but
would not have remembered the cop and the cabdriver. I was not able to confirm
this with Jim before he died, but shortly thereafter I spoke to Jon Stone, Sesame Street's
first producer and head writer and a man largely responsible for the show's
format. He assured me that Ernie and Bert were named one day when he and Jim
were studying the prototype puppets. They decided that one of them looked like
an Ernie, and the other one looked like a Bert. The movie character names are
purely coincidental."


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