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Die besten Jahre unseres Lebens

Originaltitel: The Best Years of Our Lives
  • 1946
  • 12
  • 2 Std. 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,1/10
75.514
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
4.211
466
Dana Andrews, Myrna Loy, Fredric March, and Virginia Mayo in Die besten Jahre unseres Lebens (1946)
Home Video Trailer from HBO Home Video
trailer wiedergeben1:46
1 Video
99+ Fotos
EpischFeel-Good-RomanzeDramaKriegRomanze

Drei Veteranen kehren nach Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs in eine amerikanische Kleinstadt zurück, wo sie entdecken, dass sie und ihre Familien sich unwiderruflich geändert haben.Drei Veteranen kehren nach Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs in eine amerikanische Kleinstadt zurück, wo sie entdecken, dass sie und ihre Familien sich unwiderruflich geändert haben.Drei Veteranen kehren nach Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs in eine amerikanische Kleinstadt zurück, wo sie entdecken, dass sie und ihre Familien sich unwiderruflich geändert haben.

  • Regie
    • William Wyler
  • Drehbuch
    • Robert E. Sherwood
    • MacKinlay Kantor
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Myrna Loy
    • Dana Andrews
    • Fredric March
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,1/10
    75.514
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    4.211
    466
    • Regie
      • William Wyler
    • Drehbuch
      • Robert E. Sherwood
      • MacKinlay Kantor
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Myrna Loy
      • Dana Andrews
      • Fredric March
    • 378Benutzerrezensionen
    • 125Kritische Rezensionen
    • 93Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Am besten bewerteter Film #227
    • 7 Oscars gewonnen
      • 25 Gewinne & 4 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    The Best Years of Our Lives
    Trailer 1:46
    The Best Years of Our Lives

    Fotos137

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    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    Myrna Loy
    Myrna Loy
    • Milly Stephenson
    Dana Andrews
    Dana Andrews
    • Fred Derry
    Fredric March
    Fredric March
    • Al Stephenson
    • (as Frederic March)
    Teresa Wright
    Teresa Wright
    • Peggy Stephenson
    Virginia Mayo
    Virginia Mayo
    • Marie Derry
    Cathy O'Donnell
    Cathy O'Donnell
    • Wilma Cameron
    Hoagy Carmichael
    Hoagy Carmichael
    • Butch Engle
    Harold Russell
    Harold Russell
    • Homer Parrish
    Gladys George
    Gladys George
    • Hortense Derry
    Roman Bohnen
    Roman Bohnen
    • Pat Derry
    Ray Collins
    Ray Collins
    • Mr. Milton
    Minna Gombell
    Minna Gombell
    • Mrs. Parrish
    Walter Baldwin
    Walter Baldwin
    • Mr. Parrish
    Steve Cochran
    Steve Cochran
    • Cliff
    Dorothy Adams
    Dorothy Adams
    • Mrs. Cameron
    Don Beddoe
    Don Beddoe
    • Mr. Cameron
    Marlene Aames
    • Luella Parrish
    Charles Halton
    Charles Halton
    • Prew
    • Regie
      • William Wyler
    • Drehbuch
      • Robert E. Sherwood
      • MacKinlay Kantor
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen378

    8,175.5K
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    Zusammenfassung

    Reviewers say 'The Best Years of Our Lives' poignantly explores World War II veterans' struggles reintegrating into civilian life. Themes of war trauma and societal impact are highlighted. Praised for realistic portrayal, strong performances by Fredric March and Harold Russell, and sensitive direction by William Wyler, the film is deemed relevant and emotionally deep. Cinematography by Gregg Toland and Hugo Friedhofer's score enhance its impact. Despite some critiques on length and pacing, it is widely regarded as a significant, moving classic.
    KI-generiert aus den Texten der Nutzerbewertungen

    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10bkoganbing

    The People's War Veterans Return Home

    One of the great things about The Best Years of Our Lives that even though it dates itself rather firmly in the post World War II era, the issues it talks about are as real today as they were on V-E or V-J day of 1945. The problem of how to assimilate returning war veterans is as old as the written history of our planet.

    And while we don't often learn from history, we can be thankful that for once the United States of America did learn from what happened with its veterans after the previous World War. The GI Bill of Rights is mentioned in passing in The Best Years of Our Lives was possibly the greatest piece of social legislation from the last century. So many veterans did take advantage of it as do the veterans like Fredric March, Dana Andrews, and Harold Russell who you see here.

    All three of those actors played archetypal veterans, characters that every corner of the USA could identify with. They all meet on an army transport plane flying to the home town of all of them, Boone City, Iowa.

    War is a great leveler of class and distinction. Bank employee March, soda jerk Andrews, and high school football star Russell probably would never meet in real life even in a small town like Boone City. But they do meet and war forges indestructible bonds that can never be broken.

    March is the oldest, a man with two children and Hollywood's perfect wife Myrna Loy. He settles in the first and the best. He has some wonderful scenes, getting cockeyed drunk on his return and later with a little bit of liquor in him, tells the bank officials at a banquet off in no uncertain terms.

    I also love his scene where another returning veteran, a sharecropper wants to get a bank loan for his own piece of land. Watch March's expressions as he listens to the man's pitch for money. You can feel him read the man's soul. It's what got him his Second Best Actor Oscar for this film.

    Harold Russell was a real veteran who lost both his hands during service in the Pacific. He got a special recognition Oscar for his performance. Because of that it was probably unfair to nominate him in the Supporting Actor category which he also won in. His performance, especially his scenes with Cathy O'Donnell as his sweetheart who loves him with or without his hands, is beyond anything that could be described as acting.

    Dana Andrews is the only officer of the three, a bombardier in the Army Air Corps. Of the group of them, maybe he should have stayed in. He also comes from the poorest background of the group and he was an officer and a gentleman in that uniform. That uniform and those monthly allotment checks are what got Virginia Mayo interested enough to marry him. The problem is that he's considerably less in her eyes as a civilian.

    While Mayo is fooling around with Steve Cochran, Andrews has the great good fortune to have March's daughter Teresa Wright take an interest in him. They're the main story of the film, Andrews adjustment to civilian life and adjusting to the fact he married the wrong woman. Not all veteran's problems were solved with GI Bill.

    Myrna Loy gets little recognition for The Best Years of Our Lives. My guess is that it's because her role as wife was too much like the stereotypical wife roles she had patented over at MGM. Still as wife to March and mother to Wright she really is the glue that holds that family together.

    The Best Years of Our Lives won for Best Picture for Sam Goldwyn, Best Director for William Wyler and a few others besides the two acting Oscars it got. It was a critical and popular success, possibly the best film Sam Goldwyn ever produced. It remains to this day an endearing and enduring classic and will be so for centuries. It's almost three hours in length, but never once will your interest wane.

    The best tribute this film received came from Frank Capra who had a film of his own in the Oscar sweepstakes that year in several categories. In his memoirs he said that he was disappointed to be skunked at the Oscars that year, but that his friend and colleague William Wyler had created such a masterpiece he deserved every award he could get for it.

    By the way, the film Capra had hopes for was It's A Wonderful Life. The Beat Years of Our Lives can't get better praise than that.
    10GMJames

    Over 60 years old and still a classic!

    In 2004, I wrote the following statements on an IMDb message board when a user wondered if The Best Years of Our Lives was a forgotten movie:

    ***** To me watching this movie is like opening up a time capsule. I think in many ways "The Best Years of Our Lives" is probably one of the more fascinating character studies and it holds up extremely well as a look at life in the US in the mid-1940s after WWII. I believe "Coming Home" and "The Deer Hunter", both released in 1978, were the most recent films that were closest in capturing the numerous issues of military men returning from war that were brought up in "The Best Years of Our Lives".

    What really impressed me was watching the movie in its entirety when I was in college around 1980-81 and many if not all of the college students applauded at the end of the movie.

    This movie still packs a wallop and I'm very happy to read in other posts other users feeling of a movie that will definitely stand the test of time. *****

    I'm very happy to see the movie ranked near the top 100 movies on IMDb and AFI. Also, though it was in competition with what eventually became a Christmas classic, It's a Wonderful Life, arguably, The Best Years of Our Lives' Oscar wins, including Best Picture, were very well-deserved.

    I've just seen the film again in 2005 and after almost 60 years, The Best Years of Our Lives is still a powerful, beautifully acted and well-crafted motion picture.
    bill_mcclain

    Forgotten now that it was mildly controversial in its day

    My parents were of that generation, and the movie was cathartic for returning veterans and their families and friends; it's small wonder that it eclipsed <i>It's A Wonderful Life</i>, which arguably is a better picture. But at the time, the movie had some shocking elements to it. In fact, my mother (roughly the character Peggy's age then) saw it against her parents' wishes.

    Back in 1946, it was a jaw-dropper to have a character in a movie utter the word "divorce" or to aver an intent to break up a marriage -- such ideas just weren't voiced in films then. To modern audiences, they come across as melodramatic, but I'm told they elcited genuine gasps from audiences then.

    Even more astonishing was William Wyler's decision to cast real-life amputee Harold Russell in the key role of a returning Navy veteran. Until <i>The Battle of Britain</i>, in which an actual, disfigured RAF veteran made a cameo appearance, directors didn't make those sorts of courageous gestures. The intimate yet innocent scene in which Homer Parrish (Russell) demonstrates his helplessness to his fiancé Wilma Cameron (Cathy O'Donnell) is beautiful, heartbreaking and uplifting; later, during the wedding scene, Russell stumbled over a line in saying the vows, and Wyler left the humanizing mistake in, God bless him for it.
    9tim-764-291856

    The Troops are Coming Home.....

    Though we had a plethora of films about troops returning from the Vietnam war and trying to re-integrate back into their societies, most of which were hard-hitting, angry voices against War, here is arguably the original - and best.

    Definitely a family orientated movie (Cert U) this will appeal to and find favour with all ages, but don't start thinking that this is all gooey, slushy nonsense. There's some quite hard-hitting topics covered, even by today's standards and of course, with our minds on our current troops in Iraq/Afghanistan, equally relevant.

    Multi-stranded, which each of the three G.I.'s immediate and extended families and friends being examined, it's about them coping, with varying degrees of success, with home life and getting jobs, now that the War is ended. It's the little observations and stories around them that are so fascinating, as the Heroes of yesterday are now anything but when it comes finding new purpose in a changed world.

    The cast is exemplary, not necessarily the biggest stars of the day but the most believable and natural for their roles. Dana Andrews, Myrna Loy and Fredric Marsh are the ones most easily recognisable and their appearances convey a sort of reassuring familiarity and normality. They're all excellent, of course.

    Though long, at nearly 3 hours, William Wyler's easy going but assured and tight direction keeps things flowing nicely and it never drags. This, my second viewing, is an enjoyable one as the first and if anything I'm more at ease with it.

    Though obviously not as exciting or dramatic as other 'normal' war films, it's a tragedy that it's not more well known. I've never seen it to ever have been on TV, or to my recollection, even Sky Movies, for that matter. Any movie that won 7 Oscars and is currently no. 180 in the top 250 IMDb's films of all time, voted by its voters (us, the public) is hardly one of minority interest.

    A friend I lent my DVD to watched it with his family and normally they only go for current films, or ones they know, but they not only enjoyed it, but felt enormously moved by it, too.

    If you haven't seen The Best Years... yet, make a mental note to do so. Your life won't change by doing so, but it really is worth the 3 hours of it that it will take. You certainly can't say the same about every film out there....
    10secondtake

    Highly structured but flawless and really moving drama about returning G.I.s

    The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)

    The whole point of this film when it was released still makes perfect sense today, though I'm sure it doesn't have the same impact it did in those first years after World War II ended. Returning servicemen, with all kinds of backgrounds before and during the war, hit a wall coming home: wives who no longer loved them, jobs that had dried up, a culture that was foreign to them and that found them, these men, to be foreign themselves.

    It wasn't a crisis to take lightly. These were the guys who were drafted to fight the enemy, and in going overseas they lost some of the best years of their lives, if not their lives. The country knew its debt in the abstract, but it also knew it in sons and husbands who really did come home and who had to face it all. This movie was both a reckoning for the sake of national healing and a brilliant drama that would be beautifully pertinent and therefore successful. And what a success, then and now.

    The consummate Hollywood director William Wyler shows in this fast, long movie just what a master he is at working the medium. With Gregg Toland at the camera, Wyler makes a highly fluid movie, visual and dramatic and weirdly highly efficient. With the three main plots interweaving and depending on each other, the drama (and melodrama) build but never beyond plausibility. Wyler knew his audience wouldn't put up with pandering or cheap mistakes. Casting Harold Russell as Homer, knowing the audience would hear about how Russell really was a soldier who lost both hands in the war, was a huge step toward creating both empathy and credibility. It even practices a key theme in the move--to go beyond your bounds to make a difference, to give these guys a break and help them assimilate.

    It's interesting how singular this movie is, trying to show the truth in these kinds of situations. The other post-war films about army and navy men fall into two large and dominating categories--war films and film noir. And it is film noir that comes closest to getting at the problem of the G.I. not reintegrating well, making it a whole style, brooding and spilling over with violence. "The Best Years of Our Lives" has a highly controlled and even contrived plot structure, but it aims to be honest and representative.

    That it's remarkable formally--the way it is shot and edited and acted, top to bottom--is not surprise, given the heights that Hollywood had reached by then, and given that Wyler is easily the slickest of them all, in the best sense. That the movie makes such beautiful sense and really works as a story, a moving and heartwarming story without undue sappiness, is a whole other kind of achievement. A terrific, rich, full-blooded, uncompromised movie.

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

    See the complete list of Oscars Best Picture winners, ranked by IMDb ratings.
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    • Wissenswertes
      For his performance as Homer Parrish, Harold Russell became the only actor to win two Academy Awards for the same role. The Academy Board of Governors thought he was a long shot to win, so they gave him an honorary award "for bringing hope and courage to his fellow veterans through his appearance." Later in the ceremony, he won for Best Supporting Actor.
    • Patzer
      When Al introduces his wife and daughter to Fred and Homer at Butch's, he refers to Dana Andrews as Homer and Harold Russell as Fred. This was intended as a consequence of Al being drunk.
    • Zitate

      [after Peggy tells her parents that they never had any trouble in their relationship]

      Milly Stephenson: "We never had any trouble." How many times have I told you I hated you and believed it in my heart? How many times have you said you were sick and tired of me; that we were all washed up? How many times have we had to fall in love all over again?

    • Crazy Credits
      The character played by Ray Teal (the Axis sympathizer whom Homer Parrish attacks at the soda fountain) is listed in the credits as "Mr. Mollett". However, the character's name is never mentioned or otherwise alluded to.
    • Alternative Versionen
      The film was modified to play on a wide screen and reissued on February 3, 1954.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Des Teufels Pilot (1950)
    • Soundtracks
      Among My Souvenirs
      (1927) (uncredited)

      Music by Edgar Leslie

      Lyrics by Lawrence Wright

      Played on piano by Hoagy Carmichael

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    • Where is the airplane graveyard located?

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 1. Juni 1948 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Los mejores años de nuestras vidas
    • Drehorte
      • Ontario International Airport - 2900 E. Airport Drive, Ontario, Kalifornien, USA(Airplane graveyard)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Samuel Goldwyn Productions
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 2.100.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 23.650.000 $
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 23.667.133 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 50 Min.(170 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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