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  1. Gone With the Wind

    Gone With the Wind

    G1940 · Romance · 3h 42m

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  1. Awards

    • Academy Award Music (Original Score) 1940 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Art Direction 1940 · Winner

    • Academy Award Directing 1940 · Winner

    • Academy Award Outstanding Production 1940 · Winner

    • Academy Award Cinematography (Color) 1940 · Winner

    • Academy Award Film Editing 1940 · Winner

    • Academy Award Writing (Screenplay) 1940 · Winner

    • Academy Award Actress in a Supporting Role 1940 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Actor 1940 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Sound Recording 1940 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Special Effects 1940 · Nominated

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  2. Cast & crew. User reviews. Trivia. FAQ. IMDbPro. All topics. Awards. Gone with the Wind. Jump to. 21 wins & 9 nominations. Academy Awards, USA. 1940 Nominee Oscar. Best Actor in a Leading Role. Clark Gable. 1940 Winner Oscar. Best Actress in a Leading Role. Vivien Leigh. 1940 Winner Oscar. Best Actress in a Supporting Role.

  3. At the 12th Academy Awards, Gone with the Wind received ten Academy Awards (eight competitive, two honorary) from thirteen nominations, including wins for Best Picture, Best Director (Fleming), Best Adapted Screenplay (posthumously awarded to Sidney Howard), Best Actress (Leigh), and Best Supporting Actress (Hattie McDaniel, becoming the first ...

    • Overview
    • Production notes and credits
    • Cast
    • Academy Award nominations (* denotes win)

    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). Based on the runaway best-selling 1936 novel Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell, the movie is almost four hours long and includes an intermission.

    The film, set in the American South during the time of the Civil War, tells the story of Scarlett O’Hara (played by Vivien Leigh), the headstrong and willful daughter of the owner of the plantation Tara. The story begins in 1861. Scarlett is in love with Ashley Wilkes (Leslie Howard), but she learns that he intends to marry his cousin Melanie Hamilton (Olivia de Havilland). At a party at Ashley’s home, Scarlett’s overtures to Ashley are seen by another guest, Rhett Butler (Clark Gable). Ashley rebuffs Scarlett, and she therefore agrees to marry Melanie’s brother Charles (Rand Brooks). War is declared, and the men go off to enlist. Charles dies of measles during the war, and the widowed Scarlett goes to Melanie’s home in Atlanta. She meets Rhett at a charity fund-raising bazaar, and she dances with him, violating the customary rules of mourning. Rhett, a successful blockade runner, continues to visit Scarlett over the next few months, as Atlanta comes increasingly under siege. Ashley returns home on a Christmas furlough and asks Scarlett to take care of Melanie, who is pregnant. Melanie goes into labour as Atlanta is being evacuated, and Scarlett and her servant Prissy (Butterfly McQueen) must attend the birth on their own. Scarlett summons Rhett to take her, Melanie, Prissy, and the baby back to Tara, and they flee through the burning city, only to find that Tara has been pillaged by Union soldiers. Scarlett’s mother has died, and her father has fallen into a depression. The only people remaining there are her father, her sisters, and the former slaves Mammy (Hattie McDaniel) and Pork (Oscar Polk).

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    In the second half of the movie, Scarlett tries to resurrect Tara. She and her sisters and the house servants work in the fields. Ashley returns when the war ends but is unable to offer Scarlett help in paying the exorbitant Reconstruction taxes. Scarlett decides to ask Rhett for money, and she and Mammy construct a dress from velvet curtains for her to wear to meet Rhett. However, Rhett has become a Union prisoner and cannot help her. In desperation, Scarlett marries her sister’s wealthy beau, Frank (Carroll Nye). She uses his money to save Tara and then establishes a lumber business in Atlanta. After Scarlett is attacked while riding in her carriage near a shantytown, Frank, Ashley, and some other men attack the shantytown, and Frank is killed in the raid. Rhett then marries Scarlett, and they have a daughter, but Scarlett continues to pine for Ashley, and the marriage is stormy. Their daughter dies after having been thrown from a pony, and later Melanie dies in childbirth. Scarlett realizes that Ashley loves only Melanie and that she loves Rhett, but Rhett refuses her and leaves her alone at Tara with the words, “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.”

    The film’s producer, David O. Selznick, bought the film rights a month after the publication of Mitchell’s novel. Several roles in the film—notably that of Scarlett—involved lengthy searches and elaborate deal making. As many as five directors and 13 writers toiled to bring the epic to life. Shooting for the film took 140 days. The famous “burning of Atlanta” scene required the fiery destruction of a 30-acre back lot. Three days of festivities were held for the film’s premiere in Atlanta. Gone with the Wind was the first colour movie to win the Oscar for best picture, and Hattie McDaniel was the first African American to be nominated for and to win an Oscar.

    •Studios: Selznick International Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

    •Directors: Victor Fleming and uncredited directors including George Cukor and Sam Wood

    •Writers: Sidney Howard (screenplay) and uncredited writers including Oliver H.P. Garret, Ben Hecht, Jo Swerling, and John Van Druten

    •Music: Max Steiner

    •Vivien Leigh (Scarlett O’Hara)

    •Clark Gable (Rhett Butler)

    •Leslie Howard (Ashley Wilkes)

    •Olivia de Havilland (Melanie Hamilton)

    •Hattie McDaniel (Mammy)

    •Butterfly McQueen (Prissy)

    •Picture*

    •Lead actor (Clark Gable)

    •Lead actress* (Vivien Leigh)

    •Supporting actress (Olivia de Havilland)

    •Supporting actress* (Hattie McDaniel)

    •Art direction*

    • Pat Bauer
  4. Gone with the Wind won eight Academy Awards: Best Picture, Actress (Vivien Leigh), Supporting Actress (Hattie McDaniel), Art Direction (Lyle R. Wheeler), Color Cinematography (Ernest Haller, Ray Rennahan), Directing (Victor Fleming), Film Editing (Hal C. Kern, James E. Newcom) and Writing – Screenplay (Sidney Howard).

  5. With Thomas Mitchell, Barbara O'Neil, Vivien Leigh, Evelyn Keyes. A sheltered and manipulative Southern belle and a roguish profiteer face off in a turbulent romance as the society around them crumbles with the end of slavery and is rebuilt during the Civil War and Reconstruction periods.

    • (327K)
    • Drama, Romance, War
    • Victor Fleming, George Cukor, Sam Wood
    • 1940-01-17
  6. Jan 21, 2014 · January 21, 2014. in BEST DIRECTOR, BEST PICTURE, featured, Oscar Flashback. 2567. There are just a few years that will always be remembered in Oscar history, either because one film so thoroughly dominated those awards, or because another film didn’t. Gone with the Wind was the kind of film that Oscar seemed to be made for.

  7. Winner of eight Academy Awards® (plus two special achievement Oscars) Celebrate the 85th Anniversary of one of the most celebrated motion pictures of all time, Gone With the Wind!

    • (104)
    • Romance, History, Drama
    • G
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