Reposted from 2013 because this is Dana Andrews's birthday. The original post has a comment by Carl Rollyson, who wrote a great biography of Andrews.
This is probably truly not of general interest to anyone except old movie buffs and Mad Men fans, so if you're neither, feel free to skip it.
If you think about a postwar character, a handsome, modern, alienated
sort of man, one whose dark moodiness occasionally gives way to a smile
that masks an inner sadness, you may think of Don Draper. As I was
rewatching The Best Years of Our Lives a few weeks ago, it struck
me that the actor Dana Andrews is the prototype for this character.
Like Don Draper, he's a creature of the time he's been born into yet
always distanced from it.
Andrews is probably best known as the detective in Otto Preminger's famous noir Laura, where
he's a detective in the Raymond Chandler Lite mode--that is to say,
cynical, hardboiled, with a few light wisecracks masking a serious
attempt to get at the truth. This film defines the Andrews persona of
the haunted man: here, what haunts him is a portrait, but elsewhere,
there are other memories that haunt him.
The part that Andrews pays in The Best Years of Our Lives is that
of a returning war veteran whose high status as an officer disappears
once he returns. The only job he can get is his old job, as a soda jerk,
in a drugstore that's undergone a corporate takeover. He seemed to have
everything--good looks, status, a bombshell of a wife (Virginia
Mayo)--but now there's no place for him in this world. His skills as a
bombardier are obsolete. Earlier, we've seen his PTSD, nightmares of a
fire on a plane, a dream that he apologizes for. One of the movie's
themes is that no one wants to remember the war, now that it's over, but
that those who lived it can never forget.
Near the end of the movie, Andrews sits in the midst of an airplane
graveyard, surrounded by the junked metal that a postwar world doesn't
need. He sits in the nose turret of one of the junked bombers, hearing
the sounds of the bombing missions he made and realizing that he's also
one of the nation's discards.
His reverie is broken by a voice from the future: the foreman of a
construction crew that's turning wrecks into prefab housing. If he wants
to live, he has to forsake the past, abandon his old identity, and
start a new life. There's a happy ending of sorts for the film, but that
haunted look is there to stay, along with the inner torment that
inspired it.