Also known as Stairway to Heaven, A Matter of Life and Death is the remarkable British fantasy film that became the surprise hit of 1946.
David Niven stars as a World War II RAF pilot who is forced to bail out of his crippled plane without a parachute. He wakes up to find he has landed on Earth utterly unharmed...which wasn't supposed to happen according to the rules of Heaven. A celestial court argues over whether or not to claim Niven's life or to let him survive to wed his American sweetheart (
Kim Hunter). During an operation, in which Niven hovers between life and death, he dreams that his spirit is on trial, with God (
Abraham Sofaer) as judge and Niven's recently deceased best friend (
Roger Livesey) as defense counsel. The film tries to have it both ways by suggesting that the Heavenly scenes are all a product of Niven's imagination, but the audience knows better. Among the curious but effective artistic choices in A Matter of Life and Death was the decision to film the Earthbound scenes in Technicolor and the Heaven sequences in black and white. The film was a product of the adventuresome team known as The Archers:
Michael Powell and
Emeric Pressburger. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide