This is another
reposting of a review from a couple of years ago; I never let the holiday pass
by without watching this one;
This 1940 film by Ernst Lubitsch, starring Jimmy Stewart
and Magaret Sullavan is one of the most beautifully crafted films ever made,
and is based on the play by Miklós László. The story is simple, in the weeks
leading up to Christmas in Budapest, the department store of Matuschek and
Company, is gearing up for the holiday season.
The owner, Hugo Matuschek is
played brilliantly by Frank Morgan, known to millions worldwide as the Wizard
of Oz. His right hand man, Alfred Kralik, is played by Jimmy Stewart. The two
are very close, Mr. Matuschek values the opinions of his manager. Things are
going very smoothly, with Kralik expecting a promotion by Christmas. Enter
Margaret Sullavan as Klara Novak, an unemployed and high strung young woman.
Through a bit of trickery she lands a job at Matuschek and Company, which in
turn drives a wedge between Mr. Matuschek and Kralik.
While Kralik has been exchanging letters with an unknown
"friend" through the classified ads, Ms. Novak has been doing the
same. Without knowing, they have been exchanging letters with one another,
stretching the truth a bit where necessary. So, neither one has any idea that
their co-worker is the object of their affections. In fact, the opposite is
true, as they grate on one another’s nerves, and the Christmas holiday
approaches. And to top it all off, they are both thinking about marriage to
their prospective "pen pals", although they have never met.
At the same time, a subplot is taking place as the shops
"dandy", Ferencz Vadas, played exceptionally by Joseph Schildkraut,
does all he can to make life unbearable for his fellow employees. He is also
one of my favorite character actors, and even appears in a few of the old “Twilight
Zones.”
With a cast of character actors such as Felix Bressart,
who plays Kraliks friend and fellow employee Pirovitch, and William Tracy as
Pepi, the stores delivery boy, this movie will easily call you back year after
year for a look at Christmas in Hungary in the days before all the madness
began.
The movie has at least 3 endings. By that I mean there
are 3 separate times when the movie could end, leaving the audience happy, but
Ernst Lubitsch, being Ernst Lubitsch, has so many tricks up his sleeve, that
you will find yourself enjoying 3 endings, each one wrapping up a portion of
the film that you may have forgotten about. This is the art of Ernst Lubitsch.
Just when you think it's over - it's not.
One of the all-time great Christmas movies, this film was
remade in the 1990's with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan as "You've Got
Mail." I have never been able to sit through that entire film. That’s simply
because this 1940 version by Ernst Lubitsch captured my heart so many years
ago.
Here is a scene from the beginning of the movie;
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