| | Gone With The Wind DVD
| Category | Dramas DVDs, Children/Family Movies, Romance Videos, Recommended, Classic, Family Interaction, Essential Cinema, Love Story, G-Rated, Period Piece, Epic, Blockbuster, Big Battles, AFI Top 100 (1997), AFI Top 100, Civil War, AFI Top 100 Movie Quotes, AFI Top 100 Passions, All-Star, Vanity Fair 50 Greatest Films Of All Time, Slavery, Gentry | | Starring | Olivia de Havilland, Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard, Hattie McDaniel, Ward Bond, Thomas Mitchell, Jane Darwell, Rand Brooks, Victor Jory, Evelyn Keyes, Ann Rutherford, Paul Hurst, Isabel Jewell, Eddie Anderson, Butterfly McQueen, George Reeves, Irving Bacon, Yakima Canutt, Cliff Edwards, Harry Davenport, Mary Anderson, Louis Jean Heydt, Jackie Moran List all 57 stars
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Standard Screen; Soundtrack English; Special Edition Hot-tempered, self-centered, part-Irish Southern beauty Scarlett O'Hara, played to the teeth by Vivien Leigh, loves the gentlemanly Ashley Wilkes (Leslie Howard). Smug, rebellious, honest, blockade-running profiteer Rhett Butler, portrayed gracefully and naturally by Clark Gable, loves Scarlett. Ashley, who is also in love with Scarlett, marries his genteel cousin Melanie (Olivia de Havilland) because he believes that their quiet similarities will create a better marriage than Scarlett's passion. Meanwhile, sparks fly between Rhett and Scarlett at their first encounter and continue throughout Scarlett's first two marriages. Scarlett and Rhett finally wed, but Scarlett continues to pine for her beloved Ashley. Set against the Civil War and Southern Reconstruction, this tragic love quadrangle offers the burning of Atlanta and fields of wounded Confederates as part of its lush scenery. Meticulous backdrops, glorious sunsets, numerous silhouettes, and the ultrasaturated Technicolor film create a hyperreal vision. The romantic score is every bit as lush and dramatic as the photography, borrowing folk melodies from the Old South to make the tragic war concrete. Heavy nostalgic tones pervade the often witty dialogue and larger-than-life charms and faults of the leads. GONE WITH THE WIND stands among the greatest epic dramas ever filmed. GONE WITH THE WIND is number 4 on the American Film Institute's list of America's 100 Greatest Movies.
GONE WITH THE WIND was an original selection to the Library of Congress National Film Registry in 1989.
Margaret Mitchell wrote her only novel between 1926 and 1929 and then let it collect dust for six years before showing it to an editor. By the time of the film's release, Mitchell's novel had surpassed 1,500,000 in sales. The novel swept the nation, and everyone, everywhere, was reading it. Selznick paid $50,000 for the rights to the book.
Selznick brought in a number of screenwriters in addition to Sidney Howard to help him get a grasp on the material. Among them were Edwin Justin Mayer, John Van Druten, Ben Hecht, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Jo Swerling.
For the part of Scarlett O'Hara, David O. Selznick issued a national talent search. Scores of famous Hollywood actresses tested for the part. Many southerners (and Americans in general) were upset when Selznick cast Vivien Leigh in the role. The very prospect of an Englishwoman playing the part of an American Southern belle was outrageous. But after the film's release most southerners changed their minds. On the contrary, many said, "Better an English girl than a Yankee."
The novel was so well known and loved that MGM conducted national polls to determine who should play the leads. Gable was the clear choice for Rhett, while many of Hollywood's top actresses were considered for the role, including Bette Davis, Katharine Hepburn, Miriam Hopkins, Joan Crawford, Margaret Sullivan, Barbara Stanwyck, Paulette Goddard, Lana Turner, Jean Arthur, Mae West, Tallulah Bankhead, and Lucille Ball. In all, 32 actresses did screen tests for the film. Vivien Leigh was given the part of Scarlett O'Hara on Christmas Day, 1938.
Ronald Colman, Errol Flynn, and Gary Cooper were considered for the part of Rhett Butler, but the character was written with Clark Gable in mind.
George Cukor was the film's original director. Victor Fleming was Cukor's successor. When Fleming fell sick, Sam Wood took over, but Fleming resumed his position after his convalescence.
In addition to nine Oscars, GONE WITH THE WIND also won special academy recognition for production designer William Cameron Menzies's outstanding contribution. The film was the first film to ever credit a production designer--previously, the role of the production designer was held by the studio's art department head, who oversaw all the films in production. Because of the scope of the project and the amount Menzies contributed to it, MGM created a new title for him.
Hattie McDaniel won Best Supporting Actress for her role as Mammy--the first Academy Award given to an African American.
At the time, there were only 7 Technicolor cameras in existence, all of which were used for the production of GONE WITH THE WIND.
For 25 years after its release, GONE WITH THE WIND was the most successful picture in history. When adjustments are made for inflation, GONE WITH THE WIND retains the second-highest U.S. box office return of the 20th century, bested only by TITANIC.
Estimated budget: $3.9 million.
The film has grossed nearly $200 million.
George Reeves, who went to fame as Superman, played Stuart Tarleton.
Neither Victor Fleming nor Clark Gable initially wanted to do the film. Gable felt that he could never live up to the audience's expectations for the larger-than-life Rhett Butler, while Fleming worried that the film's production costs could bankrupt the studio. Gone With The Wind Reviews: "...For contemporary audiences, a vertiable shock of pleasure....Weep for the fearlessness with which Hollywood once believed the sublime was possible..." -- Rating: A
-- Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly "...Greater than ever....The older it gets, and we with it, the more we're able to see in it..."
-- Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times "...It is still a great film, above all, because it tells a great story..."
-- Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times "...[A] masterpiece....Gorgeous whether you're watching moving images or frozen ones..."
-- Mike Clark, USA Today "...The Everest of grand Hollywood moviemaking..."
-- Premiere Staff, Premiere "One of those rare moments when stars align, and the perfect actress finds the perfect role at the perfect time."
-- Matt Mueller, Total Film "Leigh is electric, wicked, incorrigible, lovely."
-- Chris Roberts, Uncut Gone With The Wind | List Price | $24.98 (You save $6.49) | | Studio | Warner Home Video | | Orig Year | 1939 | | DVD Encoding | Region 1 | | All Time Sales Rank | 32509  | | CD Universe Part number | 7996830 | | Catalog number | 1000089173 | | Discs | 2 | | Release Date | New Gone With The Wind DVD release date Nov 17, 2009 | | Rating | G (MPAA) | | Running Time | 223 Minutes | | Additional Info | Full Frame; Remastered; Special Edition; Subtitled | | Movie Details | Color; Full Frame; Remastered; Special Edition; Subtitled; 70th Anniversary Edition |
Gone With The Wind Movie Review best movie ever made This without a doubt . the best movie that has ever been produced in Hollywood ! I have enjoyed it since I was a kid - when it first came out - and still get a thrill each time I see it! Submitted by cjmoellerop (Oakland Park, FL , USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful. This review is for a different format.
Gone is not forgotten! Those who enjoy "some things left to the imagination" story line will enjoy this movie/book. The details are present if you have the mental capabilities to emotionally view this interaction between two people, who are not only battling the North/South vs. slavery issue but their own self drive of continuing to be successful in their life. Thereby, attempting to dismiss their "prejudicial" love for each other. Enjoy! If you can. Submitted by janet.mohrman (Vermilion, OH, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
quality is timeless i've always loved this movie-and the fact that i could get it on dvd-it was priceless-the quality and superb! i received it much sooner than i thought. great product-i look forward to ordering more movies from cd universe- Submitted by k.larkin (erlanger, KY USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
The mo The actual movie is pretty good. A classic of all times. You can even watch real history in the making. You see a little bit of slave life and the fight between the south and north in the USA If you have a long rainy day to watch, I highly recommend it. It is pretty long but it goes very fast. As for the quality (video and sound) Consisering this movie is somethng like 60 years old and possibly all the characters or at least most, might be deceased, (the movie is older than most of us. the video and sound is GREAT
I actually watch in surround sound. Submitted by mperez689 (Long Island, New York)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
A Legend in Motion Picture Making Take Clark Gable, Vivian Leigh, De Havilland, and a truly outstanding supporting cast, and you have the makings of a truly great motion picture. 1939 was a banner year for first rate motion pictures, and GWTW was at the top. Spectacle, passion, drama, remarkable cinematography, all add to the credits that many critics say is the greatest motion picture ever made. I agree... Submitted by rekroesser (Williamsburg, VA, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
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Gone With The Wind DVD Region 1 Dual Layer Full Frame - 1.33 Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English, French, Spanish Subtitles - French, Spanish
Gone With The Wind Video Birth of a Nation, Casablanca, Chushingura, Clark Gable: The Signature Collection, Cold Mountain, Giant, Griffith Masterworks, How the West Was Won, Japon, Jezebel, Little Foxes, North and South - The Complete Collection, Pride and the Passion, They Died With Their Boots On, Written on the Wind Gone With The Wind DVD Awards | Best Actress, Academy Awards, 1939 - Vivien Leigh | | Best Adapted Screenplay, Academy Awards, 1939 - Sidney Howard | | Best Cinematography, Academy Awards, 1939 - Ernest Haller | | Best Cinematography, Academy Awards, 1939 - Ray Rennahan | | Best Director, Academy Awards, 1939 - Victor Fleming | | Best Film Editing, Academy Awards, 1939 | | Best Interior Decoration (b&w), Academy Awards, 1939 - Lyle Wheeler | | Best Picture, Academy Awards, 1939 | | Best Supporting Actress, Academy Awards, 1939 - Hattie McDaniel |
Buy Gone With The Wind DVD Purchase Gone With The Wind Movie To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Run Silent, Run Deep DVD (1958) Widescreen; French Subtitles
Gone With The Wind film
$9.69 "Run silent, run deep" is a term that accurately describes the mission of the submarine in this tense World War II drama. Commander Richardson (Clark Gable) is the only survivor when his sub is hit by a notorious Japanese destroyer dubbed Bongo Pete in the Bongo Straits of Japan. Back at Pearl Harbor, Richardson obsessively plays out strategies that would have saved his crew. When he is reassigned a new ship in the Pacific, he must face old demons as well as the sub's younger executive officer who was slated for captain, Lt. Bledsoe (Burt Lancaster). Bledsoe has the support of his crew and locks horns easily with Richardson, but when the captain disobeys navy orders to stay clear of the Bongo Straits, taking the crew right in to go after Bongo Pete, there is very nearly a mutiny. RUN SILENT, RUN DEEP is marked by strong performances, particularly by Gable, and a taut script. The scenes of the rigorous sub drills the captain puts his crew through are intensive and exceptional.
Black & White; Standard Screen; Soundtrack English; English Subtitles
| | Rocio Durcal Entre Tangis Y Mariachi CD (2001)
Gone With The Wind review
$7.69 Personnel: Rocio Durcal (vocals); Manny Lopez (acoustic & electric guitars); Juan Carlos Navarro, Alfredo Solis (mariachi guitar); Guadalupe Alfaro (vihuela); Miami Symphony Orchestra (strings); Jeanne Tarrant (flute); Robert Weiner (oboe); Alfredo Oliva (concertina); Levi Mora-Arriaga (trumpet); Bebu Silvetti (piano, synthesizer); Julio Hernandez (bass); Orlando Hernandez (drums); Eugenio Ver Der Horst. Personnel: Guadalupe Alfaro (vihuela); Jeanne Tarrant (flute); Bebu Silvetti (piano). Recording information: The Gallery, Miami, FL. Photographer: Adolfo Pérez Butrón. Arranger: Bebu Silvetti.
| | Discounted Dreams: High Hopes And Harsh Realities At America's Community Colleges DVD (2007)
Gone With The Wind DVD
$17.45 The history and possible future of Community Colleges is discussed in this program from PBS.
| | Patton Blu-ray (1970) Widescreen; Dubbed; Subtitled; DTS Sound
Gone With The Wind movie DVD
$23.39 PATTON is a three-dimensional bronze bust of World War II field general George S. Patton (George C. Scott) who wrote poetry, fired pistols at strafing fighter planes, and loved America with a lofty and historical zeal. Tracing his personal rivalries with such generals as Rommel and Montgomery, his problematic treatment of his own men, and his nearly runaway contempt for diplomacy, the film triumphs as an enduring portrait of a complex and larger-than-life figure. PATTON was recipient of 10 Academy Award Nominations and winner of eight, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor--Scott, Best (Adapted) Screenplay--Francis Ford Coppola/Edmund H. North.
Widescreen; Additional Footage; Soundtrack English; Soundtrack French; Soundtrack Spanish; English Subtitles; Spanish Subtitles; Sensormatic
| | Ronde DVD (1950) Full Frame; Black & White
Gone With The Wind video
$31.09 After ten years in Hollywood, where he made the acclaimed LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN, Max Ophüls returned to France. His first film, LA RONDE, is taken from Arthur Schnitzler's play REIGEN, which features a series of interlocking love stories set in Vienna at the turn of the 19th Century. Ophüls added the visual metaphor of the merry-go-round and a raconteur (Anton Walbrook), who comments on love as the characters move from one partner to another. A student seduces a chambermaid, then, filled with confidence, has an affair with a married woman who goes home to her husband, who then goes off to his mistress--and so on until the circle comes back to the beginning. The situations and dialogue were considered quite risqué at the time and the film was actually banned in America. Now, afternoon TV soap operas are more graphic, but not as witty or subtle in their approach to the vicissitudes of l'amour. Ophüls directs with a fluid grace and Simon Signoret, Danielle Darrieux, and Alfred Gelin give outstanding performances.
Schnitzler's work returned to popularity in the late 1990s with David Hare's play THE BLUE ROOM, another adaptation of REIGEN, staring Nichole Kidman. His short stories were also the source material for Stanley Kubrick's EYES WIDE SHUT.
Black & White; Standard Screen; English Subtitles; Dolby Digital 5.1 Re
| | Come Play With Me DVD (2009)
Gone With The Wind film
$13.59 Young Alvise's body is paralyzed, or at least he thinks so. He is infatuated by his beautiful aunt Lea. What starts as innocent therapy and care soon develops into a strange erotic and psychological battle between them.
| | Barney: Fun On Wheels DVD (2009) Full Frame
Gone With The Wind review
$10.29 Barney the big purple dinosaur and his new friend Pop Wheely have a blast teaching their fun-loving pals BJ and Baby Bop about bikes, buses, boats, and other things that "go" in this collection of transportation-themed episodes.
Closed Captioned; Standard Screen; Additional Footage; Soundtrack English
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