Is WHITE CHRISTMAS really about climate change?
It seems scenarists Norman Panama and Norman Krasna were prescient in 1954 to offer up the first screen story to deal with climate change. These Hollywood liberal writers saw what no else did until at least twenty years later: that the weather was changing and the time for government action was NOW (well, maybe a half century later).
It's not just that there's no snow on the ground on Christmas Eve in Vermont, it's that everybody's walking around in light clothing and complaining about it. I'm sure Gen. Waverly and Bob's dialogue before final editing went more like this:
BOB: Those look like snow clouds to me.
GEN. WAVERLY: Those are cummulus clouds, elevation seven thousand feet.
BOB: That's pretty unusual for this time of year, isn't it, General?
GENERAL: Could be. I'd say we're about 30 degrees above what's normal temperature for this late in December.
BOB: You don't suppose the carbon we're putting into the atmosphere is affecting the weather, do you?
GEN. WAVERLY: Not sure, son, but we have been involved in heavy polluting industries for the past 100 years. Who's to say?
BOB: Well, let's just hope we don't see this same warm weather pattern in Christmas seasons to come.
GEN. WAVERLY: Oh, it'll take several years to determine any trends in the change of weather. We'll get a better grasp of this when we develop satellite technology. Say, Bob, I still don't know too much about guinea pigs, but...