Ever wondered what happens when Mercury goes retrograde in the realm of classic Christmas movies? Well, buckle up—because on Christmas Eve 2023, I stumbled upon a PlutoTV 24-hour marathon of It’s a Wonderful Life, only to discover that this beloved holiday staple had taken a very strange detour through a bizarre rights labyrinth. Imagine George Bailey’s luck hitting a new low—not from Old Man Potter this time, but from a cringe-worthy replacement score, a Title switcharoo to “A Wonderful Life,” and a baffling nod to Charles Dickens that makes about as much sense as a Capricorn trying to wing it during a Mercury retrograde! Join me as I unravel why this Franken-edit exists, why it’s more than just a headache for cinephiles, and how you can dodge this digital disaster to enjoy the true Capra classic this season. LEARN MORE

Jump back to Christmas Eve, 2023. I was feeling a bit of a case of the old “Bah Humbugs”, and while flipping through my various streaming services, I was thrilled to see that PlutoTV has a 24 hour channel dedicated to perhaps the greatest Christmas movie of all time, It’s a Wonderful Life. Within seconds of tuning in, I realized that something very, very wrong was happening with this version of the movie.
Not since Old Man Potter stole $8,000 from Uncle Billy has George Bailey suffered so much on Christmas Eve. This version of the film:
For the record, It’s a Wonderful Life has zero to do with Dickens. It’s based on The Greatest Gift by Philip Van Doren Stern. I tapped out after ten minutes. If anyone suffered through the whole thing, Godspeed.
Honestly, this is the worst thing to happen to the movie since the colorization craze of the 1980s—at least back then we could turn down the color on our TVs.
So what gives? It comes down to a long, messy copyright saga.
When It’s a Wonderful Life was released in January 1947, it was a notorious flop. Post-WWII audiences were more interested in dark film noir than Frank Capra’s sentimental, melancholy-tinged holiday story. Liberty Films—the short-lived company Capra founded—went under shortly after. Most of its films eventually fell into the public domain, including It’s a Wonderful Life.
Ironically, that’s what saved the movie. TV networks could air it for free throughout the 1970s and 80s, turning it into a Christmas staple.
But in the 1990s, Republic Pictures (now owned by Paramount) resecured partial rights:
This meant that any distributor who wanted to show the “real” version needed to license Tiomkin’s score.
Cue ad-supported streaming platforms looking to save money.
Their workaround?
Mute the original soundtrack and slap on a cheap replacement score, creating Franken-edits like the one Pluto TV is showing.
To me, this is nothing short of artistic vandalism.
Replacing Tiomkin’s score makes the movie feel cheap—like some off-brand holiday special on the Great American Family Network. And doing this to a film as culturally important as It’s a Wonderful Life sets a terrible precedent for other public domain classics.
Studios today are much better at protecting their catalogs, but plenty of beloved films from the 1930s and 40s remain public domain. If this practice continues, many could get chopped up, rescored, and rebranded in equally ugly ways.
As of now, Pluto hasn’t started airing this version for the 2025 holiday season—but they probably will once December hits. I’ll update this as it develops.
In the meantime, if you spot the alternate version, it’s usually labeled “abridged” or shows up with the retitled A Wonderful Life name. Steer clear.
This isn’t the only movie suffering from swapped-out soundtracks:
When music rights lapse or get expensive, studios sometimes choose the cheapest solution—and films pay the price.
Luckily, the authentic version of It’s a Wonderful Life is still widely available:
These versions keep the original score, original title, and original credits intact—exactly as Frank Capra intended.
Do yourself a favor this holiday season: skip the Pluto/Tubi/Roku cut and watch the real thing.
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