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The Best Years of Our Lives
Plot Synopsis by Hal Erickson

The postwar classic The Best Years of Our Lives, based on a novel in verse by MacKinlay Kantor about the difficult readjustments of returning World War II veterans, tells the intertwined homecoming stories of ex-sergeant Al Stephenson (Fredric March), former bombadier Fred Derry (Dana Andrews), and sailor Homer Parrish (Harold Russell). Having rubbed shoulders with blue-collar Joes for the first time in his life, Al finds it difficult to return to a banker's high-finance mindset, and he shocks his co-workers with a plan to provide no-collateral loans to veterans. Meanwhile, Al's children (Teresa Wright and Michael Hall) have virtually grown up in his absence. Fred discovers that his wartime heroics don't count for much in the postwar marketplace, and he finds himself unwillingly returning to his prewar job as a soda jerk. His wife (Virginia Mayo), expecting a thrilling marriage to a glamorous flyboy, is bored and embittered by her husband's inability to advance himself, and she begins living irresponsibly, like a showgirl. Homer has lost both of his hands in combat and has been fitted with hooks; although his family and his fiancée (Cathy O'Donnell) adjust to his wartime handicap, he finds it more difficult. Profoundly relevant in 1946, the film still offers a surprisingly intricate and ambivalent exploration of American daily life; and it features landmark deep-focus cinematography from Gregg Toland, who also shot Citizen Kane. The film won Oscars for, among others, Best Picture, Best Director for the legendary William Wyler, Best Actor for March, and Best Supporting Actor for Harold Russell, a real-life double amputee whose hands had been blown off in a training accident.

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The Best Years of Our Lives, a commentary
Similar Works
An American Story  (1992, John Gray)
Born on the Fourth of July  (1989, Oliver Stone)
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From Here to Eternity  (1953, Fred Zinnemann)
The Dark Angel  (1935, Sidney Franklin)
Farewell Again  (1937, Tim Whelan, Sr.)
I'll Be Seeing You  (1944, George Cukor, William Dieterle)
Pride of the Marines  (1945, Delmer Daves)
The Road Back  (1937, James Whale)
Belorussky Vokzal  (1971, Andrei Smirnov)
Other Related Works
 Is related to:    The Men  (1950, Fred Zinnemann)
   Absent  (1928, Harry A. Gant)
   Mrs. Miniver  (1942, William Wyler)
   My Brother Tom  (1986, Pino Amenta)
   The Burmese Harp  (1956, Kon Ichikawa)
   Act of Violence  (1949, Fred Zinnemann)
 Has been remade as:    Returning Home  (1975, Daniel Petrie)