The 12 Grimmest Moments in It’s a Wonderful Life

Now celebrating its 70th anniversary, It’s A Wonderful Life has endured as a cherished Christmas classic. Nominated for five Academy Awards and cited by the American Film Institute as one of the 100 best American films ever made, the film is often billed as Christmas/fantasy/drama, yet its feel-great ending is only reached after dozens of grim looks at the struggles of everyday life that are still relatable today. The 1946 film deftly balances subjects like love, family, friendship, fleeting youth, war, death, financial scandal, poverty, and whether a higher power exists.
In fact, there are plenty of moments where the movie makes a direct nod to film noir—that dark crime-drama genre that showcases femme fatales, good heroes gone bad, and protagonists fallen from grace, and it’s these moments that are the most powerful in It’s A Wonderful Life.
Here are the 12 darkest scenes from It’s A Wonderful Life, the lows that lend power to its ultimate uplifting conclusion.
1. Mr. Gower’s Drunken Slap
One running thread through the movie involves drug store owner Mr. Gower. Drunk, heartbroken and grieving over the death of his son to the flu, Gower almost ends up poisoning a child because he was so distracted he didn’t pay attention to the medication he prepares for a child with diphtheria. But Young George, who delivered medications for Mr. Gower, takes note of the poison in the jar and brings it up with Mr. Gower. Gower simply sends him away so he can be alone to grieve. When Gower finds out George didn’t do his job, he slaps him until he bleeds. George explains the danger they avoided, Gower finally realizes what happened, and together the two keep it a secret.
2. Just When He Thinks He’s Out, They Pull Him Back In
Shortly after his father dies and the business is in limbo, George tells off Mr. Potter in a board meeting, calling him a “warped, frustrated old man.” He’s also just about to catch a train to start traveling the world, something he’s always wanted to do. Just then the rest of the board votes to keep the Bailey Building and Loan running, but only if George Bailey runs it. In a tight freeze frame that conveys a nod to film noir, Bailey looks off to the side, hat cocked. His expression is a mix of fear, sadness, and helplessness. After all, George was too good a person to let the only good business in town die, so he sacrificed his dreams because that’s what his father would have done.
3. When Little Bro Lets You Down
It’s four years later, and George has kept the business running, in an agreement with his brother that Harry would take over after he returned from school. But Harry and his new fiancée, Ruth, had other plans. Ruth tells George her father offered Harry a job in the research business. While Harry says nothing’s set in stone yet, it hits George that his dreams really are turning to dust. James Stewart’s expression here turns from hopelessness to panic to horror (all while no one can see,) and shifts his eyes to shake himself out of that nightmare in time to show happiness for his brother. It’s another noirish turn that often gets overshadowed by the more famous scenes of George jumping into the water and singing “Auld Lang Syne” around the Christmas tree.
4. George Visits Uncle Billy.
Years later, George goes to see Uncle Billy at his house, who’s devastated he lost $8,000 of the business’ money but is gobsmacked as to how it happened. Billy says he’s checked every room in the house, even the rooms he’s kept locked since his wife Laura died. It’s one of the most revealing aspects of Uncle Billy’s character that cries out for further development. Uncle Billy is already down for the count at this point, but George drives the nail in deeper, telling him what’s could very well happen. “It means bankruptcy and scandal and prison. One of us is going to jail. Well it’s not gonna be me,” George says, making it clear he’d send Billy up the river if the money doesn’t turn up. George Bailey is not an ethically bad person, but if his family is in jeopardy, he’s going to do whatever he can to save himself. Later, he tells Potter he lost the money, because deep down he couldn’t fault Billy for being absent-minded.
5. Daddy’s Little Meltdown
When he goes home after confronting Uncle Billy, Christmas preparation is fully under way at the Bailey home, but George manages to sabotage the entire thing. He insults Zuzu’s teacher, Mrs. Welch and threatens to assault her husband, then snaps at his son who needs spelling help, tells his kids to shut up, and insists that Janie stop playing the piano. Amid the stony silence he’s singlehandedly caused, he notices the full-scale models of suspension bridges and skyscrapers that he’s built and wrecks them all. Any scene that involves children and domestic unrest (not violence here) can pull at most people’s heartstrings.