Amazon Prime Video is under fire for streaming a butchered version of “It’s a Wonderful Life” that guts the beloved Christmas classic.
Viewers say the abridged cut — roughly 22 minutes shorter than the original 130-minute film — removes the iconic “Pottersville” sequence, the pivotal stretch that explains why despairing hero George Bailey suddenly rediscovers the will to live.
In that part, Bailey declares his wish never to have been born and gets to see how crummy life would have been without him.
Without that sequence, audiences are left watching a man contemplate suicide one moment, then sprint joyfully through town the next — with no logical explanation.
The backlash has been swift and brutal.
Social media users blasted the edit as “an abomination,” “sacrilege” and “pointless,” accusing Amazon of turning a timeless film into narrative nonsense — especially for first-time viewers unfamiliar with the story.
The missing sequence is widely regarded as the movie’s emotional core.
In the original 1946 film, Bailey’s hometown of Bedford Falls is seen devolving into the corrupt, neon-lit “Pottersville,” with the protagonist’s brother dying young, his wife never getting married and greedy banker Henry Potter controlling the town unchecked.
Bailey realizes that one ordinary life can quietly shape the fate of many, ultimately driving his emotional transformation from despair to joy.
The sequence gives the film its enduring message that “no man is a failure who has friends.”
Strip that out, viewers say, and the movie collapses.
The existence of the abridged version is rooted not in a creative choice by Amazon, but in the film’s famously tangled copyright history, according to the University of Connecticut.
In 1974, the distributor failed to renew the movie’s copyright, sending “It’s a Wonderful Life” into the public domain.
For nearly two decades, television stations freely aired the film — especially during the holidays — without paying royalties.
But the legal landscape shifted in the 1990s.
While the film itself had fallen into the public domain, the rights to two underlying elements had been properly maintained: the original short story “The Greatest Gift,” by Philip Van Doren Stern, and the musical score by Dimitri Timokin, a UConn legal blog noted.
Republic Pictures, later acquired by Paramount, used those copyrights to effectively reclaim control over the movie’s distribution, arguing that any exhibition of the film required licensing the copyrighted story and music.
The “Pottersville” sequence is the portion most directly adapted from Stern’s story.
Legal experts say the abridged version appears to be a workaround — by removing that specific sequence, distributors may have believed they could avoid infringing on the short story’s copyright while still offering a version of the film.
Similarly edited versions circulated for years during the public-domain era, when broadcasters routinely trimmed the movie to fit time slots.
Amazon Prime reportedly carries both the full and abridged versions, but viewers say the platform does not clearly explain the difference — leaving unsuspecting viewers to click the wrong one.
The Post has sought comment from Amazon.













