The joy and the madness — the festive spirits and timeless tunes, the mandatory stress over cooking and serving and shopping and wrapping and hiding and peeking — will all be over soon.
Maybe you’re ready for a mental vacation from all that. Or maybe you need a refresher on the reason for the season. Either way, try ducking into Clark County’s independent movie theaters, which are about as overstuffed with goodies (both holiday and non-) as Santa Claus’ magical bag of presents.
Weird, wonderful
There’s no place better to start than with a Christmas story that could be the biggest, weirdest “Twilight Zone” episode of them all. Life may turn out wonderful in the 1946 classic “It’s a Wonderful Life,” but that’s only after a surprisingly tough tale of frustrated ambition and corrupt capitalism.
Jimmy Stewart stars as the almost-tragic George Bailey, saved from himself both by an intervening angel and by the very town he yearns to flee. “It’s a Wonderful Life” wasn’t a smash upon release, and the FBI even warned that its pointed class consciousness (virtuous poor v. evil banker) seemed like Communist propaganda. But in 1974, the film’s copyright lapsed and it started showing annually on TV, which is how it became such a sentimental favorite.