Gone with the Wind (film) - Wikipedia Gone with the Wind is a 1939 American epic historical romance film adapted from the 1936 novel by Margaret Mitchell The film was produced by David O Selznick of Selznick International Pictures and directed by Victor Fleming
Gone with the Wind (1939) - IMDb Reviewers say 'Gone with the Wind' captures the Civil War's impact through Scarlett O'Hara's eyes, highlighting Southern grandeur and devastation It's lauded for its epic scale, Technicolor visuals, and stellar performances by Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable
Gone with the Wind | Plot, Cast, Awards, Facts | Britannica Gone with the Wind, American epic film, released in 1939, that was one of the best known and most successful films of all time It enjoyed a more-than-30-year reign as the all-time Hollywood box office champion, and it won eight Academy Awards (in addition to two honorary awards)
Gone With the Wind movie review (1939) | Roger Ebert “Gone With the Wind” presents a sentimental view of the Civil War, in which the “Old South” takes the place of Camelot and the war was fought not so much to defeat the Confederacy and free the slaves as to give Miss Scarlett O'Hara her comeuppance
Gone With the Wind (1939) - Turner Classic Movies Based on the novel Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell (New York, 1936) Scarlett O'Hara is in love with drippy Ashley Wilkes, and is devastated when he announces that he plans to marry her cousin Melanie She pleads with Ashley to marry her instead, but then, on the first day of the Civil War, she meets mercurial Rhett Butler
Gone with the Wind Summary | Book Analysis Gone with the Wind is a historical fiction set in the American Civil war and has served as a reference point for many discussions on war, slavery, race, adaptation for survival, and values
Gone with the Wind (1939) — The Movie Database (TMDB) The greatest romance of all time! The spoiled daughter of a Georgia plantation owner conducts a tumultuous romance with a cynical profiteer during the American Civil War and Reconstruction Era