advertisements


Gone with the Wind (review)

The Heroine's Journey

If you love Gone with the Wind, you must see the restored version that's new to video. The remastered soundtrack is crisp and clear, and Max Steiner's lavish score sounds wonderful, but it's the cleaned-up film stock that astounds: Victor Fleming's 60-year-old movie looks like it was shot this year.


more below the ad... scroll down...


Yet it's not the dazzling technical makeover but the film's resonant, epic story that makes Gone with the Wind worth watching again. Scarlett O'Hara (Vivien Leigh) travels the classic hero's journey, which fiction rarely allows a woman to experience. The traditional structure begins with a young naïf: Scarlett, spoiled and pampered, is so used to getting her own way that when drippy Ashley Wilkes (Leslie Howard) refuses her hand, she foolishly marries the first suitor who asks her out of pure petulance. Typically, the naïf is thrust from her protected home into the frightening real world: Widowed quickly after the outbreak of the war with the North, Scarlett is sent from her beloved Tara to her aunt's house in Atlanta. Our hero faces personal and moral danger in the big, bad world: Atlanta under siege is a city in the grip of a panic brilliantly depicted, threatening bodily harm, and Scarlett's reputation is at risk when she falls in with the blockade runner Rhett Butler (Clark Gable), even though she's still supposed to be in mourning for her dead husband.

But our hero survives the dangers, and emerges wiser and old beyond her years: Scarlett finds it within herself to protect Ashley's wife, Melanie (Olivia De Haviland), simply because she promised him she'd take care of Melanie, though she can't stand the woman who stole the man she loves. The hero returns to her cherished home, usually under attack from the outside, hoping to save it: Scarlett goes back to Tara to find it devastated, her father unable to care for it, her mother dead, and vows to rebuild. But like the typical hero, she finds that an impossible dream.

And that's just the first half of the film!

Gone with the Wind endures thanks to its other mythic characters as well. Rhett is the archetypal rogue, grandfather to that other filmic outlaw Han Solo -- we like Butler because he's a scoundrel -- indeed, some of Solo's classic lines come right out of Butler's mouth. Melanie is a model of virtue, forgiving or ignoring slights and always seeing the best in everyone, even if that best is only in her imagination.

In another 60 years, and another, film fans will be still marveling at Gone with the Wind.

Outstanding Production 1939
AFI 100: #4

unforgettable movie moment:
After the ruinous siege of Atlanta, thousands of wounded and dying men laid out on the bare ground.

previous Best Picture:
1938: You Can't Take It with You
next Best Picture:
1940: Rebecca

previous AFI 100 film:
3: The Godfather
next AFI 100 film:
5: Lawrence of Arabia

viewed at home on a small screen
not rated
IMDB

who I am


I'm MaryAnn Johanson: geek goddess, film critic, and Generation Xer. I'm a writer and ponderer in New York City who drinks too much wine and thinks way too much about such inconsequences as movies, TV, books, and the meaning of life.
[email me]

• contributor, Film.com
• member, Online Film Critics Society
• member, Alliance of Women Film Journalists
• member, International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences

photo by David Speranza

(subscribe to the postings feed)

go here for a list of all the latest postings

Add to Technorati Favorites

recent screenings and hot movies

just opened
red for no Speed Racer
green for go Before the Rains
red for no A Previous Engagement
green for go The Fall
yellow for maybe Noise
green for go The Babysitters
box office top 5
green for go Iron Man
red for no Made of Honor
red for no Baby Mama
red for no Forgetting Sarah Marshall
Harold and Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay
top limited releases
green for go The Visitor
Young@Heart
Shine a Light
The Counterfeiters
Then She Found Me
coming soon
green for go Mongol
yellow for maybe Quid Pro Quo
yellow for maybe The Wackness
now playing
yellow for maybe Constantine's Sword
green for go Son of Rambow
red for no Redbelt
green for go Caramel
green for go Four Minutes (Vier Minuten)
green for go Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed
green for go The Forbidden Kingdom
green for go Nim's Island
yellow for maybe Up the Yangtze
green for go Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden?
green for go Street Kings
yellow for maybe 21
yellow for maybe Smart People
green for go Under the Same Moon

2008 screening log
2007 screening log

new on dvd

05.06
green for go I'm Not There [buy]
green for go Teeth [buy]
green for go How to Cook Your Life [buy]
green for go P.S. I Love You [buy]
green for go The Business of Being Born [buy]
green for go 2007 Academy Award Nominated Short Films [buy]
yellow for maybe Delirious [buy]
red for no First Sunday [buy]
red for no Over Her Dead Body [buy]
red for no The First of May [buy]
green for go Serial Mom: Collector's Edition [buy]
04.29
green for go The Diving Bell and the Butterfly [buy]
green for go Nanking [buy]
green for go How She Move [buy]
green for go The Golden Compass [buy]
red for no 27 Dresses [buy]
green for go Pearl Diver [buy]
green for go The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Volume 3 [buy]
green for go Lost: The Complete Seasons 1-3 [buy]
04.22
green for go Cloverfield [buy]
green for go The Orphanage [buy]
green for go Charlie Wilson's War [buy]
green for go The Savages [buy]
yellow for maybe Starting Out in the Evening [buy]

advertisements

search

Google
flickfilosopher.com
web
Powered by
Movable Type 3.36