Saturday, December 23, 2023

It's a Wonderful Life

Earlier this week, I watched It's a Wonderful Life (for only the second time).  I noticed that in the scene where George and Clarence are drying their clothes after having jumped in the river, the framing is such that George is enclosed by the clothesline.


I may be making too much of it, but I think this could mean two things.

First, this could illustrate George's skepticism about who Clarence is.  He doesn't fully accept his claim to be an angel, and this visual divide between the two represents the barrier of George's unbelief.

Second, this separation of George could act as a foreshadowing of the world Clarence will show him where he's never been born.  He's set apart visually to prefigure his absence from Bedford Falls.

---&---

I also noticed a slight but significant difference between George's two interactions with the man whose tree he runs into with his car.  Right after George hits the man's tree, the man complains to George and says, "My great-grandfather planted this tree!"  After George wishes that he'd never been born (and thus hasn't run into the tree), he encounters the man and comments about his tree, and the man mentions that it's "one of the oldest trees in Pottersville."  In both, the man is concerned with his tree, but in the world with George, his concern is more personal (related to his great-grandfather), while in the world without George, his concern is centered on the status of the tree itself.  Such a difference in the man's concerns seems to suggest that in the world with George, a greater emphasis is placed on personal connections.

Saturday, December 16, 2023

Julie & Julia

Recently, I re-watched Julie & Julia and noticed the significance of a detail.

The day after Julie experiences many disappointments (she falls asleep and doesn't hear her timer so she burns the stew; Judith Jones, the editor of Mastering the Art of French Cooking and Julie's dinner guest, cancels because it's raining; and then, worst of all, Julie has a fight with her husband over how concerned she's become about her blog), she goes to work wearing a turtleneck, over which she conspicuously wears the necklace that her husband gave her for her thirtieth birthday earlier in the movie:


This prominent display of the necklace tacitly indicates that Julie is thinking about those better days in her relationship with her husband.