Classic Films
Related: About this forum80th anniversary of Gone With the Wind
Last edited Mon Dec 16, 2019, 11:55 AM - Edit history (1)
I saw it the first time in a theater for its 20th then again for its 35th. Has it really been 80 years??? I just watched it for the gobzillionth time on TCM. I don't remember when it first was shown on TV. It said Ted Turner bought MGM mainly to have this film.
It is one hell of a four hour long movie. But at the core its just a soap opera.
Glorfindel
(9,943 posts)Dame Olivia deHavilland, age 103. What a remarkable lady.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olivia_de_Havilland
Thanks for the reminder, El Supremo.
asiliveandbreathe
(8,203 posts)Hubby recorded for later..
Voltaire2
(14,816 posts)Its a glitzed up romance version of birth of a nation.
I treated my slaves well. Antebellum bullshit.
Grasswire2
(13,730 posts)....not four hours, but still a very old movie. Playing at 7 p.m. one night a week. Would be fun to see some of these on the big screen.
JDC
(10,512 posts)rsdsharp
(10,245 posts)Wizard of Oz
Goodbye Mr. Chips
Ninotchka
Stagecoach
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Dark Victory
Wuthering Heights
Of Mice and Men
and a last best picture nominee I've never heard of, let alone seen -- Love Affair.
And there are even more classics which weren't nominated
Gunga Din
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Young Mr. Lincoln
There never was a better year for movies than 1939.