In the 1940s, most people lived under the influence of war everyday. Whether it is a violent war or an attempt to solve the fact that no male family is in the family, everyone shook the World War II. So it's easy to see how a movie like St. Louis Meet-Me was born. It brings us back to a time related to the world where healthy family values and wars have no major problems before directly affecting contemporary Americans. A movie of different nature, an angry bull, who happened to show us that she was showing a social life at the time rather than the people of the 1940s admired occurred.
I met in St. Louis (1944). My family's favorite is a nostalgic expression of that year in Smith 's family life. The Smith family was a family who lived in St. Louis after the turn of the last century. Although the Christmas scene is a relatively small part of the movie, they are very cute, and this movie is relevant for the holiday season. highlight? Performance of Judy Garland's "Let's make your own Christmas". It happened at Fifth Avenue (1947). Victor Moore is a homeless man living secretly in a rich house when their master left. Charles Lagers explained the owner of Moore's current 5th Avenue residence, Moore soon joined a handful of other unhappy people. Some of them could not live because of lack of housing after the war. This premise may sound a bit far away, but this movie is as sweet and warm as you would like a Christmas movie.
Let's meet at America's musical, St. Louis released in 1944. The story is very simple, centered around a middle-class family with 4 daughters and 1 son. It is in St. Louis, Missouri, and in the years before the Expo in 1904 it experienced the plight of the family and how they cooperated to overcome them. As we all know, American movie musicals have a dual focus story. As Altman stated in "American Film Musical", "American film musical focuses on her progressive trajectory, not the central role of everything of interest, but focuses on the dual focus As the result of the match between male and female is completely traditional and predictable, observers need to be insensitive to age and progress, but can be compared with simultaneity Altman, 2, page 19)