More than a
year before TV viewers began visiting Walton’s Mountain on a weekly basis, the
adventures of America’s favorite Depression-era family reached the small screen
with The Homecoming: A Christmas Story.
Adapted from the writing of Earl Hamner Jr., as was the subsequent 1972–1981
series The Waltons, the movie has a
slightly different cast from the weekly series but the same nostalgic warmth. Among the actors who debuted characterizations here that continued through the weekly series is leading man Richard Thomas, who plays elder son John Boy. (The series’ much-parodied trope of all the characters saying “good night” to each other before the closing credits emerges fully formed in this first installment.) While the overarching theme of familial love and devout spirituality
shielding poor people from the hardships of the outside world might strike some
viewers as too sickly-sweet wholesome, the execution of this fine telefilm is
sufficiently humorous, lively, and specific to make The Homecoming: A Christmas Story abundantly appealing.
The Homecoming: A Christmas Story is all
about setting the stage for an uplifting climax, but Hamner—who wrote the script—and director
Fielder Cook are so rigorous in how they pursue narrative goals that the ending
feels sturdy instead of manipulative. The simple premise is that the
large Walton family, living in rural Virginia, awaits the return of patriarch
John Walton (Andrew Duggan), who has been forced to take a job 50 miles away
and can only get home on weekends. Matriarch Olivia Walton (Patricia Neal)
struggles to provide for the couple’s many children, some of whom are nearing
adulthood and some of whom still anxiously await Santa. Various
complications make Olivia’s task formidable. Money is too tight for extravagant
gifts, and the means by which neighbors make ends meet test Olivia’s strict
religious beliefs, so she’s vexed when John Boy accepts favors from a pair of biddies who sell bootleg liquor.
Most vignettes involve humor, an emotional
sucker punch of some sort, and the learning of a lesson—as when the older kids
feed Bible verses to their younger siblings during a contest with Christmas
gifts as a prize. Some scenes explore passages in life, such as the
sequence of teenaged Mary Ellen asking John Boy about dating and kissing. Much
of the plot revolves around John Boy’s awkward assumption of a surrogate-father
role, a situation complicated by his secret desire to become a writer.
All of this stuff pays off quite well, even if Hamner occasionally betrays a
weakness for cutesy scripting. At his best, he channels homespun pragmatism
through Olivia’s dialogue (“Santa Claus is poor this year, just like everyone
else”), and his management of a huge number of speaking roles is impressive. All
in all, The Homecoming: A Christmas Story
provides either a satisfying one-and-done entertainment or, for those so
inclined, a charming gateway into the world of the Waltons. FYI, neither Duggan
nor Neal returned for the series, with their roles assumed by Ralph Waite and
Michael Learned, while beloved vaudeville star Edgar Bergen’s role in the pilot
film as Grandfather Walton later went to Will Geer.
The Homecoming: A Christmas Story: GROOVY
Although they did get back Jerry Goldsmith for early episodes of the series, the theme he wrote for The Homecoming: A Christmas Story was changed at the proucers' behest - they thought it was too gentle (Goldsmith preferred it to the trumpet theme we all know and well love because the TV movie's theme was, he felt, more authentic to the setting.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.screenarchives.com/title_detail.cfm/ID/15078/THE-HOMECOMING-A-CHRISTMAS-STORY-RASCALS-AND-ROBBERS/ (Sadly, thanks to all Lorimar's music masters being lost, none of Goldsmith's (or any other composer's) work for The Waltons has ever been released.)
Loved The Waltons(a staple in my house), and loved The Homecoming.
ReplyDeleteWe watch The Homecoming every Xmas.
ReplyDeleteWhile we love The Waltons, The Homecoming is, we think, superior. The cast is ... flintier, the life seems harder, and the situation(s) less ... pat. I don't think the series would've survived with Neal and Bergan and Duggan -- the reality of the Depression was too raw in their performances, and the family needed softening.
But ... good heavens, what a movie. The bit with the female preacher is especially harrowing, and the father's homecoming is deeply moving.
I love this picture.