 | Miracle on 34th Street: Encyclopedia II - Miracle on 34th Street - Plot summary
Miracle on 34th Street - Plot summary
The story begins when Kris Kringle attends the annual Thanksgiving Day parade and finds to his indignation that the actor cast as Santa is drunk. When he complains to the special events director, Doris Walker, she desperately casts Kris as a replacement. Kris proves a sensation during the event and he is quickly hired as the Santa for Macy's main outlet.
Once there, Kris proves he is stands apart from others in both his firm belief in the spirit of christmas and his firm contension that he is actually Santa himself. Although Doris initially wants to fire him as crazy, Kris' unusually generous ideas such as occasionally recommending other stores for toys create so much good publicity and customer support for Macy's that Kris is considered indispensable. In addition, Fred Gailey, an idealistic lawyer smitten with Doris and her daughter, Susan, who is raised not to believe in anything, come to see there is something special about Kris that makes his claims seem creditable.
However, things take a turn for the worst when a burgeoning conflict between Kris and a cruelly incompetent psychologist, Mr. Sawyer, erupts into a heated argument over the supposed doctor's consouling a young man that he is mentally ill simply because he's generous and kind hearted. In a fit of anger at the psychologist's unreasonable attitude, Kris raps him on the head and Sawyer exagerates the incident as a pretext to have Kris sent to the Bellevue mental hospital. Once there, the discouraged Kris deliberately fails his mental examination and is recommended for permanent commitment.
However, Fred Gailey comes to persuade Kris not to give on the world and he himself is talked into working to secure Kris' release. To that end, Fred requests a formal hearing under Judge Harper in which he makes the stunningly unorthodox argument that Kris should be released because his contention to being Santa Claus is rational because he actually is that figure. Although Doris has no faith in Fred's ability's, Fred is able to reinforce his argument with clever questioning of witnesses, including the prosecutor's own son. In addition, Judge Harper is sympathetic to Kris if only because he is well aware that ruling against the popular figure is political suicide.
However, Fred hits an insurmountable obstacle when the Judge is forced to agree with the prosecutor that Kris' claims need to have authorative support. While Fred searches fruitlessly for such support, Susan, now firmly believing in Kris, writes a letter to him to cheer him up with a support postscript from Doris. While the letter is in transit, a postal worker finds it and realizes that the postal system could easily offload their many letters to Santa to Kris at the courthouse. When Fred learns of this unusual delivery, he successfully argues in court that the United States Postal Service, a branch of the federal United States government, is in fact supporting Kris' claims in this fashion. When asked to show his evidence, Fred has all the mail brought and the judge is literally buried in letters, which proves convincing and politically convienent enough for him to rule that Kris be released.
On Christmas Day morning, it seems a happy ending for all. However, Susan is disillusioned on account that Kris was apparently unable to supply her greatest wish, a house in the suburbs for her family to live in. However as Fred, Doris and Susan are driving along a route Kris suggested, Susan is elated to find the house of her dreams for sale. Fred and Doris decide to purchase the house and Fred notes that it has been a good time as proudly notes that he managed to do the seemingly impossible getting Kris officially called Santa. However at that boast, Fred immediately spots a cane that looks exactly Kris' which suggests he arranged this grand gift. While Doris doubts that, Fred notes he might not be that good a lawyer after all if Kris is capable of boons like this.
Other related archives1947, 1947 films, 1973, 1973 films, 1994, 1994 films, Academy Awards, Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Best Picture, Best Picture Oscar Nominee, Best Supporting Actor Oscar (film), Best Writing, Original Story, Best Writing, Screenplay, Christmas films, David Doyle, David Hartman, Dylan McDermott, Edmund Gwenn, Elizabeth Perkins, Film remakes, Gene Lockhart, George Seaton, Horatio Sanz, J.T. Walsh, Jack Albertson, James Remar, Jane Alexander, Jane Leeves, Jim Backus, John Hughes, John Payne, Macy's, Mara Wilson, Maureen O'Hara, Natalie Wood, New York City, Percy Helton, Post Office, Public domain films, Richard Attenborough, Roddy McDowall, Santa Claus, Sebastian Cabot, Simon Jones, Thanksgiving Day, Thelma Ritter, Tom Bosley, United States National Film Registry, United States Postal Service, Valentine Davies, William Frawley, William Windom, faith, film, psychologist, short story, television movie
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