I made my 20 yr old son watch it last night. I thought his attention span would have been about an hour & we would have to watch it over the next 4 nights. Not only did he watch it straight through, captivated & in awe, but his first words when the movie finished, were " Now I understand why this is considered one of the greatest movies of all time"...happy momma ❤
I’m a 48 yr old Hispanic that just seen the movie for the first time in my life. I’m not in favor of going around removing or deleting history. I saw this movie and was in awe. What a great film. It made me feel sad because I like my naiveness when I see movies and tv. I want to see great actors play great roles. I don’t want to feel like I have to count the amount of different races are playing in the movie so it can feel “equal.” I’m not sure if I’m just getting old but I don’t like where we’re all heading.
Carlos Medrano, If they would just tell the TRUTH.... Many of these Americans that they "LABELING," for their "Racial Diving of America, as "White Supremacists," many of them dna proces they are some percentage "Native American!" And the earliest of the making of a government, on North America started with "Native Americans." The lying going on in 2021... to LABEL an American group of people is Unconscionable...And is STEPS right out of the "Old Socioligy Play Book" of steps to DESTROY a NATION.. For the Evil Elites know a "Divided NATION can NOT STAND!" It's Biblical.
Carlos, can't thank you enough for sharing your thoughts and impressions of GWTW. Read it when I was the same age as Scarlett at the beginning of the story. Sixteen. Saw the film the following year in 1974 when it was re-released in the theater for its 35th anniversary. The book and the film hit me on a visceral level and led me on a journey of discovery about my country's history and its continuing "growing pains" as it tries to fulfill its promise for all of its citizens.. I am so grateful for people like you who can truly understand and appreciate the beauty, importance, and cultural significance of this film. The love story hooked me as a teenager, but the time and setting of both the book and the film enlightened me about the complexity, contradictions, and conflicts that exist between and within human beings. Thank you again for your insightful comment.
When I was in college many years ago, my sociology teacher gave our class an assignment to do a paper on a movie of our choice and write about the relationship between two characters. I chose “Gone With The Wind” and wrote about the relationship between Scarlett O’Hara and Melanie Wilkes. I got an A+ because most people would have focused on Scarlett O’Hara and Rhett Butler’s relationship but I chose to approach it differently because Scarlett and Melanie had more screen time and interaction than any two characters in the movie. This was a great motion picture that had the perfect cast and script and film score. I’ve watched this movie probably a hundred times in my life and it never gets old. The movie was a huge vehicle for its Black character actors and had a huge impact on the storyline. The character of Mammy, was portrayed as intelligent and strong woman who was bold enough to stand up to Scarlett O’Hara, Rhett Butler and didn’t hesitate to put them in their places when they were behaving foolishly. Too many people today, are calling for this movie to be banned because of the slavery theme. They miss the entire point of the movie and the house slaves were portrayed with certain strengths and the 1940 academy awards awarded Hattie McDaniel as best supporting actress and was the first African American actress to win an Oscar.
Thank God for Mammy! She was telling them exactly the things I wanted to tell them while reading the book. She was smart, loyal, caring and I loved her character.
"Gone with the Wind," is one of the last movies that they used REAL settings. It took David O Selznick, days to video the sun rise scenes. "I'LL NEVER GO HUNGRY AGAIN!" Americans today, do not realize what Abraham Lincolns' war did to the entire USA economically. By 1863, with the Northern Army consisting of most small, individual dirt farmers: No food crops had been grown in the North since 1861. And with the Union Army destroying the Southern Farms,as well. THERE WAS NO FOOD, ANYWHERE. Abe Lincoln could NOT even feed his army.. And the Union Army was confiscating food every where, North and South and was warehousing it... only for the Union Army. Especially in New York, New York...Desperation for food became so bad: The Union Army had guards on their "Food warehouses:" A bunch of WOMEN had had enough of Mr. Lincolns' War and their children STARVING: The WOMEN took on the UNION ARMY. And the Women took the Union food Warehouses.. And the Women past out UNION ARMY FOOD UNTIL THE WAREHOUSES WAS EMPTY. These Union Army guards.... Said, "They thought it was hard fighting against men but they never wanted to ever a fight with angry WOMEN ever again."
I read the book in 1959 as a 16 year old. We were spending a holiday weekend in a loaned cottage. It rained all the time and I found the book in a bookcase in my room. I spent 2 days and part nights reading in bed till I finished it. It was the best book I ever read and at 19 the film arrived and it was so wonderful. I own the DVD now and have watched the film many times. I don’t think a better film has ever been made. Vivian Leigh was so beautiful. As for Rhett.......❤️
Your experience has been replicated thousands of times. I lost track of where I was when I first read it in '73. TH-cam has dozens of videos of GWTW montages accompanied by modern songs. During the late 2000's and 2010's, a new generation of 16 year olds has discovered its magic.
I grew up hearing how "GWTW" saved my grandmothers life, after her sister died, she must have gone to see it 50 times.She said that it saved her life and gave her the courage to keep on going, regardless of what other miseries were present in her life. It pulls my spirits up too when I slip below my levels.
Ultimately GWTW is a story of survival with a flawed but very strong heroine at it's center. It's not really surprising that it could inspire someone going through a very difficult time.
Hattie McDaniels became the first African American to win an Oscar for her role in this film. Not to mention the first African American woman to win an Oscar in this time frame period.
Isabella Xoxo and yet you wouldn’t win a single prize if you played a queen. What does that say about you, if someone can play a slave and win one of the most prestigious accolades in the film industry?
I’m sure Hattie appreciated her role in “GWW” being acknowledged with a Oscar, but the Supporting award wasn’t in figure form back then. I wonder what year Oscar was the same for Supporting as it was for Best ?
A superb film. Great script and great acting. A wonderful cast of supporting actors such as Leslie Howard and Thomas Mitchell, who were wonderful. But also Olivia de Havilland, who played Melanie, and Hattie McDaniel, who were both marvellous in their roles.
Hattie McDaniel was Beautiful. And performed her character with the utmost honor. She ran the "O'haras' World." And Miss McDaniel deserved the award. It was a different time then. "Love one another, as I have Loved You!" "Do unto others, as ye would have them do unto you." "You Reap what you sow!"
I first read the book when I was about 16 and feel in love with it. It was the first time that I felt the realization of the civil war and the importance of it. I’ve been fascinated with that era ever since. It was such a tragic time in history.
Hattie McDaniel was quoted as saying, "I'd rather PLAY a maid than BE one." If those were the only roles available to her, she did magnificently with what she had. Though Mammy is surprisingly not in the novel a lot, her role in the movie was likely built up because McDaniel was proving to be the glue holding the whole thing together. I'm not sitting here saying slavery was great or justifiable, just that this movie must be seen as a product of its times. Some of the greatest moments are hers, such as the scene where she is walking up the stairs with Melanie telling her about the death of Bonnie and Rhett's reaction. It makes me weep EVERY time. She is a consistent presence in the movie and yet acted her part so seamlessly that you almost don't see how crucial she is to the whole story.
Gone with the Wind is miles better than anything Hollywood makes these days, and it will be remembered long after all the modern woke rubbish has been forgotten.
I saw this movie at the theater for the first time when I was about 9 years old. If you haven't seen it on the big screen you are really missing something. After seeing it on television many times it came to our local theater. My husband had never seen it on the big screen. Only a few people showed up and we were the only ones that stayed to the end. I loved all the costumes and hats and for that reason will continue to enjoy it for what it is. A book made into a movie.
I’ll say it was iconic ! Probably the most recognized item from a film as Dorothy’s ruby slippers ! And didn’t the curtain dress look great on Carol Burnett ?! ( lol ).
@@rnn5676 I was going on a 45(ish) year old memory so thanks for the actual words. I have since found the entire skit on TH-cam and it's still hilarious.
Celia Lovett Watching “Went with the Wind” on the Carol Burnett Show was quite the experience!!! I was laughing so hard I ended up rolling on the floor. My Mom’s side of the family lived in Atlanta during the Civil War. I’m from the west coast and would have been a Yankee! Anyway my MOM made my brother and I go see the movie when we were high schoolers. I read the 1300 page novel and cried at the end. A very epic movie 🥰🌷.
To think that Olivia De havilland has out lived them ALL even the little girl that played Vivien Leigh's little daughter , " Bonnie Blue" ! I think Olivia's over 100 yrs old now !!!
I read the book and Vivien Leigh was perfect for the role of Scarlett. There was only 1 difference between Scarlett and Vivien and it was eye color. Scarlett’s eyes were green but Vivien Leigh’s eyes were blue so that’s why Vivien wore a lot of green was to try to make her eyes look more green than blue.
And the eye colour is incidental anyway. There were actually lots of differences (Scarletts black hair, not being described as beautiful, strong brows) but none of that matters. Vivien was perfect as she was. She WAS Scarlett
@@j.d.youtube6557 Gone With the Wind, the movie, is really not about the Civil War. The SETTTING is the South before, during and after the Civil War, that's all. The movie is about Scarlett O'Hara. She's shown initially as beautiful, vain, spoiled, privileged, hypocritical and selfish; but when the Civil War wrecks her world and brings her to the brink of starvation, her unexpected, innate toughness and determination emerge. She fights her way back, not just to survival but ultimately to affluence and she drags everyone in her circle along with her. She's a flawed character, not traditionally very admirable, but you can't help appreciating her strength. In the end she's still a stinker but she's also still a fighter and you finish the film hoping she'll get Rhett back. So, it's about Scarlett's journey, not about the South or the Civil War or slavery. The film has well-written, distinct, varied characters extremely well acted by the perfect cast. The production was the very top quality available at the time. In my opinion Gone With the Wind had a production design that made the best use of Technicolor EVER. The first three times I saw the film it was in re-release on a full sized theatre screen. You haven't lived until you've seen it that way. It's an excellent story beautifully made on film.
I lack words to respect all about this film. I love the film and the author and all characters in Gone with the Wind. Terrific both the novel and the film. Until now, no film has ever caught the more attention and love for it will live forever, I hope.
I saw this movie the first time in 1976, it was required viewing for school, we took the bus to the local theater to see it. I went to the theater to see it on the 80th anniversary also. I read the book the first time to find out what Melanie told Rhett to let them bury Bonnie. It wasn’t in the book either😊, but I loved the book too and have reread it several times. I watch GWTW on DVD at home. GWTW is a beautiful movie. Not as close to truth as the book, but it should not be taken as a real history lesson. It’s the story & the beautiful presentation, the way it makes you feel. Great achievement in movie making. The book is extraordinary.
I agree. The performances of Hattie McDaniel and Butterfly McQueen brought more dignity and compassion for Black Americans and for that alone, this movie should be protected and remembered. The selfish self absorbed portrayal of Scarlette O'hara with Hattie McDaniel's character was shocking to many of the time and showed the first Black character with more love, compassion and real charity than many other characters and her work alone needs to be respected.
@@billmeeker774 I’m as liberal as you can get, and I don’t want it banned either. And honestly, as good as Vivian Lee is, and her performance is probably the best ever committed to film, we have Clark Gable to thank. The script was full of the n-word (just like the book) and Mr. Gable refused to say that word. He said “If you want me, that word goes.” And everyone wanted Gable as Rhett. This one man taking a stand will keep this movie with us.
You miss the point i think. Django portrayed the true brutality whereas i think people have a problem with the sugarcoating of slavery this movie has. Still a great movie though. It will survive for sure.
@@jd0604 Yes, sugar-coating or not showing reality. We can think of it this way about the film: what Scarlett did to that exhausted horse = the actual treatment of slaves in the era.
I had poor farmer ancestors who had a slave whipped. I also had plantation ancestors who treated the slaves so well they came back to the farm after they nearly starved with the Yankees. Slavery was a brutal system that the South held onto too long, & if you read enough history you find a lot of Southerners were disgusted with it & the deep South planters who owned hundreds of slaves & wanted to continue the system-slavery was a huge part of the financial system of the South. I dislike the generalization of the treatment of slaves. Every slave owner was not brutal. Every slave did not get whipped.
The production is just so otherworldly. GwtW simply shows how literature art would stand on its own... to be pulled of so accurately and to be presented so fantastically in a visual form.
The thing with the HBO removal is that they were put in a situation of ‘damned if u do and damned if u don’t”. Making it available to stream can be considered as being in favor of slavery and idolizing confederates by a lot of people, while at the same time, many other people will get pissed if they think they’re banning it by removing it. HBO did the right thing by relaunching GWTW with an explanation behind this great film and how preserving these films can be hurtful and intense but necessary for understanding history.
Show the movie. People with a problem can stay home & leave the rest of us the hell alone. All the whining in the world currently makes me sick & angry.
Has anyone watching this ever read the book. It has nothing to do with slavery or perceived racism. Those issues are only a backdrop to the story. It is a story of privilege, love and loss. Built around a time of brother killing brother and the tribulations of a 16yr old girl who grows into womanhood through the horrors of war and the realisation of what her womanhood could do for her advancement. Instead of, as Ashley did, lamenting a lost age. Scarlet powers forward to rise above mediocrity and laziness. As with the human condition, you never realise what you have until its gone. Gone with the Wind.
The movie is a great film, the book is closer to real life & deserved the Pulitzer. Mitchell did a huge amount of research, and grew up around people who lived through the war. Mitchell can’t be faulted for the racial attitudes, she was a Southern woman of her time & it’s just the way it was. Scarlett was a planter’s daughter, people criticize the story because it was about a rich girl who lost everything. She fared no better than poorer landowners. I have my family stories, poorer families with farms, one couple lived on corn pone for awhile because it was all they had after the Yankees stole & destroyed everything. The story of loss is universal. My family had the same experiences, starvation, dead & maimed loved ones, loss of money & land. That book is extraordinary as a tale of America. A story of the CW registered with people during the Depression. It ranks with Moby Dick, Huckleberry Finn, & I like to add To Kill a Mockingbird because it’s my favorite book after GWTW.
We have got to stand up for this movie!! Together in One Accord or we will lose it! This movie is Awesome & Hattie McDaniel is Spectacular in it! HISTORY shld never ever be trashed but cherished for the love of those who lived it. We learn from the past & from those who endured it! Our History shld be upheld & left standing!
I first saw GWTW when it was re-released in theaters in 1967. I was 10 years old and l was just blown away. I loved everything about it from the opening theme song to the characters and the costumes and sets. I thought Vivien Leigh was the most beautiful actress l ever saw. I remember the large theater was packed.
I also read the book. The book is just as good as the movie, over a 1,000 pages. Goes into more detail of Scarlet & Rhett Butler. It was fascinating…a great read. Couldn’t put it down. Bought the movie a few years ago.
I am 78 years old I first saw this movie when I was 9 over the years I couldn't possibly remember how many times I have watched it. It is timeless in fact I think I will watch it right now ❤
❤ I watch part two in early 1970s Boxing day x it was split into two parts x to.make sure other movies and shows got fair slots x just brought another dvd mine was bit old x
The first black persons to win the Oscar and she earned it too, no quotas or political bullshit, just good acting and a grateful heart. She was black in 1938, !!!
She dealt with racist shit until the day she died. She couldn't even be buried at Hollywood Cemetery( now Hollywood Forever Cemetery) because of being black. Black in 1938, do you really know what that meant?
Por todos conocida pero vista por tan pocos actualmente, un pecado de omisión para quien se llame un verdadero cinéfilo, en lo personal, la mejor película de la historia aunque pese, adelantada a su época, la obra maestra de David O’ Selznick y apoyado por un ejército de los mejores de su época!!!
Funny how the one guy thought we’d understand more about the film in the future, when realistically it’ll be cancelled just like how aunt Jemima has been erased from history
I went to this exhibition in 2014. It was spectacular. There's an error in this film. At 3:39 it mistakenly shows a picture of George Cukor instead of David Selznick. Which is funny, because they were frequently mistaken for one another back in the '30s. Cukor made jokes about it in interviews.
The photo at 3:39 is unquestionably Cukor and not Selznick. The photo appears, correctly identified, in the book commissioned for the exhibition, "The Making of Gone With the Wind" by Steve Wilson, page 2.
Hattie McDaniels attented the Oscar's but had to sit at a separate table in the back. She could NOT attend the premiere in Atlanta because of the Jim Crow laws in place at the time.
I heard about that, and it was quite a shame, considering that she contributed greatly in that movie, and fully deserved to win that Oscar.It's a great, classic film.
But Hattie McDaniel DID attend the Oscar ceremony contrary to what is stated in this documentary. I read somewhere though that her acceptance speech had been written for her.
I think they got confused. Hattie did attend the Oscars but was banned from the premiere because Atlanta was racist as hell. Even Clark Gable threatened to not attend if they not allowed Hattie to go, but she talked him out of it.
My family moved to Florida when it was the deep south. My school still wasn't desegregated 4 years after the Supreme Court decision. We've come so far now in the US.
18:23 it is said here, and I have always heard it told, that Hattie McDaniel, the actor who played Mammy, could not attend the oscars to collect her award in person because she was black, yet in another documentary from 1987, we can see Hattie stepping up to collect her Oscar. th-cam.com/video/3B4blSwOqNM/w-d-xo.html approx 23 minutes in. So what’s happening there?
I believe it was the director, fought hard to even get her in. Yes it’s unbelievable but what’s worse is that aside from winning the oscar, no one mentions she was the first African American to ever even be at the oscars. I think that in itself is amazing.
This is exactly why we MUST learn True History & uphold it bcz there are others trying to erase it & tell our young people lies! Even during the Civil war & before that were whites that did not have slaves. There were many more who had them but regarded them as friends & family. Treated them so well, that they did not want to leave & stayed on as paid workers & part of that family. The lies are rampant about that era. We must not believe the new narrative but remember & tell the true History of that time. I think most of the misinformation is told now days to stir up hate in America. Furthering the tensions through the land. Mainly bcz if we can not stand in one accord, our enimies from without can march in & destroy our Country & wipe us off the map!! Let us not choose hate but love & stand together in the modern era we live in! Red & yellow, black & white they are precious in His sight!! Pray for America & each other. 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
the older I get, the more I can get outta this movie & the book, (which is better in my opinion, plus must read the sequel "Scarlett") life is hard & we need to be tougher... tomorrow is always another day! I cried after watching it again for like the n-th time I couldn't recall anymore, & I cried for the 1st time upon seeing how Scarlett lost almost everyone & everything when arrived at home, the rich glorious old times is gone now, she must make herself out of nothing & she did it at whatever the costs she could afford, truly remarkable, what a woman!
regardless of slavery, or racism, or whatever cancel culture/WOKE idea is out there, I believe everyone needs someone like Mammy close by to do us some good in life, like just give the real sh*t straight in your face whenever is needed. that's priceless & should be cherished, real love & care. I love it!
I love gone with the wind..i was lucky enough to go see the museum in Georgia..im from the south..i do know i had relatives in the confederacy..found that out doing a history report on our relatives who fought in that war..i disagree 110000% on slavery..but i loved finding out my family's history when it came to the Civil War
If you want to assess the importance of GONE WITH THE WIND, compare it to THE JAZZ SINGER only ten years before. GONE WITH THE WIND was a great achievement in film making. Listen to the dialogue. Rhett and Scarlett aren't hero and heroine. They're anti-hero and anti-heroine. Read Margaret Mitchell's letters, too. I think they will confirm this.
Scarlett’s experience was the same as my poor farmer ancestors, starvation, want, fear, dead & maimed men, loss of money & land. My people survived, Scarlett went further, she was going to survive and be rich. Great character study, Scarlett.
People should make up their own minds, skip it if you don’t like it. This is censorship & cultural marxism. NOBODY has the right to tell me what or how to THINK.
And to all those who want us to engage in censorship of this film (not to mention the removal of statues and more erasure of HISTORY, I do not care about your knee-jerk responses to my comments. Rational dialogue may currently be unpopular in some quarters and under attack in others. And that I DO care about. But it’s pushing 4am so I’ll make this uncharacteristically short and simply remind all of us of an old expression; “ACT IN HASTE. REPENT IN LEISURE.” A dialogue on this issue would be welcome.
The Great Depression DID NOT end in 1936. In fact 1936-37 were two of worst years during the Great Depression era. It wasn't until the outbreak of WW2 that the economy started to turn around and it wasn't until 1943 that full employment was achieved.
It's absolutely heartbreaking that Margaret Mitchell was mowed down by an Atlanta taxi driver. The story of Margaret Mitchell is fascinating, including how Gone With the Wind came to be. th-cam.com/video/4rzQBbIOvks/w-d-xo.html
I understand the reason GWTW is a horrible representation of slavery and it’s black characters. Unfortunately that also is part of America’s history. Erasing our past from books and movies doesn’t erase history. It’s important we all reflect on this movie and talk about it’s faults, if we cancel it, there’s no dialogue.
I would like to write the second book to "Gone with the Wind." I thought the tv version of the second book ... was a flop. And was sadly disappointing.
I didn't see the tv version, but did read the book... and gave it right back to the library. It was written in the 1990s with a 1990s mindset and was very self-consciously, and anachronistically, trying to "atone" for the "sins" of the original, from a 1990s point of view. Blecch.
The TV version of "Gone with the Wind" 2and book...Has Scarlett going back to "England, Ireland" with all the frolicking and Not enough about Tara and the rebuilding of the South. In which, I believe Scarlett as a Southern Woman would have gone to no end to restore O' HARA SOUTH....
The comment that Hattie McDaniel did not attend the Oscar ceremony is not correct. She was there but in a inconspicuous area (which was equally appalling). Her acceptance speech was reviewed by execs beforehand in case she won, again, appalling. Clark Gable was her staunch friend who refused to go to Atlantic if she couldn't. Enormous pressure was brought to bear, and he finally went. He remained a close friend of Hattie's until the end of her life.
@@lauragranger9813 Hey that's another Mary Louise! Funny because I read the book during summer holidays. I was bored & my sister said "Here, read this you'll enjoy it" And of course I did & couldn't put it down & finished it in 3 weeks, then saw the film at the local theatre with my mother & sister & loved it as well. I didn't like Leslie Howard as Ashleigh but my mother said he was considered handsome at the time. Also in the book Scarlett has I think 3 children a boy definitely & another child I can't remember. People always comment on how racist this story is & surely it is, but the author Margaret Mitchell wrote this novel & gathered her information from older relatives who told their stories from this time. So of course the content has a lot of contentious issues relating to civil war, but that's the history of the abolition of slavery & the struggle of the South
laura granger It definitely captures the spirit of the book. In the film, Scarlett is homogenized. There’s no depiction/mention of her reading Melanie’s mail, her threat of abortion, and how she treated her children.
For a professor of film. Tom Schatz is pretty ignorant of his subject. In one sequence, he says Margaret Mitchell had Gable in mind when she wrote the book. False; She always insisted Rhett Butler was not based on Gable at all. Then he says Vivien Leigh was a last-minute decision when introduced by brother Myron at the burning of Atlanta. False; Leigh had been one of the 2 finalists (with Paulette Goddard) for some time. Selznick screened all her movies and watched Fire Over England at least six times before he met her in the flesh. Bad professor! Bad! Bad!!
I made my 20 yr old son watch it last night. I thought his attention span would have been about an hour & we would have to watch it over the next 4 nights. Not only did he watch it straight through, captivated & in awe, but his first words when the movie finished, were " Now I understand why this is considered one of the greatest movies of all time"...happy momma ❤
I’m a 48 yr old Hispanic that just seen the movie for the first time in my life. I’m not in favor of going around removing or deleting history. I saw this movie and was in awe. What a great film. It made me feel sad because I like my naiveness when I see movies and tv. I want to see great actors play great roles. I don’t want to feel like I have to count the amount of different races are playing in the movie so it can feel “equal.” I’m not sure if I’m just getting old but I don’t like where we’re all heading.
Carlos
Thank you for stating it so ELOQUENTLY.
THANK YOU for having your head on straight.
Carlos Medrano, If they would just tell the TRUTH.... Many of these Americans that they "LABELING," for their "Racial Diving of America, as "White Supremacists," many of them dna proces they are some percentage "Native American!" And the earliest of the making of a government, on North America started with "Native Americans." The lying going on in 2021... to LABEL an American group of people is Unconscionable...And is STEPS right out of the "Old Socioligy Play Book" of steps to DESTROY a NATION.. For the Evil Elites know a "Divided NATION can NOT STAND!" It's Biblical.
Yes I couldn’t have said it better
Carlos, can't thank you enough for sharing your thoughts and impressions of GWTW. Read it when I was the same age as Scarlett at the beginning of the story. Sixteen. Saw the film the following year in 1974 when it was re-released in the theater for its 35th anniversary. The book and the film hit me on a visceral level and led me on a journey of discovery about my country's history and its continuing "growing pains" as it tries to fulfill its promise for all of its citizens.. I am so grateful for people like you who can truly understand and appreciate the beauty, importance, and cultural significance of this film. The love story hooked me as a teenager, but the time and setting of both the book and the film enlightened me about the complexity, contradictions, and conflicts that exist between and within human beings. Thank you again for your insightful comment.
The dresses are so beautiful. I can't believe thay survived so well 82 years now
I was probably 10-12 yrs. Old when I saw GWTW, around 1959. It took my breath away, still does, epic film.
When I was in college many years ago, my sociology teacher gave our class an assignment to do a paper on a movie of our choice and write about the relationship between two characters. I chose “Gone With The Wind” and wrote about the relationship between Scarlett O’Hara and Melanie Wilkes. I got an A+ because most people would have focused on Scarlett O’Hara and Rhett Butler’s relationship but I chose to approach it differently because Scarlett and Melanie had more screen time and interaction than any two characters in the movie. This was a great motion picture that had the perfect cast and script and film score. I’ve watched this movie probably a hundred times in my life and it never gets old. The movie was a huge vehicle for its Black character actors and had a huge impact on the storyline. The character of Mammy, was portrayed as intelligent and strong woman who was bold enough to stand up to Scarlett O’Hara, Rhett Butler and didn’t hesitate to put them in their places when they were behaving foolishly. Too many people today, are calling for this movie to be banned because of the slavery theme. They miss the entire point of the movie and the house slaves were portrayed with certain strengths and the 1940 academy awards awarded Hattie McDaniel as best supporting actress and was the first African American actress to win an Oscar.
Yes, Mammy was a strong character! She was the smartest of them all.
Thank God for Mammy! She was telling them exactly the things I wanted to tell them while reading the book. She was smart, loyal, caring and I loved her character.
Loved the character of Mammy. What an actress!
I actually wrote a paper about this book when I was in seventh grade I choose the book because the movie has always been my all-time favorite
Saxon C most of those protesting have probably never watched it.
My heart jumped with joy to even see those dresses in this vid. If I saw them in person, I would definitely cry!
I love gone with the wind , hands down one of the best movies ever made
is the best movie*
"Gone with the Wind," is one of the last movies that they used REAL settings. It took David O Selznick, days to video the sun rise scenes.
"I'LL NEVER GO HUNGRY AGAIN!"
Americans today, do not realize what Abraham Lincolns' war did to the entire USA economically. By 1863, with the Northern Army consisting of most small, individual dirt farmers: No food crops had been grown in the North since 1861. And with the Union Army destroying the Southern Farms,as well. THERE WAS NO FOOD, ANYWHERE. Abe Lincoln could NOT even feed his army..
And the Union Army was confiscating food every where, North and South and was warehousing it... only for the Union Army. Especially in New York, New York...Desperation for food became so bad: The Union Army had guards on their "Food warehouses:" A bunch of WOMEN had had enough of Mr. Lincolns' War and their children STARVING: The WOMEN took on the UNION ARMY. And the Women took the Union food Warehouses..
And the Women past out UNION ARMY FOOD UNTIL THE WAREHOUSES WAS EMPTY. These Union Army guards.... Said, "They thought it was hard fighting against men but they never wanted to ever a fight with angry WOMEN ever again."
Absolutely!
I agree! One of my all time favorites as well
for whites
Still moves me , my favorite movie 🎬. Hands down!
Yes🎉
The best movie with the best cast ever! Nothing will ever compare!
I read the book in 1959 as a 16 year old. We were spending a holiday weekend in a loaned cottage. It rained all the time and I found the book in a bookcase in my room. I spent 2 days and part nights reading in bed till I finished it. It was the best book I ever read and at 19 the film arrived and it was so wonderful. I own the DVD now and have watched the film many times. I don’t think a better film has ever been made. Vivian Leigh was so beautiful. As for Rhett.......❤️
Your experience has been replicated thousands of times. I lost track of where I was when I first read it in '73. TH-cam has dozens of videos of GWTW montages accompanied by modern songs. During the late 2000's and 2010's, a new generation of 16 year olds has discovered its magic.
@@lnl3237 🥰
@@carolking6355Do you mean that you saw the film when you were 19? Because it came out in the 1930s.
Best film ever made . I've got the dvd I love it.
This is one of my favorite movies and books of all time
I grew up hearing how "GWTW" saved my grandmothers life, after her sister died, she must have gone to see it 50 times.She said that it saved her life and gave her the courage to keep on going, regardless of what other miseries were present in her life.
It pulls my spirits up too when I slip below my levels.
I can not simply believe that Gone with the wind is 82 years old the memory is still fresh
Ultimately GWTW is a story of survival with a flawed but very strong heroine at it's center. It's not really surprising that it could inspire someone going through a very difficult time.
🌹Yes.
Hattie McDaniels became the first African American to win an Oscar for her role in this film. Not to mention the first African American woman to win an Oscar in this time frame period.
For playing a slave. Whoopie 🙄
Isabella Xoxo and yet you wouldn’t win a single prize if you played a queen. What does that say about you, if someone can play a slave and win one of the most prestigious accolades in the film industry?
I’m sure Hattie appreciated her role in “GWW” being acknowledged with a Oscar, but the Supporting award wasn’t in figure form back then. I wonder what year Oscar was the same for Supporting as it was for Best ?
Ed Warlock Proved that her portrayal of a what a slave living in the South looked and acted like was spot-on .
@@isabellaxoxo8357 You could win the AA playing Jekyll and Hyde. Fredric March did.
So many publications/websites name Citizen Kane as the #1 greatest movie of all time; however, I would have to put Gone with the Wind ahead of it.
citizen kane was boring
ABSOLUTELY!!!!
A superb film. Great script and great acting. A wonderful cast of supporting actors such as Leslie Howard and Thomas Mitchell, who were wonderful. But also Olivia de Havilland, who played Melanie, and Hattie McDaniel, who were both marvellous in their roles.
HATTIE MCDANIEL WAS A CLASSY AND DIGNIFIED LADY. THE WAY SHE WAS TREATED AT THE OSCARS WAS APPALLING.
Hattie McDaniel was Beautiful. And performed her character with the utmost honor. She ran the "O'haras' World." And Miss McDaniel deserved the award. It was a different time then. "Love one another, as I have Loved You!" "Do unto others, as ye would have them do unto you." "You Reap what you sow!"
Those were the days unfortunately. She rose above it.
Hattie McDaniel was a trailblazer....Clark gable hung out at her house. Change doesn't happen over night.
I didn’t see pregisrtryi saw a love story full of love sad and happ days of a family I love gwtw then now and for all times
@@louise-yo7kzyes. She had a gorgeous mansion and lived very well. She had many friends in the biggest stars who came to her famously fun parties.
I first read the book when I was about 16 and feel in love with it. It was the first time that I felt the realization of the civil war and the importance of it. I’ve been fascinated with that era ever since. It was such a tragic time in history.
Hattie's famous saying, I'd rather make $700 a week playing a maid, than $7 a day being one.
I think she said "7 dollars A WEEK" playing one.
That’s right and she was treated abominably by black civil rights leaders at the time.
Hattie McDaniel was quoted as saying, "I'd rather PLAY a maid than BE one." If those were the only roles available to her, she did magnificently with what she had. Though Mammy is surprisingly not in the novel a lot, her role in the movie was likely built up because McDaniel was proving to be the glue holding the whole thing together. I'm not sitting here saying slavery was great or justifiable, just that this movie must be seen as a product of its times. Some of the greatest moments are hers, such as the scene where she is walking up the stairs with Melanie telling her about the death of Bonnie and Rhett's reaction. It makes me weep EVERY time. She is a consistent presence in the movie and yet acted her part so seamlessly that you almost don't see how crucial she is to the whole story.
Yes slavery was justified.
It is written that every nation who sins greatly will be humbled through slavery.
Happened even to the chosen in Egipt.
Amen!!!
That scene breaks my heart every time too. Truly great acting and very, very visceral.
That scene is so raw, made me cry last week
Gone with the Wind is miles better than anything Hollywood makes these days, and it will be remembered long after all the modern woke rubbish has been forgotten.
I saw this movie at the theater for the first time when I was about 9 years old. If you haven't seen it on the big screen you are really missing something. After seeing it on television many times it came to our local theater. My husband had never seen it on the big screen. Only a few people showed up and we were the only ones that stayed to the end. I loved all the costumes and hats and for that reason will continue to enjoy it for what it is. A book made into a movie.
This is one of my favorite movies. I've never seen it on big screen though. But I can recite it line for line from memory!
Saw it in 2014 for the 75th at the cinemas..a dream come true. ❤️
I compair this film whit my life " all gone whit the wind"
One of my top favorite movies.
The curtain dress is so iconic! I would have loved to see it!
I’ll say it was iconic ! Probably the most recognized item from a film as Dorothy’s ruby slippers ! And didn’t the curtain dress look great on Carol Burnett ?! ( lol ).
Curtain rod intact?
harlandted Lol !
Aida Rashid
That phrase is totally Carol Burnett: Went with the Wind.
Aida Rashid 🤣😂
I first saw this wonderful movie in a special cinema re-release. It was thankfully the best way for me to truly know and understand the story.
I can't help but think of Carol Burnett's GWTH take on Scarlett's green velvet dress. "Just saw it in the window and couldn't help myself."
@Celia Lovett correct quote is, “Thank you, I saw it in the window and I just couldn't resist it"
@@rnn5676 I was going on a 45(ish) year old memory so thanks for the actual words. I have since found the entire skit on TH-cam and it's still hilarious.
Celia Lovett Watching “Went with the Wind” on the Carol Burnett Show was quite the experience!!! I was laughing so hard I ended up
rolling on the floor. My Mom’s side of the family lived in Atlanta during the Civil War. I’m from the west coast and would have been a Yankee! Anyway my MOM made my brother and I go see the movie when we were high schoolers. I read the 1300 page novel and cried at the end. A very epic movie 🥰🌷.
To think that Olivia De havilland has out lived them ALL even the little girl that played Vivien Leigh's little daughter , " Bonnie Blue" ! I think Olivia's over 100 yrs old now !!!
😁
I read the book and Vivien Leigh was perfect for the role of Scarlett. There was only 1 difference between Scarlett and Vivien and it was eye color. Scarlett’s eyes were green but Vivien Leigh’s eyes were blue so that’s why Vivien wore a lot of green was to try to make her eyes look more green than blue.
And the eye colour is incidental anyway. There were actually lots of differences (Scarletts black hair, not being described as beautiful, strong brows) but none of that matters. Vivien was perfect as she was. She WAS Scarlett
Yes her colour was Blue,made no difference to the story,she was a very beautiful woman and a damn good actress
Number one ☝️ film 🎥 forever
Gone With the Wind film is like a beautiful dream.
'a beautiful dream' about the civil war? Do you know anything about the civil war?
@@j.d.youtube6557
Gone With the Wind, the movie, is really not about the Civil War. The SETTTING is the South before, during and after the Civil War, that's all.
The movie is about Scarlett O'Hara. She's shown initially as beautiful, vain, spoiled, privileged, hypocritical and selfish; but when the Civil War wrecks her world and brings her to the brink of starvation, her unexpected, innate toughness and determination emerge. She fights her way back, not just to survival but ultimately to affluence and she drags everyone in her circle along with her. She's a flawed character, not traditionally very admirable, but you can't help appreciating her strength. In the end she's still a stinker but she's also still a fighter and you finish the film hoping she'll get Rhett back.
So, it's about Scarlett's journey, not about the South or the Civil War or slavery.
The film has well-written, distinct, varied characters extremely well acted by the perfect cast. The production was the very top quality available at the time. In my opinion Gone With the Wind had a production design that made the best use of Technicolor EVER. The first three times I saw the film it was in re-release on a full sized theatre screen. You haven't lived until you've seen it that way. It's an excellent story beautifully made on film.
Scarlett’s gowns were stunning. She was so small and tiny.
I lack words to respect all about this film. I love the film and the author and all characters in Gone with the Wind. Terrific both the novel and the film. Until now, no film has ever caught the more attention and love for it will live forever, I hope.
One of the best movies made
Loved since my mom told me as a kids still a big hit classic today.
the best movie of all the times
I named my 9 year old daughter Scarlett after this movie. I feel it's about survival. Human nature.
A friend at school was named Scarlett, and she named her daughter Tara. 💕
Wow, most people name their babies when they are born!😂
I saw this movie the first time in 1976, it was required viewing for school, we took the bus to the local theater to see it. I went to the theater to see it on the 80th anniversary also. I read the book the first time to find out what Melanie told Rhett to let them bury Bonnie. It wasn’t in the book either😊, but I loved the book too and have reread it several times. I watch GWTW on DVD at home. GWTW is a beautiful movie. Not as close to truth as the book, but it should not be taken as a real history lesson. It’s the story & the beautiful presentation, the way it makes you feel. Great achievement in movie making. The book is extraordinary.
Never forget history!!!!
It’s a movie that came long time ago please have patients with it and don’t ban it....
I agree. The performances of Hattie McDaniel and Butterfly McQueen brought more dignity and compassion for Black Americans and for that alone, this movie should be protected and remembered. The selfish self absorbed portrayal of Scarlette O'hara with Hattie McDaniel's character was shocking to many of the time and showed the first Black character with more love, compassion and real charity than many other characters and her work alone needs to be respected.
Agreed.
If GWTW is banned, then we need to ban Straight Outta Compton, Boyz in the Hood and all that bullshit too. You can't have it both ways.
@@billmeeker774 wl
@@billmeeker774 I’m as liberal as you can get, and I don’t want it banned either. And honestly, as good as Vivian Lee is, and her performance is probably the best ever committed to film, we have Clark Gable to thank. The script was full of the n-word (just like the book) and Mr. Gable refused to say that word. He said “If you want me, that word goes.” And everyone wanted Gable as Rhett. This one man taking a stand will keep this movie with us.
Ppl trying to censor this movie meanwhile, Quentin Tarantino's "Django" which has very graphic imagery, nobody is batting an eye.
Not exactly "meanwhile", 80 years later😆 But I see your point, the Hayes code was disgraceful. "Land of the free (speech)" my foot!!
You miss the point i think. Django portrayed the true brutality whereas i think people have a problem with the sugarcoating of slavery this movie has. Still a great movie though. It will survive for sure.
@@jd0604 Yes, sugar-coating or not showing reality. We can think of it this way about the film: what Scarlett did to that exhausted horse = the actual treatment of slaves in the era.
I had poor farmer ancestors who had a slave whipped. I also had plantation ancestors who treated the slaves so well they came back to the farm after they nearly starved with the Yankees. Slavery was a brutal system that the South held onto too long, & if you read enough history you find a lot of Southerners were disgusted with it & the deep South planters who owned hundreds of slaves & wanted to continue the system-slavery was a huge part of the financial system of the South. I dislike the generalization of the treatment of slaves. Every slave owner was not brutal. Every slave did not get whipped.
The films that America has produced are many, but the milestones are few. This movie is one of them
Vivien Leigh: the face of a Dresden doll kitten Angel
The production is just so otherworldly. GwtW simply shows how literature art would stand on its own... to be pulled of so accurately and to be presented so fantastically in a visual form.
The thing with the HBO removal is that they were put in a situation of ‘damned if u do and damned if u don’t”. Making it available to stream can be considered as being in favor of slavery and idolizing confederates by a lot of people, while at the same time, many other people will get pissed if they think they’re banning it by removing it.
HBO did the right thing by relaunching GWTW with an explanation behind this great film and how preserving these films can be hurtful and intense but necessary for understanding history.
It’s a goddamn movie it cannot be construed as supporting slavery by showing it . Jesus
So if you show Schindler‘s list that means you condone burning Jews killing Jews don’t be a dumb ass
Show the movie. People with a problem can stay home & leave the rest of us the hell alone. All the whining in the world currently makes me sick & angry.
Has anyone watching this ever read the book. It has nothing to do with slavery or perceived racism. Those issues are only a backdrop to the story. It is a story of privilege, love and loss. Built around a time of brother killing brother and the tribulations of a 16yr old girl who grows into womanhood through the horrors of war and the realisation of what her womanhood could do for her advancement. Instead of, as Ashley did, lamenting a lost age. Scarlet powers forward to rise above mediocrity and laziness. As with the human condition, you never realise what you have until its gone. Gone with the Wind.
The movie is a great film, the book is closer to real life & deserved the Pulitzer. Mitchell did a huge amount of research, and grew up around people who lived through the war. Mitchell can’t be faulted for the racial attitudes, she was a Southern woman of her time & it’s just the way it was. Scarlett was a planter’s daughter, people criticize the story because it was about a rich girl who lost everything. She fared no better than poorer landowners. I have my family stories, poorer families with farms, one couple lived on corn pone for awhile because it was all they had after the Yankees stole & destroyed everything. The story of loss is universal. My family had the same experiences, starvation, dead & maimed loved ones, loss of money & land. That book is extraordinary as a tale of America. A story of the CW registered with people during the Depression. It ranks with Moby Dick, Huckleberry Finn, & I like to add To Kill a Mockingbird because it’s my favorite book after GWTW.
DEMOCOMMIES RACISMO GO FAR AWAY
We have got to stand up for this movie!! Together in One Accord or we will lose it! This movie is Awesome & Hattie McDaniel is Spectacular in it! HISTORY shld never ever be trashed but cherished for the love of those who lived it. We learn from the past & from those who endured it! Our History shld be upheld & left standing!
Appreciating the movie doesn't mean you condone human enslavement.
@@christinec.6685 Of course not! I agree 100%!
DVD.....period
This movie is outstanding my favorite Love Love Love 💕 it 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰 I am 67 and still this move is number one for me 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
I'm 65. I love this. Motion. Picture
The first time I watched this movie was with my mother who wanted me to see at local theater in the 1960's. I was impressed🎉
When I saw the curtain scene, I can’t help but think of carol Barnete
Historic, for sure.
I first saw GWTW when it was re-released in theaters in 1967. I was 10 years old and l was just blown away. I loved everything about it from the opening theme song to the characters and the costumes and sets. I thought Vivien Leigh was the most beautiful actress l ever saw. I remember the large theater was packed.
Обожаю этот фильм.Посмотрела его ещё в детстве. Теперь смотрю вместе со своей дочкой.
I also read the book. The book is just as good as the movie, over a 1,000 pages. Goes into more detail of Scarlet & Rhett Butler. It was fascinating…a great read. Couldn’t put it down. Bought the movie a few years ago.
I am 78 years old I first saw this movie when I was 9 over the years I couldn't possibly remember how many times I have watched it. It is timeless in fact I think I will watch it right now ❤
❤ I watch part two in early 1970s Boxing day x it was split into two parts x to.make sure other movies and shows got fair slots x just brought another dvd mine was bit old x
The first black persons to win the Oscar and she earned it too, no quotas or political bullshit, just good acting and a grateful heart. She was black in 1938, !!!
So, are you saying that all of the non-white Oscar winners that followed didn't deserve their awards?
Hattie MacDaniel had to enter by a different entrance from her white co-stars, and wasn't allowed to sit at the table with the other stars.
She dealt with racist shit until the day she died. She couldn't even be buried at Hollywood Cemetery( now Hollywood Forever Cemetery) because of being black. Black in 1938, do you really know what that meant?
GypsyFairy85 I know but they said she had big parties all the time in her big house. So for the time she must have lived pretty well. 1939.
Dee Rush I guess you’ve noticed by now I didn’t even respond to your remark? lol
저는 바람과 함께 사라지다를 영화 연극 다해서 21번 봤습니다. 내 인생에 길이남을 명작이죠
Por todos conocida pero vista por tan pocos actualmente, un pecado de omisión para quien se llame un verdadero cinéfilo, en lo personal, la mejor película de la historia aunque pese, adelantada a su época, la obra maestra de David O’ Selznick y apoyado por un ejército de los mejores de su época!!!
Muy bien dicho,,pelicula épica
Funny how the one guy thought we’d understand more about the film in the future, when realistically it’ll be cancelled just like how aunt Jemima has been erased from history
As God is my witness.
One of my favorites..... Great actors& actresses.......Excellent...
I went to this exhibition in 2014. It was spectacular. There's an error in this film. At 3:39 it mistakenly shows a picture of George Cukor instead of David Selznick. Which is funny, because they were frequently mistaken for one another back in the '30s. Cukor made jokes about it in interviews.
Actually that is David O. Selznick. He and George Cukor looked very similar and in fact, their pictures do get mixed up when googled.
The photo at 3:39 is unquestionably Cukor and not Selznick. The photo appears, correctly identified, in the book commissioned for the exhibition, "The Making of Gone With the Wind" by Steve Wilson, page 2.
It's a picture of both men
Hattie McDaniels attented the Oscar's but had to sit at a separate table in the back. She could NOT attend the premiere in Atlanta because of the Jim Crow laws in place at the time.
I heard about that, and it was quite a shame, considering that she contributed greatly in that movie, and fully deserved to win that Oscar.It's a great, classic film.
And apparently had to come in the back door!
Yes, sad and disgraceful how little has changed in a way.
Gary Dubois Terrible. So glad things have changed.
@@annnee6818 Oh come in on! Alot has changed!
I Love "Gone With the Wind!" For the scenes are authentic and not that of creativity."
But Hattie McDaniel DID attend the Oscar ceremony contrary to what is stated in this documentary. I read somewhere though that her acceptance speech had been written for her.
seats in the Oscars were segregated, too.
Clark Gable said he wouldn't go, unless Hattie was allowed to attend the Oscar ceremony.
I heard she was given a table on her own, near the kitchen?
I think they got confused. Hattie did attend the Oscars but was banned from the premiere because Atlanta was racist as hell. Even Clark Gable threatened to not attend if they not allowed Hattie to go, but she talked him out of it.
Pop Tart. I read that Mr. Gable and Ms McDaniel were indeed good friends.
My family moved to Florida when it was the deep south. My school still wasn't desegregated 4 years after the Supreme Court decision. We've come so far now in the US.
DeSantis is trying to take Florida back to the 1850’s.
Juat saw the re release in the theatre! So hood one of my favorite movies of all time
From New Jersey I didn’t understand how important this Civil War was. Then I came here to Florida which is the South so I had a different perspective.
New Jersey was not a pile of rubble at the end of the war. My state on the other hand…😉
does anyone think that 80 to 100 years from now people will remember avengers movies? probably not hahaha
This was really good.
So beautiful Vivien leigh 🌹🌹🌹🌹💗💗💗💗💗💗
18:23 it is said here, and I have always heard it told, that Hattie McDaniel, the actor who played Mammy, could not attend the oscars to collect her award in person because she was black, yet in another documentary from 1987, we can see Hattie stepping up to collect her Oscar. th-cam.com/video/3B4blSwOqNM/w-d-xo.html approx 23 minutes in. So what’s happening there?
she was there but was made to sit separate from everyone else because of her colour I believe. Totally unbelievable.
I believe it was the director, fought hard to even get her in. Yes it’s unbelievable but what’s worse is that aside from winning the oscar, no one mentions she was the first African American to ever even be at the oscars. I think that in itself is amazing.
she was allowed to collet her oscar but was denied attending (sit and dine) the ceremony itself.
This is exactly why we MUST learn True History & uphold it bcz there are others trying to erase it & tell our young people lies! Even during the Civil war & before that were whites that did not have slaves. There were many more who had them but regarded them as friends & family. Treated them so well, that they did not want to leave & stayed on as paid workers & part of that family. The lies are rampant about that era. We must not believe the new narrative but remember & tell the true History of that time. I think most of the misinformation is told now days to stir up hate in America. Furthering the tensions through the land. Mainly bcz if we can not stand in one accord, our enimies from without can march in & destroy our Country & wipe us off the map!! Let us not choose hate but love & stand together in the modern era we live in! Red & yellow, black & white they are precious in His sight!! Pray for America & each other. 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
No! Her attendance is on film and they repeated that myth. Shame. It is all on FILM!! The guy totally lied.
the older I get, the more I can get outta this movie & the book, (which is better in my opinion, plus must read the sequel "Scarlett") life is hard & we need to be tougher... tomorrow is always another day!
I cried after watching it again for like the n-th time I couldn't recall anymore, & I cried for the 1st time upon seeing how Scarlett lost almost everyone & everything when arrived at home, the rich glorious old times is gone now, she must make herself out of nothing & she did it at whatever the costs she could afford, truly remarkable, what a woman!
regardless of slavery, or racism, or whatever cancel culture/WOKE idea is out there, I believe everyone needs someone like Mammy close by to do us some good in life, like just give the real sh*t straight in your face whenever is needed. that's priceless & should be cherished, real love & care. I love it!
I love gone with the wind..i was lucky enough to go see the museum in Georgia..im from the south..i do know i had relatives in the confederacy..found that out doing a history report on our relatives who fought in that war..i disagree 110000% on slavery..but i loved finding out my family's history when it came to the Civil War
Everyone brings their own experience to this movie and book.
The movie as great as it is and I have seen it numerous times... Read the book!! ❤️
I was just listening when it began, and I swore I was hearing Clark Gregg!
If you want to assess the importance of GONE WITH THE WIND, compare it to THE JAZZ SINGER only ten years before. GONE WITH THE WIND was a great achievement in film making. Listen to the dialogue. Rhett and Scarlett aren't hero and heroine. They're anti-hero and anti-heroine. Read Margaret Mitchell's letters, too. I think they will confirm this.
Fantastic movie
I love the book and the movie. It gives a good look into the civil war era from the white plantation owners persective.
Scarlett’s experience was the same as my poor farmer ancestors, starvation, want, fear, dead & maimed men, loss of money & land. My people survived, Scarlett went further, she was going to survive and be rich. Great character study, Scarlett.
No ! GWTW IS NOT ABOUT THE GREAT DEPRESSION !
True. It was written in the 1920s.
Vivien Leigh didn’t live long enough to see what a huge cinematic project she made.
She lived until 1967. The movie was released in 1939, so she definitely was able to appreciate how greatly the movie was received.
@@willen2416 I know that.. but imagine up to these years like Olivia de havilland. ☺️
Wrong. You must mean Margaret Mitchell not Vivian Leigh.
Hattie McDaniel did attend the Oscar ceremony, however she was forced to sit at a table near the kitchen. Disgusting.
Taking it off Netflix is shameful
People should make up their own minds, skip it if you don’t like it. This is censorship & cultural marxism. NOBODY has the right to tell me what or how to THINK.
Don't delete history!
And to all those who want us to engage in censorship of this film (not to mention the removal of statues and more erasure of HISTORY, I do not care about your knee-jerk responses to my comments. Rational dialogue may currently be unpopular in some quarters and under attack in others. And that I DO care about. But it’s pushing 4am so I’ll make this uncharacteristically short and simply remind all of us of an old expression;
“ACT IN HASTE. REPENT IN LEISURE.”
A dialogue on this issue would be welcome.
Clark Gable was good friends with Vic Fleming. They went hunting and fishing together. He did not care too much for George Cukor.
FABULOUS POST.
I thought the fence was pretty good as well.
The Great Depression DID NOT end in 1936. In fact 1936-37 were two of worst years during the Great Depression era. It wasn't until the outbreak of WW2 that the economy started to turn around and it wasn't until 1943 that full employment was achieved.
TRUTH!
Guiero verla completa la película lo gue el viento se llevó
Selznick got it right
Ok, the editing of the multiple segments needs to be linked better. Black screen for several minutes is disconcerting vs shorter cut.
It's absolutely heartbreaking that Margaret Mitchell was mowed down by an Atlanta taxi driver. The story of Margaret Mitchell is fascinating, including how Gone With the Wind came to be. th-cam.com/video/4rzQBbIOvks/w-d-xo.html
I understand the reason GWTW is a horrible representation of slavery and it’s black characters. Unfortunately that also is part of America’s history. Erasing our past from books and movies doesn’t erase history. It’s important we all reflect on this movie and talk about it’s faults, if we cancel it, there’s no dialogue.
I would like to write the second book to "Gone with the Wind." I thought the tv version of the second book ... was a flop. And was sadly disappointing.
I didn't see the tv version, but did read the book... and gave it right back to the library. It was written in the 1990s with a 1990s mindset and was very self-consciously, and anachronistically, trying to "atone" for the "sins" of the original, from a 1990s point of view. Blecch.
The TV version of "Gone with the Wind" 2and book...Has Scarlett going back to "England, Ireland" with all the frolicking and Not enough about Tara and the rebuilding of the South. In which, I believe Scarlett as a Southern Woman would have gone to no end to restore O' HARA SOUTH....
That book & movie were such garbage!
The comment that Hattie McDaniel did not attend the Oscar ceremony is not correct. She was there but in a inconspicuous area (which was equally appalling). Her acceptance speech was reviewed by execs beforehand in case she won, again, appalling. Clark Gable was her staunch friend who refused to go to Atlantic if she couldn't. Enormous pressure was brought to bear, and he finally went. He remained a close friend of Hattie's until the end of her life.
I read the book before I saw the film.
Mary Louise do you think it’s a good rendition?
Mary Louise i ask because most today have seen the film first and id be interested in hearing that perspective
Mary Louise same girl
@@lauragranger9813 Hey that's another Mary Louise! Funny because I read the book during summer holidays. I was bored & my sister said "Here, read this you'll enjoy it" And of course I did & couldn't put it down & finished it in 3 weeks, then saw the film at the local theatre with my mother & sister & loved it as well. I didn't like Leslie Howard as Ashleigh but my mother said he was considered handsome at the time. Also in the book Scarlett has I think 3 children a boy definitely & another child I can't remember. People always comment on how racist this story is & surely it is, but the author Margaret Mitchell wrote this novel & gathered her information from older relatives who told their stories from this time. So of course the content has a lot of contentious issues relating to civil war, but that's the history of the abolition of slavery & the struggle of the South
laura granger
It definitely captures the spirit of the book. In the film, Scarlett is homogenized. There’s no depiction/mention of her reading Melanie’s mail, her threat of abortion, and how she treated her children.
For a professor of film. Tom Schatz is pretty ignorant of his subject. In one sequence, he says Margaret Mitchell had Gable in mind when she wrote the book. False; She always insisted Rhett Butler was not based on Gable at all. Then he says Vivien Leigh was a last-minute decision when introduced by brother Myron at the burning of Atlanta. False; Leigh had been one of the 2 finalists (with Paulette Goddard) for some time. Selznick screened all her movies and watched Fire Over England at least six times before he met her in the flesh. Bad professor! Bad! Bad!!
Yes, in letters Mitchell said her circle preferred Basil Rathbone for one as Rhett!
@@nativevirginian8344 He says Selznick went independent "to make" GWTW. False! His independent studio was already well-established when he made it.
Red gown worn to birthday party, curtain dress, green wrapper, wedding dress... what was the fifth dress on exhibit?
Minna Humble the blue robe with fur trim from when Bonnie falls.
Lyn Ryall well you need to brush up and re watch the film because when Bonnie dies she is wearing a blue robe with black fur trim. 😉
Lyn Ryall sorry but namasteph is right. She is definitely wearing blue with black fur trim!
The 5th costume is the green robe with gold trim . From her scene when she told Rhett she only wanted to be married in name only
Leesa Randleman that is what she meant by the green wrapper ;)
I can imagine for any part of me Katharine Hepburn as the lead in Gone With the Wind.
Can or can't? Your comment is confusing.
Selznick said, "nobody will believe a man chased you for 10 years" which is the length of Scarlet and Rhet's relationship. (He said this to Hepburn)
A New England Yankee playing Scarlett, what a travesty!
@@nativevirginian8344 Kate was not a beauty. She was never in the running.
Margaret Mitchell said she wrote about people who had 'gumption' and those who didn't .