8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Last Time Seen On The Old AMC, 4 November 2005
Author:
xerses13 from United States
We saw this film sometime in the late 1980's on the old AMC. You
remember AMC, the station that didn't like colorized or edited movies.
That showed films how they were meant to. Well enough of that.
The HAPPY LAND was one (1) of those fine WWII films that gave you a
peek of what the home front was like and the effects the war had upon
it. This was effectively and economically done. Not as long as SINCE
YOU WENT AWAY or the HUMAN COMEDY more in line with the FIGHTING
SULLIVANS another seldom seen home front film. Or at least seldom seen
since AMC went to seed.
The importance of these films is to give a glimpse into the lives of
our parents or grandparents and not just the war, but the effects of
rationing, personal loss and the fear that we could lose. Many young
people have no concept what a close run thing WWII was. Not that we
would have been conquered. But that Asia and Europe would have been
dominated by two (2) powers both with a race superiority agendas. The
NAZI Germans who wanted to create a master race and Imperial Japan who
thought they WERE the master race.
The film as far as we know is unavailable on any video format. Seems
like a shame when so much bad material is rushed to DVD. 20th Century
Fox should do something about this. After all they have released A YANK
IN THE R.A.F which main claim to fame is Betty Grable and Tyrone Power.
8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Great movie - they don't make em like this anymore, 12 December 2001
Author:
nstobert from Michigan, USA
I thought this was a wonderfully nostalgic movie. The acting is well done,
and the end is just a real tear-jerker. It brings back the feelings that I
believe really did exist in WWII, right down to the fateful trip the girl
from Western Union had to make to deliver the telegram that said his son
died. Excitement, no. A few laughs, yes. Great nostelgic drama with a good
story line.
6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Happy Land is a great look at life of an old time druggist., 26 March 2006
Author:
schaz from United States
Years ago (1980's) I happened on this film just as it was beginning on
AMC. At that time I was a newly licensed pharmacist (less than 5 years
experience.) I couldn't stop watching it. There on the screen was the
story of a druggist like I'd always thought it should be--respected in
his community, devoted to his fellow citizens' health, and always
available night and day. This was the life I'd thought I was supposed
to have before the reality of modern health insurance had fully settled
on me. Don Ameche played the role perfectly. Harry Carry as the ghost
of 'Gramps', Ameche's grandpa and druggist mentor, could not have been
better cast. The central role of the Marsh drugstore was also perfectly
set. This was like being in the era. Even a non-pharmacist would find
this to be a charming look at an older generations' simpler life. Even
with a world-war raging, the drugstore with its soda fountain and
variety of dry goods was always there. People met their future spouses
at the soda fountain, were able to find just the right remedy for what
ailed and could get there favorite bath oils,etc. This is a must-see
film for any pharmacist or anyone else who longs for the good-old-days.
Anyone would find the story moving and even though most scenes take
place in the drugstore, there is plenty of story to keep your
attention. This film should be released on DVD. I know every pharmacist
would want a copy.
9 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- Happy Lies, 3 July 2002
Author:
RJC-4 from St. Paul, MN
Finding this oddity on cable recently, I was quickly seduced by its
opening
sequence, a Welles-like plunge down main street into a small everytown's
heart, Marsh's pharmacy. Here, as some clever camera work reveals, solid
citizen Lew Marsh (Don Ameche) tends to the blisses of early 40's
Hollywood
America; everyone's prescription is filled, sundaes topped off with a
cherry, local oddballs humored, etc.
What most recommends the film is its frame narrative. Quickly the idyll
is
broken when Marsh learns his son has been killed in the war. He sinks
into
a lengthy depression. Enter the ghost of Gramp to conduct psychotherapy:
he
spirits Marsh back into the past where we relive the childhood,
adolescence,
and early adulthood of the now-dead Rusty. While the mid-section unfolds
linearly, Marsh and Gramp function offscreen as a Greek chorus (their
melancholy dialogue often a grim counterpoint to the generally cheerful
scenes). Then it's back to the present where an exorcized Marsh learns to
stop questioning the wisdom of sacrificing young men in war. "Rusty died
a
good death," Gramp's ghost counsels, and we know it's only a matter of
time
before Marsh will agree.
Three years before "It's A Wonderful Life" (1946), "Happy Land" was
already
hijacking the "Christmas Carol" device of reliving the past on a
therapeutic
sightseeing tour. Unlike the Stewart film, though, the tone is more
darkly
somber, lingeringly mournful. The theme of sorrow outweighs the theme of
recovery. Ameche looks and sounds wracked, bitter.
In fact, the film's heart is scarcely in its chief enterprise, which is to
steel its audience for more wartime sacrifice. It seems at times almost
to
be working against its own message that war deaths are "good deaths." I
imagine it may have helped salve some broken hearts, but the crime of this
type of film is that, if it succeeds, it only helps to break
more.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- This movie is a slightly corny, yet warm and lovely gem..., 10 May 2006
Author:
justin_poet from New York, NY
I loved this movie and I highly suggest you catch this movie if you
can. If for the very least, to see Harry Morgan (aka the crusty Col.
Potter from TV's M*A*S*H) back when he was just a kid at 28 years old.
The other reason is it's a sweet and warm story of a small town family
and how it deals with post WWII. The film's cinematography is a vivid
Hallmark card of 1940s Americana.
There's a really tender scene where Morgan, a recent vet from the war,
helps Don Ameche, the father of a fellow soldier stock the shelves of
Ameche's Pharmacy. The art direction of this film is amazing as well.
Also look for Morgan as the mysterious bad guy in "The Big Clock" circa
1948 with Ray Milland which has an analagous plot line to "No Way Out"
with Kevin Costner.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Melancholy and Grief In Wartime Iowa, 3 June 2009
Author:
Alonzo Church from United States
Don Ameche's son is killed in WW II. Can grandpa Harry Carey, returning
from the dead, convince a grieving Ameche that his life, his son's
life, and this whole war is worth his son's sacrifice, and get Ameche
to believe his small town is indeed HAPPY LAND?
Despite a wonderful opening sequence, reminiscent of the homespun
melancholy of the better parts of Our Town and Since You Went Away,
this is a rather superficial and bland treatment of the grief of a
good, if temporarily embittered man, whose son has died in the war.
Ameche, a decent enough actor, does not have skill to bring off his
role, and Harry Carey, with his mono-tonal voice, and facial
expressions running the gamut of emotions from A to B, makes
conversations about life and death as enchanting as a conversation
about whether to pick up milk at the store. The result might be truly
Midwestern in its emotions, but it's questionable whether that's a good
thing.
Much of the movie is flashbacks to the life of Ameche's child (though,
interestingly, we do not see the kid actually fighting in the war).
There's nothing especially interesting in the flashbacks, nor, really,
is there much there that would provide comfort to Ameche. A final
scene, where Ameche learns from a young Harry Morgan how his son died
heroically, works somewhat better, simply because Morgan's flat
Midwestern delivery and Ameche's flat Midwestern delivery grounds what
has been rather leaden supernatural stuff in a bit of reality. Whether
Ameche, under these circumstances, would find the will to go on again
after all this, is questionable.
A comparison between this film and It's A Wonderful Life is inevitable,
as they deal with the same basic situation. This film, far more low key
and far less extreme than the Stuart/Capra collaboration, might be more
appealing to folks who prefer their fantastic/supernatural cinema to be
realistic. But to this viewer, the far more dramatic events and
emotional acting of Stuart makes his movie more fun to watch and, oddly
enough, more believable.
Assessment -- Don't avoid this movie. You might like it. Alas, I did
not.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- I liked it when I was 10, 16 July 2001
Author:
Wayne119
Saw this movie with my family in 1943 at age 10. We all liked it, even
though it made us sad. Seems like it starts with Rusty already dead, killed
in the war. Then there are flashbacks to his childhood. What it said to me
back then was: war makes no sense. I'm not sure that's what was
intended.
Nice try but it missed the target, 8 June 2009
Author:
rooster_davis from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I think rating this picture a '4' is about right... it shows a slice of
wholesome American life in reprise as Don Ameche reviews the life of
his son who has just been killed in WW2. The story starts off with
everyone upbeat and happy - then a telegram comes with the bad news.
Rusty has been killed in action.
Ameche is too immersed in his sorrow to go back to work at the family
drugstore; then to his disbelief, his long-dead grandfather reappears
from the past to help him work through his memories of Rusty's life,
and see how rich and full it was despite being cut so short. At the end
of the movie, Harry Morgan arrives; he's a good friend of Rusty's and
comes to meet his late friend's parents, and tell them how nobly their
son died.
It's all nice enough, I guess, a very prim and proper movie showing
life in a simpler, more patriotic time. Now... maybe I over-analyze
things, but I'm wondering this: if Ameche's grandfather (who is also
Rusty's great-grandfather) could appear from the dead, why couldn't
Rusty himself have done so? The old man seems as real and 'visible' as
anything to Ameche (once he accepts that he's not imagining it all) as
the old guy pays him a visit to help him through his grief; he talks
about Rusty being 'gone' now, but hey, he's no more gone than you are,
old timer! Why didn't you bring him with?
I think Henry Morgan's short role in this movie is one of the best I've
ever seen him in; he's still very young here, younger than you've
probably ever seen him, and his part has some emotion to it which he
handles very well. I think in his short part he out-acted everyone else
in the whole film. And, I think if we'd have had just one glimpse at
the very end of Rusty appearing before his dad to say 'Don't be sad,
pop, I'm okay where I am....' it would have made the earlier part with
the old guy a lot more credible and it would have given a good feeling
to the ending of the story, reminding people that maybe this isn't all
there is to our existence.
It's a nice movie, flawed in that major regard for me - just that one
change of having Rusty make one appearance from 'beyond' would have
turned the whole thing around for me. So, I'll give it a four as an
artifact of the days of WW2 and an earlier version of America now gone.
And I might add, it's an America in which I wish I could have lived.
Nice try but it missed the target, 8 June 2009
Author:
rooster_davis from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I think rating this picture a '4' is about right... it shows a slice of
wholesome American life in reprise as Don Ameche reviews the life of
his son who has just been killed in WW2. The story starts off with
everyone upbeat and happy - then a telegram comes with the bad news.
Rusty has been killed in action.
Ameche is too immersed in his sorrow to go back to work at the family
drugstore; then to his disbelief, his long-dead grandfather reappears
from the past to help him work through his memories of Rusty's life,
and see how rich and full it was despite being cut so short. At the end
of the movie, Harry Morgan arrives; he's a good friend of Rusty's and
comes to meet his late friend's parents, and tell them how nobly their
son died.
It's all nice enough, I guess, a very prim and proper movie showing
life in a simpler, more patriotic time. Now... maybe I over-analyze
things, but I'm wondering this: if Ameche's grandfather (who is also
Rusty's great-grandfather) could appear from the dead, why couldn't
Rusty himself have done so? The old man seems as real and 'visible' as
anything to Ameche (once he accepts that he's not imagining it all) as
the old guy pays him a visit to help him through his grief; he talks
about Rusty being 'gone' now, but hey, he's no more gone than you are,
old timer! Why didn't you bring him with?
I think Henry Morgan's short role in this movie is one of the best I've
ever seen him in; he's still very young here, younger than you've
probably ever seen him, and his part has some emotion to it which he
handles very well. I think in his short part he out-acted everyone else
in the whole film. And, I think if we'd have had just one glimpse at
the very end of Rusty appearing before his dad to say 'Don't be sad,
pop, I'm okay where I am....' it would have made the earlier part with
the old guy a lot more credible and it would have given a good feeling
to the ending of the story, reminding people that maybe this isn't all
there is to our existence.
It's a nice movie, flawed in that major regard for me - just that one
change of having Rusty make one appearance from 'beyond' would have
turned the whole thing around for me. So, I'll give it a four as an
artifact of the days of WW2 and an earlier version of America now gone.
3 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Good job, Harry. Bad job, Harry. (Different Harrys.), 27 August 1999
Author:
from Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Overall, this film falls within the much larger group of films from
this period during screenings of which I like to call, "Buy war bonds!"
Not as propagandistic as, say, THOUSANDS CHEER, HAPPY LAND can boast of
a relatively amazing performance by a young Harry Morgan, as well as a
generally high quality of acting on the part of the star, Don Ameche.
Harry Carey, as Gramp, is a bit over the top, however. When HAPPY LAND
doesn't remind you of an advertisement for the U.S. War Dept., it will
remind you of IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE. Unless you're a die-hard Harry
Morgan fan, save yourself the trouble and see Jimmy Stewart relive HIS
life in a small town. It's a bit more interesting.
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8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Last Time Seen On The Old AMC, 4 November 2005
Author: xerses13 from United States
We saw this film sometime in the late 1980's on the old AMC. You remember AMC, the station that didn't like colorized or edited movies. That showed films how they were meant to. Well enough of that.
The HAPPY LAND was one (1) of those fine WWII films that gave you a peek of what the home front was like and the effects the war had upon it. This was effectively and economically done. Not as long as SINCE YOU WENT AWAY or the HUMAN COMEDY more in line with the FIGHTING SULLIVANS another seldom seen home front film. Or at least seldom seen since AMC went to seed.
The importance of these films is to give a glimpse into the lives of our parents or grandparents and not just the war, but the effects of rationing, personal loss and the fear that we could lose. Many young people have no concept what a close run thing WWII was. Not that we would have been conquered. But that Asia and Europe would have been dominated by two (2) powers both with a race superiority agendas. The NAZI Germans who wanted to create a master race and Imperial Japan who thought they WERE the master race.
The film as far as we know is unavailable on any video format. Seems like a shame when so much bad material is rushed to DVD. 20th Century Fox should do something about this. After all they have released A YANK IN THE R.A.F which main claim to fame is Betty Grable and Tyrone Power.
8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Great movie - they don't make em like this anymore, 12 December 2001
Author: nstobert from Michigan, USA
I thought this was a wonderfully nostalgic movie. The acting is well done, and the end is just a real tear-jerker. It brings back the feelings that I believe really did exist in WWII, right down to the fateful trip the girl from Western Union had to make to deliver the telegram that said his son died. Excitement, no. A few laughs, yes. Great nostelgic drama with a good story line.
6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

Happy Land is a great look at life of an old time druggist., 26 March 2006
Author: schaz from United States
Years ago (1980's) I happened on this film just as it was beginning on AMC. At that time I was a newly licensed pharmacist (less than 5 years experience.) I couldn't stop watching it. There on the screen was the story of a druggist like I'd always thought it should be--respected in his community, devoted to his fellow citizens' health, and always available night and day. This was the life I'd thought I was supposed to have before the reality of modern health insurance had fully settled on me. Don Ameche played the role perfectly. Harry Carry as the ghost of 'Gramps', Ameche's grandpa and druggist mentor, could not have been better cast. The central role of the Marsh drugstore was also perfectly set. This was like being in the era. Even a non-pharmacist would find this to be a charming look at an older generations' simpler life. Even with a world-war raging, the drugstore with its soda fountain and variety of dry goods was always there. People met their future spouses at the soda fountain, were able to find just the right remedy for what ailed and could get there favorite bath oils,etc. This is a must-see film for any pharmacist or anyone else who longs for the good-old-days. Anyone would find the story moving and even though most scenes take place in the drugstore, there is plenty of story to keep your attention. This film should be released on DVD. I know every pharmacist would want a copy.
9 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-
Happy Lies, 3 July 2002
Author: RJC-4 from St. Paul, MN
Finding this oddity on cable recently, I was quickly seduced by its opening sequence, a Welles-like plunge down main street into a small everytown's heart, Marsh's pharmacy. Here, as some clever camera work reveals, solid citizen Lew Marsh (Don Ameche) tends to the blisses of early 40's Hollywood America; everyone's prescription is filled, sundaes topped off with a cherry, local oddballs humored, etc.
What most recommends the film is its frame narrative. Quickly the idyll is broken when Marsh learns his son has been killed in the war. He sinks into a lengthy depression. Enter the ghost of Gramp to conduct psychotherapy: he spirits Marsh back into the past where we relive the childhood, adolescence, and early adulthood of the now-dead Rusty. While the mid-section unfolds linearly, Marsh and Gramp function offscreen as a Greek chorus (their melancholy dialogue often a grim counterpoint to the generally cheerful scenes). Then it's back to the present where an exorcized Marsh learns to stop questioning the wisdom of sacrificing young men in war. "Rusty died a good death," Gramp's ghost counsels, and we know it's only a matter of time before Marsh will agree.
Three years before "It's A Wonderful Life" (1946), "Happy Land" was already hijacking the "Christmas Carol" device of reliving the past on a therapeutic sightseeing tour. Unlike the Stewart film, though, the tone is more darkly somber, lingeringly mournful. The theme of sorrow outweighs the theme of recovery. Ameche looks and sounds wracked, bitter.
In fact, the film's heart is scarcely in its chief enterprise, which is to steel its audience for more wartime sacrifice. It seems at times almost to be working against its own message that war deaths are "good deaths." I imagine it may have helped salve some broken hearts, but the crime of this type of film is that, if it succeeds, it only helps to break more.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
This movie is a slightly corny, yet warm and lovely gem..., 10 May 2006
Author: justin_poet from New York, NY
I loved this movie and I highly suggest you catch this movie if you can. If for the very least, to see Harry Morgan (aka the crusty Col. Potter from TV's M*A*S*H) back when he was just a kid at 28 years old.
The other reason is it's a sweet and warm story of a small town family and how it deals with post WWII. The film's cinematography is a vivid Hallmark card of 1940s Americana.
There's a really tender scene where Morgan, a recent vet from the war, helps Don Ameche, the father of a fellow soldier stock the shelves of Ameche's Pharmacy. The art direction of this film is amazing as well.
Also look for Morgan as the mysterious bad guy in "The Big Clock" circa 1948 with Ray Milland which has an analagous plot line to "No Way Out" with Kevin Costner.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Melancholy and Grief In Wartime Iowa, 3 June 2009
Author: Alonzo Church from United States
Don Ameche's son is killed in WW II. Can grandpa Harry Carey, returning from the dead, convince a grieving Ameche that his life, his son's life, and this whole war is worth his son's sacrifice, and get Ameche to believe his small town is indeed HAPPY LAND?
Despite a wonderful opening sequence, reminiscent of the homespun melancholy of the better parts of Our Town and Since You Went Away, this is a rather superficial and bland treatment of the grief of a good, if temporarily embittered man, whose son has died in the war. Ameche, a decent enough actor, does not have skill to bring off his role, and Harry Carey, with his mono-tonal voice, and facial expressions running the gamut of emotions from A to B, makes conversations about life and death as enchanting as a conversation about whether to pick up milk at the store. The result might be truly Midwestern in its emotions, but it's questionable whether that's a good thing.
Much of the movie is flashbacks to the life of Ameche's child (though, interestingly, we do not see the kid actually fighting in the war). There's nothing especially interesting in the flashbacks, nor, really, is there much there that would provide comfort to Ameche. A final scene, where Ameche learns from a young Harry Morgan how his son died heroically, works somewhat better, simply because Morgan's flat Midwestern delivery and Ameche's flat Midwestern delivery grounds what has been rather leaden supernatural stuff in a bit of reality. Whether Ameche, under these circumstances, would find the will to go on again after all this, is questionable.
A comparison between this film and It's A Wonderful Life is inevitable, as they deal with the same basic situation. This film, far more low key and far less extreme than the Stuart/Capra collaboration, might be more appealing to folks who prefer their fantastic/supernatural cinema to be realistic. But to this viewer, the far more dramatic events and emotional acting of Stuart makes his movie more fun to watch and, oddly enough, more believable.
Assessment -- Don't avoid this movie. You might like it. Alas, I did not.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-
I liked it when I was 10, 16 July 2001
Author: Wayne119
Saw this movie with my family in 1943 at age 10. We all liked it, even though it made us sad. Seems like it starts with Rusty already dead, killed in the war. Then there are flashbacks to his childhood. What it said to me back then was: war makes no sense. I'm not sure that's what was intended.
Nice try but it missed the target, 8 June 2009

Author: rooster_davis from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I think rating this picture a '4' is about right... it shows a slice of wholesome American life in reprise as Don Ameche reviews the life of his son who has just been killed in WW2. The story starts off with everyone upbeat and happy - then a telegram comes with the bad news. Rusty has been killed in action.
Ameche is too immersed in his sorrow to go back to work at the family drugstore; then to his disbelief, his long-dead grandfather reappears from the past to help him work through his memories of Rusty's life, and see how rich and full it was despite being cut so short. At the end of the movie, Harry Morgan arrives; he's a good friend of Rusty's and comes to meet his late friend's parents, and tell them how nobly their son died.
It's all nice enough, I guess, a very prim and proper movie showing life in a simpler, more patriotic time. Now... maybe I over-analyze things, but I'm wondering this: if Ameche's grandfather (who is also Rusty's great-grandfather) could appear from the dead, why couldn't Rusty himself have done so? The old man seems as real and 'visible' as anything to Ameche (once he accepts that he's not imagining it all) as the old guy pays him a visit to help him through his grief; he talks about Rusty being 'gone' now, but hey, he's no more gone than you are, old timer! Why didn't you bring him with?
I think Henry Morgan's short role in this movie is one of the best I've ever seen him in; he's still very young here, younger than you've probably ever seen him, and his part has some emotion to it which he handles very well. I think in his short part he out-acted everyone else in the whole film. And, I think if we'd have had just one glimpse at the very end of Rusty appearing before his dad to say 'Don't be sad, pop, I'm okay where I am....' it would have made the earlier part with the old guy a lot more credible and it would have given a good feeling to the ending of the story, reminding people that maybe this isn't all there is to our existence.
It's a nice movie, flawed in that major regard for me - just that one change of having Rusty make one appearance from 'beyond' would have turned the whole thing around for me. So, I'll give it a four as an artifact of the days of WW2 and an earlier version of America now gone. And I might add, it's an America in which I wish I could have lived.
Nice try but it missed the target, 8 June 2009

Author: rooster_davis from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I think rating this picture a '4' is about right... it shows a slice of wholesome American life in reprise as Don Ameche reviews the life of his son who has just been killed in WW2. The story starts off with everyone upbeat and happy - then a telegram comes with the bad news. Rusty has been killed in action.
Ameche is too immersed in his sorrow to go back to work at the family drugstore; then to his disbelief, his long-dead grandfather reappears from the past to help him work through his memories of Rusty's life, and see how rich and full it was despite being cut so short. At the end of the movie, Harry Morgan arrives; he's a good friend of Rusty's and comes to meet his late friend's parents, and tell them how nobly their son died.
It's all nice enough, I guess, a very prim and proper movie showing life in a simpler, more patriotic time. Now... maybe I over-analyze things, but I'm wondering this: if Ameche's grandfather (who is also Rusty's great-grandfather) could appear from the dead, why couldn't Rusty himself have done so? The old man seems as real and 'visible' as anything to Ameche (once he accepts that he's not imagining it all) as the old guy pays him a visit to help him through his grief; he talks about Rusty being 'gone' now, but hey, he's no more gone than you are, old timer! Why didn't you bring him with?
I think Henry Morgan's short role in this movie is one of the best I've ever seen him in; he's still very young here, younger than you've probably ever seen him, and his part has some emotion to it which he handles very well. I think in his short part he out-acted everyone else in the whole film. And, I think if we'd have had just one glimpse at the very end of Rusty appearing before his dad to say 'Don't be sad, pop, I'm okay where I am....' it would have made the earlier part with the old guy a lot more credible and it would have given a good feeling to the ending of the story, reminding people that maybe this isn't all there is to our existence.
It's a nice movie, flawed in that major regard for me - just that one change of having Rusty make one appearance from 'beyond' would have turned the whole thing around for me. So, I'll give it a four as an artifact of the days of WW2 and an earlier version of America now gone.
3 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Good job, Harry. Bad job, Harry. (Different Harrys.), 27 August 1999
Author: from Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Overall, this film falls within the much larger group of films from this period during screenings of which I like to call, "Buy war bonds!" Not as propagandistic as, say, THOUSANDS CHEER, HAPPY LAND can boast of a relatively amazing performance by a young Harry Morgan, as well as a generally high quality of acting on the part of the star, Don Ameche. Harry Carey, as Gramp, is a bit over the top, however. When HAPPY LAND doesn't remind you of an advertisement for the U.S. War Dept., it will remind you of IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE. Unless you're a die-hard Harry Morgan fan, save yourself the trouble and see Jimmy Stewart relive HIS life in a small town. It's a bit more interesting.
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