Sunday, May 19, 2019

Gone with the Wind and Feminism

Gone with the intrude and Feminism affix by Miriam Bale on Sat, Mar 13, 2010 at 138 PM pic mollie Haskell, rootage of aboveboard, My Dear, will interjectGone with the Wind at Film Forum on Sunday afternoon. Gone with the Wind plays this spend in Film Forums Victor Fleming festival, but is it re completelyy a Fleming assume?Uber-producer David Selznick is the most consistent author, and Selznick doppelganger George Cukor directed a significant amount of scenes, giving this domestic war carry somewhat moments more delicate and subtle than anything else in Flemings oeuvre (and after macho Fleming was brought on deputize the openly gay Cukor at Clark Gables urging, the womens director went on to coach Vivien Leigh and Olivia de Havilland on weekends, at their insistence, throughout the shoot) and Vivien Leigh gives a scarily mercurial performance in almost every scene, owning the film entirely.At the time of the films release, Frank Nugent in the New York Times wrote, Is it the greatest motion ideate ever made? Probably not, although it is the greatest motion mural we have ever seen. Its a mural made by many hands, and the esteemed critic Molly Haskells latest hold, Frankly My Dear Gone with the Wind Revisited does a fabulous job of parsing out the personas.She reveals nuggets like Howard Hawks supposed uncredited contribution in rewriting some of the dialogue in the last section, the battle of the sexes showdown between Rhett and Scarlett, which helps lick sense why this particular section feels like an entirely different film from the historical trifle of Part 1. Another uncredited writer was F. Scott Fitzgerald Haskells digging suggests that what he eliminated from the film may be as principal(prenominal) as what anyone else contributed.She in addition describes writer Ben Hecht maintaining as a point-of-pride that he had never nor never would read the mass-market large romance on which the film was basedso Selznick and Fleming stayed up all ni ght on a diet of speed and peanuts acting out the story for him (with Selznick as Scarlett and Fleming playing Melanie). Haskells volume overly focuses on the one-hit-wonder novelist Margaret Mitchell, telling the ascinating history of this flapper-turned-frumpy matron who rebelled against her serious, feminist southern belle of a mother by becoming a connoisseur and practitioner of frivolity as an art. As Mitchells background might suggest, Gone with the Wind is a complicated universe for a feminist to tackle. And further this is exactly the sort of conflicted, non-PC and pre-Second Wave adult male of women that Haskell has consistently celebrated and examined through films, serving a unique and all-important(a) role in American feminism.As Haskell describes this position in connection to a 1972 panel she took part in on women in film, in which Gloria Steinem deplored the scenes in Gone with the Wind of Scarlett OHara squeezed into a corset and Haskell then rose to defend that eccentric as a courageous survivor Both of our reactions were in their own way, right.But this difference of perspective was also an early augur of the fault lines in feminism or perhaps a necessary fall apart focus between those predisposed to see and proclaim signs of the victimization of women in a benighted ball now progressing toward enlightenment and equality and those inclined to be heartened by the contradictionsthe women in the past ( two real and fictional) whod held their own in a chauvinist culture, whod subverted the norms and gained victories not always apparent through a literal reading of the plot. Of course, just as Gone with the Wind is both tricky and rich individual(prenominal) territory for a southern-raised feminist like Haskell to examine, it is also difficulteven in coverage this truncatedfor a black feminist like myself to look at honestly. Gone with the Wind is unarguably, painfully racist, yet extraordinarily valuable for examining just how and why.T he film displays insipid white stereotypes in some of the minor characters as much as it does obscenely destructive black ones, and yet the main characters Rhett and Scarlett seem to exist right(prenominal) of this orbit, beyond expectations of both gender or race identification with these two characters is widespread and complex, by all races. Just as Selznicks Duel in the Sun inspired Laura Mulvey to overhaul her views on womanly identification, GWTW is ripe for looking at where racial identification splits and falls in this film, even after Haskells sharp, thorough and artfully scripted book has covered so uch mind and historic territory. Haskell will be on hand at 3pm screening at Film Forum on Sunday to introduce this problematic and fascinating piece of film history. Shell also be signing copies of her book, a coup of single-work film criticism that is highly intelligent, personal and never relies on jargon or cliches. Besides her unique and crucial role in American feminism , Haskell is also one of the best writers on film in America, and both as a critic and stylist shes only getting better. Molly Haskells feminist Take on Gone with the Wind y Melissa Silverstein on March 2, 2009 in Books Molly Haskell is the shit when it comes to writing about womens films with a feminist perspective. There is no one better. Her book From Reverence to Rape The Treatment of Women in the Movies is one of the best books about women in film and it was written in the 70s. (There is an apicdditional chapter that covers the 70s and 80s in the paperback. ) That just goes to show you how few books have critically looked at this issue (from a non-academic perspective. Haskell has taken on one of the most beloved films Gone with the Wind in her new book Frankly My Dear which is out now. The book has gotten stellar reviews and including in the NY Times this weekend. Haskells argument is attach on feminist principles that at first glance seem antithetical to a film wide regarde d as prefeminist fluff. She contends that themes centering on women are always an inferior subject matter to socially aware critics of literature and film. After 70 years of GWTW bashing, a creditable critic finally says, Not so fast Haskell gave up regular reviewing in the early 90s, leaving criticism that seriously examined the big-screen image of women and the democratic representation of female social roles to go underground into academic studies where abstruse, tenure-seeking jargon is used to rebuff popular taste. That makes Frankly, My Dear all the more remarkable. Its Haskells feminist perspective that provides insight into a cinema most academics wont touch and current critics dismiss. She disentangles the films qualities from the confounding issues of misogyny, racism and intellectual snobbery.

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