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Your Learning Zone - Gone with the Wind

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List Price: $8.98
Our Price: $4.44
Your Save: $ 4.54 ( 51% )
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Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD) Starring: Thomas Mitchell, Barbara O'Neil, Vivien Leigh, Evelyn Keyes, Ann Rutherford Directed By: Victor Fleming, George Cukor, Sam Wood
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: G (General Audience) Binding: VHS Tape Brand: MGM EAN: 9786305123613 Format: Closed-captioned ISBN: 6305123616 Label: MGM (Video & DVD) Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD) Number Of Items: 2 Publisher: MGM (Video & DVD) Release Date: 1998-10-27 Running Time: 233 Studio: MGM (Video & DVD) Theatrical Release Date: 1941-01-17
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: The Immortal GWTW Comment: Gone With the Wind is one of the alltime greatest movies ever made, with something for just about everyone to enjoy, whether it is the fine performance by Hattie McDaniel as "Mammy" or the scenes of Atlanta burning as Sherman marches to the sea. Some of the history is good, and none is as bad as its detractors would like it to be.
If you have not seen GWTW, you must do so to say that you know great American films.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Isn't the defense of slavery romantic! Comment: I wonder what kind of reception GWTW would have gotten had it come out in 1945 and been about a love affair between a man and woman in Nazi Germany. Imagine Rhett Butler as the dashing U-boat captain who constantly evades those pesky British destroyers in the North Atlantic. Picture Scarlett O'hara as the totally self-absorbed Fraulein who can't quite figure out what is in all those trains leaving town for central Europe because she is too busy thinking about a party dress. Despite the cinematic qualities of the film - which are undeniable - I cannot get past the fact that it romanticizes a society based on an evil institution. Achtung, darling, I don't give a damn.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Gone With the Wind Comment: Gone with the Wind (Four-Disc Collector's Edition) 1939
Excellent movie, excellent price. I got it for free shipping, but it took almost two weeks to get to me. I think it is worth the extra few bucks to get stuff sooner.
Customer Rating:      Summary: one on¡f the best classic movies ! Comment: I bought this DVD for my father's birthday, he loves the movie, and me too !!
Customer Rating:      Summary: best film ever Comment: simply the best film ever from start to finish it captures the imagination and despite its length you never want it too end. All the cast put in sterling peformances. Aside from all those classic scenes one of my very favourties is the scence between Hattie MacDaniel & Clark Gable after Bonnie is born particularly when they tease one another and mammie lifts her skirt to reveal the red petitcoat!
A timeless classic and i like the fact that the film has a multi racial cast and resulted in Hattie getting a much deserved oscar. Vivien Leigh and Olivia De Havilland are among my most favourite actresses ( Bette Davis, Joan Crawford & Lana Turner included)
buy it immediately everyhing right down to the theme music is perfect
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Editorial Reviews:
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David O. Selznick wanted Gone with the Wind to be somehow more than a movie, a film that would broaden the very idea of what a film could be and do and look like. In many respects he got what he worked so hard to achieve in this 1939 epic (and all-time box-office champ in terms of tickets sold), and in some respects he fell far short of the goal. While the first half of this Civil War drama is taut and suspenseful and nostalgic, the second is ramshackle and arbitrary. But there's no question that the film is an enormous achievement in terms of its every resource--art direction, color, sound, cinematography--being pushed to new limits for the greater glory of telling an American story as fully as possible. Vivien Leigh is still magnificently narcissistic, Olivia de Havilland angelic and lovely, Leslie Howard reckless and aristocratic. As for Clark Gable: we're talking one of the most vital, masculine performances ever committed to film. --Tom Keogh
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