Find a flaw
>>63332783
too white. needs some diversity.
>>63332783
She's not taking the BBC
Not enough mammy
>>63332797
There's lots of coloreds in it, though.
>>63332783
>Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn!
How can one man be so alpha?
>>63332854
diversity means black male on white female shitlord.
>>63332854
Yeah but they all play slaves.
>>63332783
>Find a flaw
It's a dumbed-down historically inaccurate romanticized sympathy flick for the degenerate, uneducated, sore-loser South.I should know, I live here
>>63332783
Spreads the story out over nearly 4 hours instead of making a proper Trilogy with tons of unnecessary subplots and added characters.
>>63332797
Gone with the Wind is LITERALLY the first time a black actress won best supporting role at the Oscars
it was one of the most progressive movies of its time, tumblr would have praised it at the time and /pol/ would have been massively triggered
>>63332879
>
Rudolph Valentino as Sheik Ahmed and Agnes Ayres as Lady Diana in the 1921 silent film The Sheik. Mitchell used Valentino's image, which women found sexually appealing, to develop her character of the "ideal man", Rhett Butler.[92]
The most passionate and virile character in the novel is Rhett with whom Margaret Mitchell associates "dark sexuality" and the "black devil".[93]
>Further, Mitchell's romantic hero is colored—black and brown.
>Rhett's symbolic dark-colored image is placed within the context of two other images: the mythic black rapist and the dark-skinned Arab Sheik played by screen idol Rudolph Valentino in the film, The Sheik.
>By strategically placing Rhett's image in this manner, Mitchell simultaneously plays upon racial anxieties and sexual fantasies.[94]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gone_with_the_Wind
>>63332783
Worst heroine ever
>Have a handsome admirer willing to quit his playboy lifestyle to settle down with her
>She cheats on him with her brother-in-law
I'm glad Rhett told her to go fuck herself in the end.
>>63332824
Best girl.
>>63332990
>With Rhett's "swarthy face"[91] juxtaposed against Scarlett's "magnolia-white skin",[14] the two white protagonists are a metaphor for an interracial couple, and their romance represents racial conflict.[96]
Jesus Christ. It's like the olden-timey BLACKED
>>63332930
> LITERALLY
I know this is autistic, but how would the sentence "Gone with the Wind is the first time a black actress won best supporting role at the Oscars" ever be interpreted non-literally?
>>63333179
it's just for emphasis fæm