Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Gone With The Wind Review

Rating Scale

My rating scale will be from 0 to 10 at .5 increments so it will start at 0 then the next rank is .5, 1, 1.5 and so on until 9.5, and finally 10. I will judge based on acting performance, graphics (for the time), genre (it has to appeal to a wide group of people), and the plot. All of these will be taken into consideration as I give my score.


Gone with the Wind


  • Gone with the wind while being very advanced for its time, seemed to lack in its plot. Overall it deserved about 7 out of 10 due to the excellent acting, wide genre appeal, and the vivid graphics. Clark Gable who played Rhett Butler was a tremendous relief from the overplayed drama of Scarlett O'Hara’s (played by Vivien Leigh) “Ashley” obsession. In my opinion the south was represented fairly well, the war was interesting, and the rebuilding looked realistic. I thought the director Victor Fleming with his team did a tremendous job of compiling the 1000 plus page novel into a film that while lengthy, could be watched in one sitting not counting the intermission.
  • As mentioned earlier gone with the wind’s plot seemed to lack in substance although it was only after the intermission which basically splits the movie in two. The first half of the movie was well written and had an excellent story line with the election of Abraham Lincoln, the Civil war, and the North’s march down south. However once you get to the second half of the movie that begins with the aftermath of the war the storyline became a little vague, random, and repetitive as Scarlett continues on trying to obtain Ashley. It was frustrating because how many times do you have to get shot down before you realize they don’t love you, or when they told you years ago he loved Melanie (Olivia De Havilland) you continue to chase him? The best part of the second half was when Rhett walked out on Scarlett and said “Frankly my dear, I don’t give a dam.” Maybe she learned an important lesson while too late, she needed to learn regardless. However as a whole I think that if they would have altered the ending of the first half of the movie and cut out the second half, it could arguably be the best movie of all time. I say arguably because not everyone likes the same genre and while the movie didn’t appeal to me, I have to admit it was made fairly well.
  • Anyone who wants to can disagree with my next few lines of writing because I am not a person who always wants “perfect picture.” As long as strings aren’t visible and extremely ridiculous tactics of achieving the impossible aren’t used I think the graphics are fine in any movie. Now it helps if the graphics are better however I won’t score a movie low because the pictorials are just older. I don’t need to see every piece of shrapnel from the bomb fly out or the jet stream as superman flies. It is just a part of the movie and the time period. So for this movie to have that kind of picture for a film made in the late 30’s to early 40’s was pretty amazing. This again is completely and totally my opinion about cinematography, so you’ll just have to deal with it.
  • The last thing I will comment on is the great symbolism in the G.W.T.W. There were numerous points in the movie where an object could symbolize many things. I think that if a movie has symbolism people will relate to it better. If you show objects that might mean different things to different people, but it is a positive influence on them regardless I think the movie turns out better. Like how the bell in the beginning of the movie could have symbolized American freedom from foreign rule but it also symbolized a different type of freedom to the blacks. It was “quittin’ time!” There was also Tara which was Scarlett’s home, but also was almost a part of the family because she always took care of it. Then according to her father, “Why, land is the only thing in the world worth workin’ for, worth fightin’ for, worth dyin’ for, because it’s the only thing that lasts.” Land could mean a lot to different people, but it is something that will turn out positive. Then there was also the pose at the end of the first segment right at the intermission when Scarlett promised herself she would never be hungry again. The pose looked like the statue of liberty and could have symbolized the American Dream, the potato famine which brought over many Irish people of which Scarlett could have descended from, or the fight for women’s rights. I think they used symbolism extremely well to get their message out.
  • Overall the movie was alright it didn’t catch me as anything spectacular other than the vivid pictures from the time period. It had some good dialogue between Rhett and Scarlett like when they first met and acknowledged that neither of them were gentlemen or ladies as the opening quote suggested. The complete storyline was a little below average and could have been done better or a little differently but the actors were extremely convincing. It must have been very difficult for the actors to play characters in a love/war/drama film. I would say watch it at your own risk and not as a warning that this movie is bad, but if this doesn’t fall into your film preference area, then it probably won't catch your fullest attention.

4 comments:

Sandra said...

Wow! Great detail and in-sight. Well written and interesting. I like the lay-out of your blog, very easy to follow and easy to read. Good personal voice.
Thanks...SWM

AtotheBarney said...

Good job man. I totally agreed with Rhett Butler being the relief to Scarlett's obsessive personality. I also agree with the fact that the graphics were awesome considering the time period it was created during.

K 2 da C said...

Very good, quite long though, but that's ight. All in All it was good.

APPLES TO APPLES said...

Awesome..... your blogs are layed out real nice