Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Fountainhead of Bedford Falls
The Fountainhead of Bedford Falls
Jul 4, 2025 4:06 AM

[Note: A version of this article ran last year around Christmastime. I’m posting it again because I love talking about Frank Capra and everyone else seems to love talking about Ayn Rand.]

Frank Capra and Ayn Rand are two names not often mentioned together. Yet the cheery director of Capra-corn and the dour novelist who created Objectivism have more mon than you might imagine. Both were immigrants who made their names in Hollywood. Both were screenwriters and employees of the film studio RKO Pictures. And during the last half of the 1940s, both created works of enduring cult appeal, Capra with his filmIt’s a Wonderful Lifeand Rand with her novelThe Fountainhead.

The pair also created two of the most memorable characters in modern pop culture: Howard Roark and George Bailey. To anyone familiar with both works, it would seem the two characters could not be more different. Unexpected similarities emerge, however, when one considers that Roark and Bailey are variations on mon archetype that has captured the American imagination for decades.

Howard Roark, the protagonist of Rand’s book, is an idealistic young architect who chooses to struggle in obscurity rather promise his artistic and personal vision by conforming to the needs and demands of munity. In contrast, George Bailey, the hero of Capra’s film, is an idealistic young would-be architect who struggles in obscurity because he has chosen to conform to the needs and demands of munity rather than fulfill his artistic and personal vision. Howard Roark is essentially what George Bailey might have e had he left for college rather than stayed in his hometown of Bedford Falls.

Rand portrays Roark as a demigod-like hero who refuses to subordinate his self-centered ego to the demands of living in munity. Capra, in stark contrast, portrays Bailey as an amiable but flawed man who es a hero preciselybecausehe chooses to subordinate his self-centered ego for the greater good of munity.

Not surprisingly, Roark has e something of a cult figure,especially among young nerdy males entering post-adolescence. Although Roark is artistically gifted and technically brilliant, he prefers to take a job breaking rocks in a quarry than sell out to The Man. He provides a model for the twenty-somethingunderemployed misfit who chooses not to “play by society’s rules.” These man-boys see themselves in the promising sulker, believing it better to vandalize and destroy (if only verbally) than to allow society to co-opt their dreams.

Rand herself would have certainly envisioned things differently. She would have sneered in disgust at the idea that Roark was anything like the slackers working at Starbucks or the populists marching at Tea Party rallies. Her hero was a cross between the modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright and the serial killer and child rapist William Hickman. Rand’s ideal was the nonconformist who exhibited sociopathic tendencies. She dreamed of the minority of brilliant, atheisticubermenschwho would “eventually trample society under its feet.” The vast majority of the people who readThe Fountainheadmight admire Roark, but they’d never emulate him—at least not in way that Rand would appreciate.

Similarly, Capra’s audience flatters themselves by believing the message ofWonderful Lifeis that their own lives are just as worthy, just as noble, and just as wonderful as George Bailey’s. In a way, they are as delusional as the Randian Roark-worshippers. Despite the fact that they left their munities for the city, put their parents in an assisted living facility, and don’t know the names of their next door neighbors, they truly believe they arejust likeCapra’s hero.

Such delusions are the reason these characters have remained two of the most dominant archetypes of American individualism in pop culture. The pendulum of popularity is swinging back toward Rand but it’s Capra’s creation that should be our model for inspiration.

Roark is nihilistic, narrow-minded, and something of a bore. Bailey is far darker, plex, and infinitely more interesting.

What makes George Bailey one of the most inspiring, plex characters in modern popular culture is that he continually chooses the needs of his family munity over his own self-interested ambitions and desires—and suffers immensely and repeatedlyfor his sacrifices.

Although sentimental, Capra’s movie is not a simplistic morality play.It’s true that the movie ends on a happy note late on Christmas Eve, when George is saved from ruin. But on Christmas Day he’ll wake to find that his life is not so different than it was when he wanted mit suicide.

George Bailey will remain a frustrated artist who is scraping by on a meager salary while living in a drafty old house in a one-stoplight town. All that has really changed is that he has gained a deeper appreciation of the value of faith, friends, munity—and that this is worth more than his worldly ambitions. Capra’s underlying message is thus radically subversive: It is by serving our fellow man, even to the point of subordinating our dreams and ambitions, that we achieve both true greatness and lasting happiness.

This theme makesWonderful Lifeone of the most counter-cultural films in the history of cinema. Almost every movie about the individual in society—fromEasy RidertoHappy Feet—is based on the premise that self-actualization is the primary purpose of existence. To a society that accepts radical individualism as the norm, a film about the individual subordinating his desires for the good of others sounds anti-American, if not munistic. Surely the only reason the film has e a Christmas classic is because so few people grasp this core message.

Of course the fans ofThe Fountainhead—at least those who view Roark as a moral model—are not likely prehend, much less adequately appreciate the subtext ofWonderful Life. Indeed, only a schizophrenic personality could aspire to emulate both Bailey and Roark, characters whose grave differences have been obscured by pop culture’s sentimentalism.

Roark lives to create inspiring works of architecture but cannot do so without relying on others. When society fails to appreciate his genius, his egotistical purity leads him to engage in a vandalistic and destructive temper-tantrum. By the end ofThe FountainheadRoark is revealed to be an infantile, narcissistic, parasite.

Bailey, on the other hand, is the type of character Rand would consider a villain. He exhibits the qualities of a repressed, conformist, patsy. He lives for others rather than “following his bliss” or “going Galt.” promises everything but his integrity, and in doing so discovers that he has all that makes life worth living.

Sentimental claptrap? Probably so. Capra and Rand authored utterly different narratives, but are guilty of the same sort of sentimentalism. As William Butler Yeats said, “The rhetorician would deceive others, the sentimentalist himself.” To fall for Rand’s foolish philosophy or Capra’s corny flicks is therefore to risk deceiving oneself. Perhaps I’m in such danger myself, but Capra makes me want to believe. While I know it may not always be a wonderful life, it would be better world if more of us aspired to be George Bailey and lived less like Howard Roark.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Why the ‘success sequence’ is not enough
We’ve seen a drastic shift in the social habits and behaviors of Americans, whether in work, education, or family life. Yet with an ever increasing range of “nontraditional” routes to success and stability, social scientists have begun to see how one particular pattern bears fruit. Back in2009, the Brookings Institute’s Isabel Sawhill and Ron Haskins pointed us to “the success sequence”: a formula that involves (1) graduating from high school, (2) working full-time, and (3) waiting until marriage to have...
Yet another example of how the Vatican misunderstands America…and economics
After almost twenty years in Rome, I’ve learned not to insist too much on the Vatican reading the USA with any kind of accuracy, so I usually don’t feel the need ment on every little ing from the Roman Curia. It would take up way too much time and make me grumpier than I already am. But there are times when something must be said. August, for example, when you’re one of the few non-tourists around and nothing else is...
Abraham Kuyper and the ‘twoness theses’
In the academic world there are several well-known “twoness theses”, says Acton research fellow Andrew McGinnis, arguments by scholars that there are in one historical person two identifiable and contradictory lines of thought that warrant depicting the individual as divided. It seems that anyone who writes and publishes enough material will be susceptible to a twoness thesis. In some ways it is a mark that you have made it as an author. It means you have published, lectured, or preached...
Humanity 2.0: The human progress accelerator that ‘should’
Matthew Sanders and Fr. Ezra Sullivan, O.P. facilitate moral discussion with entrepreneurs and academics. Matthew Harvey Sanders, a former seminarian turned successful technology munications entrepreneur, has sought to fuse deep theological and moral convictions with his natural talent and contagious pioneering spirit. His brain child: Humanity 2.0, a self-described “human progress accelerator” showcased last May 9 at a forum held inside Vatican walls. According to Sanders’s web site, Humanity 2.0 is built on Thomas Aquinas’s precepts for human salvation, namely,...
Seattle stinks
In a recent article at City Journal, Discovery Institute Fellow, Christopher Rufo says: Over the past few years, Seattle has e a dumping ground for millions of pounds of garbage, needles, feces, and biohazardous waste, largely emanating from the hundreds of homeless encampments that have sprouted across the city… Last year saw a 400 percent increase in HIV infections among mostly homeless addicts and prostitutes in the city’s northern corridor. Public-health officials are sounding the alarms about the return of...
Acton Line podcast: Jonah Goldberg on his ‘Suicide of the West’; Remembering Fulton J. Sheen
On this episode, National Review senior editor Jonah Goldberg speaks about his latest book, “Suicide of the West: How the Rebirth of Nationalism, Populism, and Identity Politics Is Destroying American Democracy.” Jonah will also be speaking at our ing annual conference in Grand Rapids, Acton University, and you can still register to hear him during the plenary dinner on Wednesday, June 19. After that, James Patterson, professor of politics at Ave Maria University, joins us to talk about the legacy...
Should credit-card interest be capped at 15%?
Democratic presidential primary contender Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have unveiled a plan to cap credit-card interest rates at 15%: Under the “Loan Shark Prevention Act,” the annual percentage rate applicable to any extension of credit would not be allowed surpass 15% on “unpaid balances, inclusive of all finance charges” or “the maximum rate permitted by the laws of the State in which the consumer resides.” Consumer debt, and credit card debt in particular, is something many Americans...
The politically correct rule at Harvard Law
What do President Donald J. Trump and Ronald Sullivan, a professor at Harvard Law School, have mon? At first glance, nothing. However, a careful reading of recent news reveals that these two men were victims of a political trend that has engulfed American society and has been turning the land of freedom into a grotesque experiment of authoritarianism. Let us start with Sullivan. A black law professor occupying a senior position in one of the most prestigious law schools in...
Do the rich get all the gains from economic progress?
The rich get richer, the poor get poorer, and the middle class remains stagnant. That’s the story often told by those plain about inequality in America. But is it true? Has economic progress in America been shared widely or captured by only the rich? As economist Russ Roberts explains, the standard story of stagnating wages takes snapshots of one set of people in the past pares them to an entirely different set of people in the present. But when you...
Alexis de Tocqueville and Michael Novak at the Heritage Foundation: May 29, 2019
Aspirations to socialism and social democracy appear to be gaining traction in much of America, especially among young Americans. People are often fuzzy about what they mean by terms like “socialism.” Sometimes it seems to be a type of aspirational outlook. On other occasions, it involves specific policy-proposals. In yet other instances, it’s bination of both. The effect is often to make socialism a harder target to critique. The good news is that we’re been here before. Some of the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved