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Our Town

  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
William Holden and Martha Scott in Our Town (1940)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer3:46
1 Video
13 Photos
DramaFamilyRomance

Change comes slowly to a small New Hampshire town in the early 20th century.Change comes slowly to a small New Hampshire town in the early 20th century.Change comes slowly to a small New Hampshire town in the early 20th century.

  • Director
    • Sam Wood
  • Writers
    • Thornton Wilder
    • Frank Craven
    • Harry Chandlee
  • Stars
    • William Holden
    • Martha Scott
    • Fay Bainter
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sam Wood
    • Writers
      • Thornton Wilder
      • Frank Craven
      • Harry Chandlee
    • Stars
      • William Holden
      • Martha Scott
      • Fay Bainter
    • 74User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 6 Oscars
      • 4 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:46
    Official Trailer

    Photos13

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    Top Cast27

    Edit
    William Holden
    William Holden
    • George Gibbs
    Martha Scott
    Martha Scott
    • Emily Webb
    Fay Bainter
    Fay Bainter
    • Mrs. Gibbs
    Beulah Bondi
    Beulah Bondi
    • Mrs. Webb
    Thomas Mitchell
    Thomas Mitchell
    • Dr. Gibbs
    Guy Kibbee
    Guy Kibbee
    • Mr. Webb
    Stuart Erwin
    Stuart Erwin
    • Howie Newsome
    Frank Craven
    Frank Craven
    • Mr. Morgan
    Doro Merande
    Doro Merande
    • Mrs. Soames
    Philip Wood
    • Simon Stimson
    Ruth Tobey
    • Rebecca Gibbs
    • (as Ruth Toby)
    Douglas Gardner
    • Wally Webb
    Arthur B. Allen
    • Professor Willard
    • (as Arthur Allen)
    Charles Trowbridge
    Charles Trowbridge
    • Dr. Ferguson
    Spencer Charters
    Spencer Charters
    • Constable Warren
    Tim Davis
    • Joe Crowell
    Dix Davis
    • Si Crowell
    Eddie Acuff
    Eddie Acuff
    • Storekeeper Selling Gasoline
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Sam Wood
    • Writers
      • Thornton Wilder
      • Frank Craven
      • Harry Chandlee
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews74

    6.53.2K
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    Featured reviews

    drednm

    The Mind of God

    OUR TOWN is a timeless classic, and this 1940 film version captures the major themes from Thornton Wilder's great play.

    At once simple and profound, unsentimental and heart-breaking, the story of Grover's Corners, New Hampshire, and its citizens is a time capsule of early 20th Century America. Two neighboring families are examined in their everyday lives, and we especially follow George Gibbs (William Holden) and Emily Webb (Martha Scott) as they grow up and marry.

    A stage convention, the Stage Manager (Frank Craven), acts here as a tour guide and talks directly to the audience and tells them the history of the town and stories about the characters. Independent of time, the Stage Manager can also see into the future and matter-of-factly see the various deaths of several characters as well as their pasts.

    The scene from the cemetery is chilling yet is quite wondrous as the characters there ponder the timelessness of the universe. Also great is Emily's visit back to her family on her birthday, where she finally understand that life is made up or so many small and insignificant details that we hardly notice as times flies by.

    The film boasts a terrific cast with Fay Bainter and Beulah Bondi outstanding as the mothers , Thomas Mitchell and Guy Kibbee solid as the fathers. Also notable are Doro Merande as Mrs. Soames, Arthur Allen as the professor, Philip Wood as the organist, Spencer Charters as the constable, Stu Erwin as the milkman, and Ruth Tobey as Rebecca, who gets to tell the "mind of god" anecdote.

    The ending is different from the play's but works well in this version.

    This is a film that badly needs restoration
    7gbill-74877

    Slow but meaningful, with a good payoff

    This might be the slowest of all slow-burners, so if you're going to watch it, brace yourself and be very, very patient. The first hour in this small turn of the century town is for the most part quaint and frankly pretty boring, as we are introduced to various characters and follow them in their everyday lives. There are flashes of a larger meaning in an omniscient narrator, who points out when some of them are going to die, but mostly we seem to be watching simple, mundane events, and a romance completely devoid of spark or chemistry. The production quality is not very high either; even if one takes into account the desire to keep some semblance of Thornton Wilder's lean aesthetic from the stage, there is not enough life in these characters (at least to my modern eyes), the quality of the film stock seems to have deteriorated, and William Holden is both poorly cast and quite wooden.

    However, it's all a buildup to that last half hour, and this is where the film really shines, starting with going into the thoughts of the characters at the wedding, and continuing on when the narrator strolls through the cemetery. Wilder's play was both existential and deeply humanistic, and its power comes forth, even with the alteration to the ending, something I'd normally hate. It puts our humble lives into a skeletal framework, and then with its cosmic perspective, forces us to see how brief they are, and how we should treasure every moment, even the simple ones.

    Playwright and professor Donald Margulies said that Capra's 'It's a Wonderful Life' owes a great deal to 'Our Town', and while he didn't expand on that too much, it's a great point. They ask some of the same questions, such as what's the meaning of this life and do we make a difference being here, but while Capra's answers are positive and joyful and sentimental, Wilder is a little more on the fence, or at least, he lets us interpret (and perhaps this is where the changes in the film were a mistake). In both works the point is made that we need to open our eyes to appreciate what we have and the people around us, but Wilder shows us that our lives are going to be all-too-brief and all-too-small in the grand scheme of things regardless. And yet, he says, "There's something way down deep that's eternal about every human being." We are both meaningful and meaningless at the same time. This is not 'Our Town', it's 'Our Lives', or 'Our Humanity'.

    The film's incredibly reserved, staid approach is something that doesn't necessarily work 80 years later, in a world that's much faster paced. As a result, it may be hard to appreciate just how groundbreaking and touching it was at the time. In many cases, audience members at the play responded by openly weeping at the end, and as early critic Brooks Atkinson of the New York Times put it, the play "transmuted the simple events of human life into universal reverie" which contained nothing less than "a fragment of the immortal truth." It's pretty hard to translate such a quiet, introspective play to film or to the present world, and as with Beckett's 'Waiting for Godot', it may evoke the reaction that "not enough happens," but I think there's actually quite a bit here, if you wait for it.
    9olddiscs

    A film I dont want to watch..but I cant stop watching...

    Why is this a film I dont wanna watch...because it moves me to uncontrollable tears everytime...It hits home...Thornton Wilder must have known my family ,understood my psyche..It hits home... Americana at the turn of the century.. my parents born... not in samll town america but Mid size city... still the thought the virtues the principals, the ideals were the same the happiness of a a home in America.. Mom & Dad providing a home, warm morning breakfasts on a cold winter day.. family members irrelevant yet unforgettable... the birthdays the graduations & the weddings the changes & the phases of life... and death are simply adequately & beautifully presented by Thornton Wilder & his play & screen play.. Emily portrayed by Marhta Scott is superb... if this doesnt bring a tear to your eye, you are not human... & George played by William Holden perfectly & the best supporting cast ever assembled.. Fay Bainter, Beulah Bondi, Thomas Mitchel, Guy Kibee,Dora Merande etc etc...non stop emotions.. non stop truth.. and the score ,all so memorable... i shouldnt watch this film..becsause its non stop tears everytime... but to me its an American Classic,,, maybe underrated...watch it absorb every line & cry your eyes out..
    9mrdaytonoh

    Sentimentality made lovely and even haunting...

    This film, a Thornton Wilder play, is about how many of the unnoticed details of day-to-day life are sweet and, in fact, ARE life. The Aaron Copeland music sprinkled through the film is lovely and fits the mood perfectly. The contrived ending (not part of the stage play) does not help the film, but by no means does it ruin it, either.
    8silverscreen888

    Thornton Wilder's Mood-Rich Stage Piece Becomes an Equally-Memorable Film

    Like "Harvey", "The Second Woman" and "Good Morning, Miss Dove", "Our Town" is set in an underpopulated United States town. Its 1901 look shares features with theirs, as do some of its story elements. Everyone knows practically everyone else; and the very fact that such towns are not the sort of place where important thing happens renders what does happen peculiarly intense, as if it had been placed under a magnifying lens in a powerful light. Author Thornton Wilder and his co-writers here adapt what was a most successful and atmospheric play into a deliberately-paced by I suggest an absorbing screenplay. It has the build perhaps of "Picnic" with the underlying calm of a good early western; only the setting here is Grover Corners, New Hampshire, a decidedly northeastern setting.. Sam Wood directed the film with his usual understated skill; and the writers I believe have retained the best of Mr. Wilder's crisp and often memorable dialogue. The film really divides into three parts--which I would nominate as Introduction, George and Emily and Two Futures(?). George Gibbs and Emily Webb in this film become two of the best remembered characters in U.S. fiction. Sol Lesser produced, with music by Aaron Copland, whose repressed melodies seem to me perfectly to serve this understated masterwork of dramatic construction. Production designer William Cameron Menzies and cinematographer Bert Glennon here tried for an uncompromising atmosphere rather than quaint or merely attractive compositions. Julia Heron did the remarkable interiors, with simple but effective wardrobe by Edward P. Lambert. Among the cast, Martha Scott is wonderfully young and unspoiled, and as Dr. Gibbs, Thomas Mitchell plays with Fay Bainter as his wife more-than-expertly. As their neighbors Editor Webb and his wife, Guy Kibbee is unusually restrained and Beulah Bondi as usual solidly dependable or better in every scene she is given. Stuart Erwin ad Frank Craven (as the stage manager) are quite good, and young William Holden shows to much better advantage than he did in several other films of the period. The supporting cast is not given a great deal to do but they do it very seamlessly, in my opinion. But what one remembers of "Our Town" I assert is its haunting, almost poetic quality. The production's pace is leisurely without being slow, electrically tense without being excited and focused without becoming too sad. The story here is about life, death, youth, love, honesty and fear--and the narrative evokes these emotions in the viewer honestly I claim because it is never pretentious and never striving for the effect that it admirably earns. It is I argue a touching black-and-white classic; and it is quite well acted also throughout.

    _____________________________________

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    Drama
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    Romance

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film debut of Martha Scott. She was not considered for the role of "Emily" at first because of her poor screen test for the role of "Melanie" in Gone with the Wind (1939), but she was chosen after much auditioning of other actresses.
    • Goofs
      Mr. Webb says that of the residents of Grover's Corners, 86% are Republican, 12% are Democrats, 4% are socialists - the rest "indifferent." That's a total of 102%. The author knows how to do math. This is a joke.
    • Quotes

      Mrs. Julia Hersey Gibbs: It seems to me, once in your life, before you die, you ought to see a country where they don't speak any English and they don't even want to.

    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood Ghost Stories (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      Art Thou Weary, Art Thou Languid?
      (1868)

      Music "Stephanos" by Henry W. Baker (1868)

      Greek words by Stephen of Mar Saba (Judea) (8th century)

      Translated from Greek to English by John M. Neale (1862)

      Played on an organ in church by Philip Wood and sung by the choir

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 24, 1940 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Naš grad
    • Filming locations
      • Point Arena, California, USA(backgrounds)
    • Production company
      • Sol Lesser Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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