Skip to main content

Gone With The Wind


For all these years, I've been hearing this oft repeated phrase "Gone with the wind" and I knew it was in reference to the book written by Margaret Mitchell. It was just about fifteen days ago that I finally saw the movie! The first thing that striked me about the movie was the price! I wanted to buy it from the shop, and it was for Rs. 1,500! It must have been some collector's edition, nevertheless, I didn't have so much money to spend on it... So I ended up renting it for the night, little did I know that the entire movie is around 5 and 1/2 hours long...


I sit to watch this movie, and it takes me into this different world that I knew very little about. I had only read a little about the Civil War and about the differences that made South and North America.. There was a short introduction to the movie, enabling viewers like me to understand the contexts.


Another reference though not so prominent was a book that I had read a couple of years ago (which I re-read many more times, coz I thoroughly enjoyed the book). The book was "Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood" by Rebecca Wells, in which the protagonist, Viviane, is shown to fall in love with "Gone With the Wind". One dialogue that she refers to, "Oh! Necie (her friend) I want to live in this drama! I was made for it" and another quote from her daughter (Sidda), who recollects her mother's (Viviane) peculiar manner of raising her eyebrow, quite like the protagonist in the novel, Scarlett O' Hara.


The movie spans many years, and takes us through the beautiful fields and lands of South America, their cultures, and parties, the mindsets of the people, the war, death and destruction, conflict of land and of love, relationships, parenthood, slavery, hunger, determination and finally what triumphs, the love of the land...


Very beautifully interwoven, and articulately written, the artist's renderation of the screenplay is flawless! You begin to feel and connect with the characters to a great extent.


Scarlett O' Hara is a very intelligent woman, she is very symbolic of some of the ideals that an American individual tends to inherit from his land. Though her greatest value and asset is that she loves her land, Tara, (probably from terra, earth) the other things that she does, being proud of who she is, doing acts and things with her sole goal in mind, fiercely independent and sure, determined to achieve success at all costs... For me, this was an experience of sorts, because while through the whole movie, people were denouncing Scarlett's (whose character is played by Vivien Leigh) behavior and her manipulations, I was actually thinking that there was nothing wrong in doing what she did from her perspective. She wanted to achieve her goal, and she had kept that as her highest value, society's laws of governance, small talk and winning accolades from her friends, peers was of no concern for her. Her depiction of the character is superb and you must watch this movie for the various shades that you get to see in a character. It's like you're peeling off the skin from the character as part of the movie. It takes you through the various natures of men, women and those of society.


I consider this movie a classic and an absolute must-see!

Comments

Shrinterest said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Shrinterest said…
hey a true blast from the past. A 1939 movie, with Vivien Leigh, born as Vivian mary Hartley/1913/Darjeeling in india. (thanks to the history channel for this info). much celebrated for the dialog "frankly my friend, i don't give a damn"... Heard the book was very borring, all though never found myself placeing it on my book shelf. write on!!! cheers!!!
clickable said…
Err...you mean Southern and Northern US right? South and North America are different continents...the conflict is more about the the North and the South (within the US). Read more here.
~ a said…
Oh yeah! :) faux pas!! :)

Popular posts from this blog

Crash Landing on You - Netflix K-Drama Review

I think all of us remember our first love, we remember what it felt like to have our hearts beat that much faster, the butterflies in our stomach, the obsessing about the words we spoke or didn't speak, and other million details that come along with it. Watching a romantic comedy is supposed to evoke some bit of those memories and just fill you up in this warm, fuzzy feeling that feels like a comforting bear hug (if you like hugs!). A while back I was reading this article about the dearth of good romantic comedies nowadays and it's true, when was the last good romantic comedy you saw? To me the evergreen You've Got Mail, Kate & Leopold, Notting Hill, Sleepless in Seattle are still the classics (yes, I think I crushed on Meg Ryan a lot!). In Hindi movies, I know this divides a lot of people, but I do genuinely think Sonam Kapoor has figured this out. I absolutely loved her Khoobsurat with Fawad Khan. I thought it was funny, contemporary and their chemistry was left me...

Reviewing the K-Dramas I binge-watched because of Hyun Bin & Son Ye-Jin (Part #1)

This year has been an interesting year for me so far. Not just because of the coronavirus situation but because of my new found passion for Korean Dramas! So, in February, I decided to watch 'Crash Landing on You' on Netflix with my husband and literally since then I've just immersed myself whole heartedly into everything Korean! I'm right now at the 'obsessing' part, hopefully it'll mature and I'll find a healthy balance soon (or maybe not!). Quick recap of what I've done so far: After binge-watching CLOY multiple times, I joined a Facebook Fan Group for the show, joined Soompi and started reading the CLOY Drama thread and the Hyun Bin & Son Ye-Jin thread . I posted a link to my blog on the FB group and had 1000+ views with 10+ comments. I've shared the blog with multiple friends and family members, all of whom loved reading the blog and most of them then watched the show as well! My husband brought me soju + beer at home and I'm ...

LSD: Love, Sex aur Dhokha!

Well, I reached late for this movie and did regret it because it took me the better part of 20 mins to figure out why the movie looked like it did. It's shocking, gruesome even at some points, daringly different, and just managed to make me squirm in my seat at points. Technically this film is very different because it's shot completely using weird camera angles... it's made primarily on a handycam, a CCTV camera footage, sting camera videos. It's actually uncomfortable to see the movie because of these angles, jerky hand movements, and brisk cuts. The film is basically an integration of 3 stories, one each on love, sex and betrayal (dhokha)... the characters are very real, very ordinary, daily life people whom you would meet anywhere. The dialogues are what you would actually hear people talking. The ease with which they abuse, they call names, everything is very realistic. If you're the types who leads a sheltered life in your comfort zone, this is a movie that do...