Google+ Cinema Viewfinder: Gone With the Wind
Showing posts with label Gone With the Wind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gone With the Wind. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Revisiting Gone with the Wind (1939) and its Problematic Legacy

by Tony Dayoub


From my column in this week's Wide Screen:
Next month marks the 75th anniversary of the publication of Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind, and 150 years ago last month, the first shots of the American Civil War were fired. Here in Atlanta, now a mecca for many African-Americans well-versed in the rich history of the city’s civil rights movement, one can still find dubious organizations, like the Sons of Confederate Veterans, that refer to the Civil War as the War of Northern Aggression.

In fact, living in present-day Atlanta is a curiously dichotomous affair. The past and the present are constantly juxtaposed in the strangest of ways. Take our midtown, a thriving collection of gleaming, new buildings reaching into the sky and surrounding landmarks like the iconic Varsity restaurant (the largest drive-in joint in the world), Peachtree Street’s Fox Theatre (once – and sometimes, again – a luxurious movie palace), or the Margaret Mitchell House, the place where the author wrote a large portion of Gone with the Wind until moving out in 1932. The Margaret Mitchell House itself is emblematic of Atlanta’s and, indeed, the South’s tendency to rehabilitate its image in light of its dubious history before the civil rights era.

Mitchell and her second husband, John Marsh, never actually had the run of the entire house, affectionately nicknamed “the Dump” by the novelist. In 1925, when the building was a 10-unit dwelling known as the Crescent Apartments, Peggy Mitchell (as she was known to her fellow journalists at the Atlanta Journal) and Marsh moved into Apartment 1 on the ground floor. Last week, I took a tour of the small flat. I was shocked by its size, so tiny that the radiator is bolted to the living room ceiling. Much of the furniture in the apartment, though not actually Mitchell’s, is of the period. And many of the objects that occupy the rest of the museum are replicas, looking accurate despite not being the true antique objects of value.

So it is with Gone with the Wind (1939), a film that only approximates the truth about Southern society pre- and post-Civil War, distorting its more unsavory realities...
CONTINUE READING AT NOMAD EDITIONS: WIDE SCREEN

Saturday, November 14, 2009

UPDATED: Gone With the Wind DVD Giveaway

by Tony Dayoub



On Tuesday, Warner Home Video will release the 70th Anniversary 2-Disc Special Edition DVD of Gone With the Wind (1939) (there's an extra nice package on Blu-ray as well). It includes the newly remastered film and commentary by historian Rudy Behlmer. I have one copy of the DVD available to give away (courtesy of Warner Home Video) to the first person who can answer the following question correctly. But first, the rules:

The Most Unusual Flash Mob You'll Ever See

by Tony Dayoub



Yesterday, a beautifully crisp fall day here in Atlanta, I was invited to attend the kickoff for Marietta's weekend celebration of Gone With the Wind (1939). The event—organized by Chris Sutherland's Gone With the Wind museum, Scarlett on the Square—heralds the upcoming 70th anniversary of the film's original release, and 175th anniversary of the quaint suburban hamlet of Marietta. It also precedes this Tuesday's rerelease of the Civil War-era melodrama on DVD—and for the first time ever, Blu-ray—remastered from the original Technicolor film elements.