Film Review
One of the most highly regarded films to come out of Hollywood in its
glorious heyday, certainly one of the most expensive and best
publicised,
Gone with the Wind
has lost none of its power to overwhelm the spectator with its epic
scale, stunning production values and a searing portrayal of a woman
whose attempts to rebuild her antebellum prosperity frustrate her
personal happiness.
A precursor to the modern Hollywood blockbuster, it is a raging juggernaut of a film, a cinematic tsunami
which, despite several obvious shortcomings, manages to enrapture its
audience by offering one of the most satisfying movie experiences
imaginable.
The film is a testament to the extraordinary ambition and vision of the
independent producer David O. Selznick. He was prepared to pay an
unprecedented fifty thousand dollars to buy the rights to Margaret
Mitchell's novel even before the book became a major bestseller and won
the Pulitzer Prize. With a five month shooting schedule and a
cast that included over 2000 extras, the film ultimately cost just
under four million dollars to make, but grossed in excess of twenty
times that amount, making it both one of the most expensive films and
one of the most profitable in cinema history.
It took two years to cast the leading lady for what would be the most
coveted female role of all time. Around 1500 actresses were
considered for the part, including many established and rising stars,
such as Bette Davis, Katheryn Hepburn and Paulette Godard. The
part ultimately went to an English actress who was virtually unknown in
America at the time, Vivien Leigh. Clark Gable, an actor with
major box office appeal, was Selznick's preferred actor for the lead
male role after his first choice, Gary Cooper, proved to be
unavailable. The other main roles were taken by Leslie Howard and
Olivia de Havilland, both big name actors at the time.
The casting of Howard is perhaps the film's biggest flaw - the actor,
cocooned in his cool British reserve and incapable of delivering even
the crudest approximation to a southern US accent, is completely
eclipsed by his more charismatic co-stars and is unconvincing as
Scarlett O'Hara's object of desire. By contrast, Vivien
Leigh absolutely dominates the film and, in possibly the greatest
performance of her career, makes her character harrowingly
believable. Scarlett O'Hara may not be the most sympathetic of
screen heroines, but it is hard not to empathise with her passions -
her anger, her anguish and her ultimate sense of loss.
The production difficulties of
Gone
with the Wind are well documented. Three weeks into the
shoot, director George Cukor was sacked by Selznick when Clark Gable
refused to work with what he considered a "women's director".
Cukor was replaced by Victor Fleming, who had been directing
The Wizard of Oz
for MGM. Fleming fell ill through exhaustion and another director, Sam Wood, had
to stand in for a fortnight until he recovered. When he took over
from Cukor, Fleming insisted on a complete rewrite of Sidney Howard's
original screenplay, something that Selznick, with an eye on the
budget, was reluctant to agree to. The story is that Fleming,
Selznick and hired screenwriter Ben Hecht locked themselves in a room
for five days and completely redrafted the script, although it was Sidney
Howard who would get the sole writer's credit in the film's opening
captions.
A carefully orchestrated publicity campaign contributed to the enormous
box office receipts the film earned when it went on general release in
1941, following its legendary premiere in Atlanta in 1939. (A sad
footnote is that the black members of the cast were unable to attend
the premiere owing to a Georgia State Law which prohibited coloureds
from sitting with whites in public cinemas.) The film's
commercial success was matched by a favourable critical reaction,
culminating in its winning ten Academy Awards, a record that was not
beaten until
Ben-Hur came
along twenty years later. The film garnered Oscars in most of the
major categories - Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay,
Best (Color) Cinematography, Best Actress (Vivien Leigh) - as
well as an award for Hattie McDaniel in her supporting role, the first
African American to be nominated for and win an Oscar.
There is something
strangely prescient about this film, its portrayal of a world changing
forever amid the turmoil of war having a direct equivalent in the
events of the early 1940s as, once again, the world went to war.
Scarlett O'Hara's impassioned declaration at the end of the first part
of the film, where she states she will not be beaten by adversity, would have had
an immediate resonance for anyone watching the film in those turbulent
and desperate years.
Gone with the Wind is a
triumph of Hollywood moviemaking at its flamboyant best, a film that
continue to excite reviewers and enthral audiences across the
world. It is a
genuine classic which appeals at so many levels, combining a poignant
melodrama with some breathtaking colour cinematography, its emotional
power
heightened by one of the most memorable score's in film history.
Here is a film that can be summed up in just one word. Epic.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1861, Scarlett O'Hara is celebrating her sixteenth birthday at her
family home, a plantation in the southern US state of Georgia.
Although she has many admirers, she is love with just one man, Ashley
Wilkes, but he is engaged to another woman, Melanie Hamilton. On
the day that the Civil War is declared, Scarlett hastily agrees to
marry Melanie's brother Charles, but he dies within a few weeks from
pneumonia. Amid the turmoil of the war and her own personal
crises, Scarlett moves to Atlanta to live with her sister-in-law
Melanie. Here, she meets Rhett Butler, a disreputable self-made
man who has been disowned by his family. Although Rhett is
clearly attracted towards her, Scarlett vows that he will never win
her. As troops from the northern states begin their attack on
Atlanta, Scarlett flees with her sister and Rhett. The
indomitable Scarlett is convinced that all will be well once they reach
her former home, but on arriving there all she sees is devastation and
penury. The plantation has been pillaged by the northern troops,
her mother is dead, and her father is a broken man. Her life in
tatters, Scarlett refuses to be beaten. She swears that she will
do whatever it takes never to be poor again...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.