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This was so sweet and tender! I can't believe it's taken me so long to watch this. I could not picture a better person to play Santa. Every character was perfect!  Also, sorry for the late-in-the-week videos. It's been a busy week at the PiB household! Trading Places will be up tomorrow :)

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[Full Reaction] Miracle On 34th Street (1947)

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Ted Little

It is perhaps worth noting that movies before the 1950's did not have long opening credits: seldom more than a minute and a quarter. Longer credits came in when the unions demanded them. Many opening credits became little productions in their own right (the best example may be the original Pink Panther). It reached the height of silliness with Superman the Movie, which had both long opening credits and interminable end credits. George Lucas did get in trouble with the unions and had to pay a fine when he opened Star Wars without credits. The first film that I know of that did that was actually Citizen Kane (1941) but the unions were not as strong then.

Anonymous

I don't know about anyone else, but either this film or It's a wonderful life (in my opinion) has to be watched in the original B&W.

Stick Figure Studios

BTW if the actress playing Peter's mom, the woman who told Santa she couldn't find the toy her son wanted anywhere, looked at all familiar, it's because she was Stella (Jimmy Stewart's in house cook / masseuse) in REAR WINDOW.