Submitted by Burning_Mouth t3_zxuviz in movies
Part of me was ready to call her the Sam to George Bailey’s Frodo, but that might be a stretch. I think what makes her so interesting is you can see her as the underappreciated hero. When her husband goes off the rails And snaps at her and the kids on Christmas Eve, she doesn’t resent him but has the kids pray for him and calls up all his friends for help. That was really awesome.
Before that, when George was supposed to honeymoon with her but the banks fell through, she was the one who held up the honeymoon money for the people to use. She then set up the broken down hotel as a sweet honeymoon spot/new home while George worked.
On some level though, I could see Mary being seen as a “villain”. Was it her wish for George to stay that “ruined” his life? Did she subtly manipulate him into staying in his loathed hometown instead of living his life traveling? I don’t subscribe to this viewpoint and see it as an affront to the purpose of the film but I can see how others might.
I feel like there’s more that could be said about Mary, but I don’t see much discussion on her. I will say, I thought the whole idea of her wishing for this life would blow up and be a conflict at some point with George finding out, but I’m glad that never happened
the_other_50_percent t1_j22mkzo wrote
In the scene when George snaps at his family, she does so much more than what you described, which would be the “support the man and be virtuous” trope. She sees that he’s off and might harm the children, and calls him out for it, cleverly and maturely blocking it from getting any worse.
In no way does Mary force George to stay. They were on their way to travel on their honeymoon, and it’s not like they were going to stay abroad or had plans to live elsewhere immediately. They could have sold the house once they fixed it up - and they couldn’t have afforded anything in better shape, it seemed.
Mary knew how to get George jealous so that he would finally make a move on her, arranged to buy a house and whip up a last-minute loving plan B of a honeymoon. She kept George from getting in his own way over indecision, frustration, anger, and pride. He was always a wonderful person, but likely wouldn’t have had the wonderful life full of so many friends and grateful customers without Mary.
And as we saw thanks to a Clarence, her life wouldn’t have been wonderful without her purposeful love with George.