It’s a Gift, written by Jack Cunningham and
others, including W.C. Fields who stars in the comedy
A different
version of this note and thoughts on other books are available at:
- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEVa4_CsRStSBBDo4uJWT8BSWtTTn0N1E
and
http://realini.blogspot.ro/
It’s a Gift
is really a …gift for the audience.
A lovely
comedy, included by TIME Magazine on its list of films, The All-TIME 100 movies
that you can find at:
The hero is
Harold Bissonette and he is played exceptionally by W.C. Fields, who has also
been involved in the writing of the script.
Mind you,
the way the name is pronounced is indicated by Amelia Bissonette, who is hard,
if not impossible to satisfy.
Maybe the best
one liner that can describe how domineering and impossible this wife was is the
following:
-
“Amelia: Wake up and go to sleep!”
No wonder
that Harold Bissonette has to apply what the ultimate expert on marriage calls “one
of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse”.
John Gottman,
the best authority on couples has a classic book in which he explains what to
do and what to avoid in a relationship:
-
The Seven Principles for Making
Marriage Work should be the bible for couples
And the
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are:
1.
Contempt
2.
Defensiveness
3.
Criticism
4.
Stonewalling
The last
one is the solution used by Harold, even if the results are not positive, the reason
why they are listed above…
Since he is
going to inherit a small fortune, Harold is determined to buy an orange grove
and move to California.
This could
be a mistake, even if a common one, for many people imagine that if they only
moved near the ocean, in the pleasant weather of the West coast they would be
as happy as could be and for ever and ever.
Positive psychology
studies have demonstrated that this is a myth that is exposed in two other
classics of this science:
-
Stumbling Upon Happiness by Harvard
Professor Daniel Gilbert and The Myths of Happiness by University of California
Professor Sonja Lyubomirsky
To make
things complicated, Mrs. Bissonette is opposed to the idea and so Harold has to
make the move behind her back.
Before that,
there are disasters in the shop they own and the husband manages, where a blind
man destroys goods and smashes two windows, a child adds to the havoc and
damage and a client has to leave without his kumquats.
The dialogue
is funny and entertaining:
“Harry Payne Bosterly: You're drunk!
Harold: And you're crazy. But I'll be sober
tomorrow and you'll be crazy for the rest of your life.
……
Amelia: As I was saying - are you listening to
me?
Harold: Eh, yes dear, yes dear, yes dear.
Amelia: For twenty years, I've struggled to
make a home for you and the children.
Harold: That's right dear.
Amelia: Slaving day-in, day-out, to make both
ends meet. Sometimes I don't know which way to turn.
Harold: Eh, turn over on your right side, dear.
Sleeping on your left side's bad for the heart.”
Harold is
an endearing man, with a lot of patience, resilience and grit.
The psychology
studies that I keep reading reveal that grit is about twice as important as IQ,
resilience being the real key for success.
And Harold
Bissonette is a funny, likeable, sympathetic, enduring, persistent and finally successful
man.
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