User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
1/10
They are wrong!
Marynewcomb201324 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
They are pushing the narrative of today's propaganda on the Civil War!! What the people doing this do not realize is, when the book of Gone With The Wind was wrote, there were people that fought & lived through the Civil War that Margaret could draw from!! The war was about more than slavery!! People HAVE to see that & STOP rewriting history!! Before the war, the cotton gin was invented & really increased cotton production, meaning more money!! The northern businessmen wanted to get the land in the south for that purpose & southerners would NOT budge!! The northerners want to get bills passed to take land from southerners before the war!! As General Lee said when he was forced into picking a side, he loved the US & would serve the US any time but he would not go against his home state in the south!! That's why he went to lead the confederate army!! The man did not own slaves, nor did he believe in it!! He fought, like most others did to protect their home state & the rights for the south to keep their land if they wanted to or sell it if they wanted!! Something else this leaves out is the south had free black men who volunteered in the confederate army!! They also forget or don't know about the Union army marching into southern towns, murdering the men, women & children or any color before burning the towns down!! They also don't mention how after the war, northerners swooped down to the southern states to wrestle basically for southern land!! That alone shows & PROVES the war was about more than slavery!! It's not a myth, it's FACTS!!!
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
The Style and the Substance
Goingbegging27 May 2021
It is the final minutes of this film that justify the words 'New South' in its title. It celebrates the rebuilding of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, blacks and whites collaborating on a massive programme of works in a harmonious spirit, no doubt helped along by a little background-jazz in Bourbon Street. Actually I think the producers missed their chance to show scenes from the hurricane itself, which made the Bush administration look as though it was deliberately leaving the poorer black enclaves to (literally) sink or swim. A revolutionary might have used this to spark Armageddon. But the longsuffering public realized there was no lynch-mob spirit here, just politicians even lazier than usual.

A distinctly non-revolutionary black lady-professor from Atlanta is proud to call herself a southerner, and claims that the 'family' is getting on much better these days. ("If my ancestors could see me now...") She certainly reflects the claim that the south has the better manners, and this, of course, is what keeps Gone with the Wind close to the hearts of America, north and south. But as always, any mention of GWTW raises the spectre of racial servitude, and the Civil War being blamed on slavery.

In the run-up to the war, most northerners were not especially interested in the slavery debate. But they were very interested in the cotton debate. Bigger and bigger cotton revenues were pouring into Washington every year. And every year, the North was winning more debates in Congress, free to spend this new wealth on projects that would benefit them at the expense of the south who had generated it (with a little help from unpaid labour, that is.) To the north, therefore, the Union was distinctly worth fighting for, as the south felt it was equally worth fighting against.

So the actual trigger was the economy, not slavery, which was somewhat on the back-burner anyway, as Lincoln had given the nod to slavery in its traditional heartlands. (Not till almost half-way through did he turn it into an abolitionist war) This is why phrases like 'caused by slavery' or 'profiting from slavery' are too simplistic to convince the sceptical.

Like many good soldiers, the Confederates were bad losers, and felt it necessary to invent the Lost Cause out of a sulky feeling that they had deserved to win, beaten only by a bigger population and better technology - and then to dress this up in the romantic imagery of the old south, as reflected in the most successful movie of all time.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Typical Hollywood Spin
bizzyziggy26 November 2021
What you get with the Gone With The Wind Box Set is this short included in the Special Features. It completely mars the set. All you get is "professional" persons giving their views on the war and the aftermath. Of course only their views are the golden truth and no countering views are given. Their takes on the war and the statues erected afterwards are inaccurate. Shame on Warner Brothers for including this woke garbage in this box set.
0 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed