The Cutters
The Cutters (1926) Each happy family is happy in its own way. Take the Cutters. Although they live in a rambling white house in a Midwestern town called Meadows, the Cutters are too irreducibly real to stand in for the average all-American family created by pollsters, popular magazines, and television sitcoms. Witty Nell Cutter is not a Good Housekeeping model. Big Ed Cutter is a lawyer not destined for Easy Street. There are three sons, a daughter, and Gramma, and together they create a full house that is even more full of love.
The Cutters (1926) Each happy family is happy in its own way. Take the Cutters. Although they live in a rambling white house in a Midwestern town called Meadows, the Cutters are too irreducibly real to stand in for the average all-American family created by pollsters, popular magazines, and television sitcoms. Witty Nell Cutter is not a Good Housekeeping model. Big Ed Cutter is a lawyer not destined for Easy Street. There are three sons, a daughter, and Gramma, and together they create a full house that is even more full of love.
The Cutters (1926) Each happy family is happy in its own way. Take the Cutters. Although they live in a rambling white house in a Midwestern town called Meadows, the Cutters are too irreducibly real to stand in for the average all-American family created by pollsters, popular magazines, and television sitcoms. Witty Nell Cutter is not a Good Housekeeping model. Big Ed Cutter is a lawyer not destined for Easy Street. There are three sons, a daughter, and Gramma, and together they create a full house that is even more full of love.