Amazon Prime gets an earful over altered Christmas classic ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’

Amazon Prime Video got an earful after leaving a critical 22 minutes of the Christmas classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” on the cutting room floor.

Viewers said the film’s enduring message that “no man is a failure who has friends” was gutted when the “Pottersville” sequence was left out — the film’s hero, George Bailey, rediscovers his will to live as a result of the excluded portion of the film.

More from the New York Post:

In that part, Bailey declares his wish never to have been born and gets to see how crummy life would have been without him.

Without that sequence, audiences are left watching a man contemplate suicide one moment, then sprint joyfully through town the next — with no logical explanation.

In the original 1946 film, Bailey’s hometown of Bedford Falls is seen devolving into the corrupt, neon-lit “Pottersville,” with the protagonist’s brother dying young, his wife never getting married and greedy banker Henry Potter controlling the town unchecked.

Bailey realizes that one ordinary life can quietly shape the fate of many, ultimately driving his emotional transformation from despair to joy.

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Considering the film is 130 minutes long, some may think a quest for brevity is the likely culprit here, but the Post cited the films “famously tangled copyright history” to note that distributors saw dropping the sequence as a possible means to avoid copyright infringement while still offering a version of the film.

Here’s a quick sampling of responses to the story, as seen on the social media platform X:

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Tom Tillison

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