moonlight and magnolias

moonlight and magnolias
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Gone with the Wind (film)

Gone With The Wind

theatrical release poster
Directed byVictor Fleming
Uncredited:
George Cukor
Sam Wood
Produced byDavid O. Selznick
Written byNovel:
Margaret Mitchell
Screenplay:
Sidney Howard
Uncredited:
Ben Hecht
Jo Swerling
John Van Druten
StarringClark Gable
Vivien Leigh
Leslie Howard
Olivia de Havilland
Hattie McDaniel
Music byMax Steiner
CinematographyErnest Haller
Distributed bySelznick International
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1939)
New Line Cinema (1998)
Warner Bros. (video)
Release date(s)December 15, 1939
(Atlanta premiere)
December 19
(NYC premiere)
December 28
(LA premiere)
January 17, 1941
(US-general)
Running time222 minutes
238 minutes with overture, entr'acte, and exit music
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3.9 million
Gross revenue$90.2 million
Followed byScarlett
IMDb

Gone with the Wind is a 1939 American drama-romance-film adapted from Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel of the same name and directed by Victor Fleming (Fleming replaced George Cukor). The epic film, set in the American South in and around the time of the Civil War, stars Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard, and Olivia de Havilland, and tells a story of the Civil War and its aftermath from a white Southern viewpoint.

It received ten Academy Awards, a record that stood for twenty years.[1] In the American Film Institute's inaugural Top 100 American Films of All Time list of 1998, it was ranked number four, although in the 2007 10th Anniversary edition of that list, it was dropped two places, to number six. In June 2008, AFI revealed its 10 top 10 — the best ten films in ten American film genres—after polling over 1,500 persons from the creative community. Gone with the Wind was acknowledged as the fourth best film in the Epic genre.[2][3] It has sold more tickets in the U.S. than any other film in history, and is considered a prototype of a Hollywood blockbuster. Today, it is considered one of the greatest and most popular films of all time and one of the most enduring symbols of the golden age of Hollywood. When adjusted for inflation, Gone with the Wind is the highest-grossing film of all time.[4][5]

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