Classic films capture Christmas magic “Christmas is a good time of year for looking backwards,” an aging Professor Wutheridge (Monte Wooley) says in the 1947 Christmas classic “The Bishop’s Wife.” Some of the biggest and best movies of the Christmas season are more than 40 years old, and are still faithfully watched and loved, such as “It’s a Wonderful Life” and “Miracle on 3A th Street.” These two perfect Christmas Michael Stock movies dominate television air time from Thanksgiving to Christmas, playing on various stations as many as 10 times a week. But these movies are not the only classics that effec tively capture what Christmas was like. The black-and-white photography )f films of the 1930s and ’40s seem to )e particularly preserving, like an aged icrapbook for reconsidering the “Christmas Past.” “The Bishop’s Wife,” made in 1947, weaves an Mnotiona! tale of humor and situation ind is set a few days before Christ nas. Bishop Henry Brougham (David S'ivcn) is a distraught Protestant bishop, 10 determined to have an enormous lew cathedral built that he fails to sec lis marriage crumble around him. t Cary Grant serves as an omnis cient angel named Dudley whom no pne seems to remember, but every one seems to know. Dudley is called into the service of Bishop Brougham i>y his prayers to save a failing mar riage. When Dudley introduces himself ®o the doubling Bishop, Brougham believes that Dudley is to aid him in getting his cathedral built. Julia Brougham (played by Loretta Young) is especially endearing in her Sole as the powerless wife and wit ness to her husband’s all-involving obsession of the cathedral. She and the angel Dudley arc the only ones who question exactly who this in credible cathedral is to glorify: the wealthy self-serving benefactors to whom Bishop Brougham will sacri fice anything to serve himself or God. Even in the role of an angel, Grant manages to carry himself in his typi cal manner, capturing the hearts of passers-by. “The Bishop’s Wife” carries all the sentiment and humor that “It’s a Wonderful Life” had a year earlier. Some of the best scenes are created by the on-screen electricity between Dudley and Julia Brougham. “The world changes, but two things remain constant: youth and beauty. You know, they’re really one and the same thing,” Dudley says. “Yes . . . “ answers Julia. “The trouble is, people grow old.” “Not everybody. The only people who grow old were bom old to begin with. You were bom young — you’ll remain that way.” Dudley embodies the spirit of Christmas, challenging each person to be ideal; to be the best that he or she can be. “The Bishop’s Wife” has granted the perfect Christmas gift to audi ences for more than 40 years — the power of the Christmas smile. In 1939, eight years before “The Bishop’s Wife,” MGM studios re leased a charming film adaptation of “The Shop Around the Comer.” This film isn t typically consid ered in the group of classic Christmas films, but it spends its time moving toward Christmas, using all aspects of the human spirit — representing the Christmastime victory of the di vine spirit of human nature over the despicable. “The Shop Around the Comer” is a Hungarian talc of a middle-class leather and gift shop. James Stewart plays Alfred Kralik, the head clerk in the shop. The bachelor Kralik longs for the perfect mate, and answers a girl’s ad for correspondence in the paper. The letters between the two arc signed only “Friend,” and the relationship between them grows strictly by correspondence. Klara Novak (Margaret Sullavan), Kralik’s corresponding “Friend,” unknowingly enters the Matuschck gift shop and is hired for the Christ mas rush. Neither Novak nor Kralik arc aware that the other is their pen pal, and the two do not get along well at first. Working together, they constantly argue and insult each other. As corre spondents, however, they finally decide that they should meet. Kralik goes to the restaurant ren dezvous where his mysterious “Friend” is to be waiting, marking a dog-eared copy of Tolstoy’s “Anna Karenina” with a red carnation. Kralik sees that Novak is his mystery-pal, and de cides not to reveal himself. Hugo Matuschek (Frank Morgan) fires Kralik because he mistakenly thinks he is having an affair with Mrs. Matuschek. After learning the truth, Matuschek rehires Kralik,and fails in his attempt to shoot himself in shame. Kralik fills in during his absence, and desires to further reveal himself to Klara. Christmas Eve finds Kralik finally revealing himself to Novak as they close up the shop after everyone else has gone. Stewart carries the movie, making the scenes come alive as he enters the set. He bounds about with youthful enthusiasm — never aloof, but al ways with a purpose — to reach the next scene, the next line. “She’s expecting a pretty impor tant man. Well... I’m in no mood to act important tonight.” “The Shop Around the Comer” fits and feels like a stage production, with most scenes filmed in or just outside of the Matuschek store. Pro duccr/director Ernst Lubitsch, one of the best directors of this period, inter nalizes the script by keeping almost all the filming in the shop and making scene changes seamless. The seam lcssncss maintains the mood of the scene and makes it easier to carry the mood from character to character. This makes the tension and the pas sion real. i-- - .—■ “The Shop Around the Comer” is the third of four films that Stewart and Sullavan made together, and the only one that ends happily, which isn’t surprising, considering Ernst Lubitsch’s fascination with amorous whimsy. The scenes shared by Stewart and Sullavan are particularly endearing and effective, whether they are the protagonist/antagonisl scenes prior to Stewart’s revelation of his identity, or the closing scenes. The film was not a big winner at j the box office in 1939, but Lubitsch’s i tender direction and Stewart’s youth ful enthusiasm propel “The Shop I Around the Comer” into the category j of truly “classic” classic movies of | the Christmas season, or any other , season. Stock is a junior English major and a j Daily Nebraskan staff reporter and colum- J nist. r i i I I / 17th & ‘N’ St. No Appointments Necessary M 476-9466 J s6°° o« , Full Service Oil Change! 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DON T USE SNUFF OR CHEWING TOBACCO_J ..JKKF— MBS j Harnoy Toscanini Cassettes $5.77 Cassettes $15.77 (3 Cs Set) I cos $9.77 cds $32.77 (3 CD Set) I 14010 SI foil Parti Plaid 6105 0 SI 434 2500 434-2510 ^ 2520 Prices effective through 12-23 Lincoln Continued from Page 13 3nc of its three auditoriums open to the public. When the other two auditoriums Dpcn, the total number of first-run screens in the downtown area will reach 14. Armed with a list of projected movie release dates, Livingston said he be lieved that there would be plenty of movies to fill the 14 screens. “We’re confident that the product is going to be there,” he said. The Lincoln Theatre has many technological advantages, such as Spectral Recording Dolby sound and a computerized box office and con cession area, Livingston said. While these features add to the quality, the average movie-goer won’t go to the movie for the sound or the convcnicnceof being able to buy tick ets in advance, Perez said. At first, most will go out of curiosity or be cause the movie they want to sec is playing at that theater, she said. With movie prices running as much as $5, Lincoln needs a dollar theater, said Todd Steele, a senior electrical engineering major. Many college towns have theaters that show movies that have been out for a month or two for a dollar, he said.