One of the greatest questions of the universe that no one seems to agree on for the answer. My answer: there is none. I always watch the movie in the mindset of Johnny. He doesn't know what racism is, therefore, he sees his Aunt Tempy as just the jolly old nanny of his, Toby and Ginny as friends of his, and Uncle Remus as the closest to a father figure he has since his own leaves him.Pluto Region1 wrote:I don't get it; where is the racism?
Not sure which Shirley Temple movie is set on a Civil War plantation, but a similar period piece that's rather ambiguous as to time is 1936's Dimples. One of my favorite Shirley Temple movies, it's about Dimples (ST), a little orphan girl (her background isn't really explained) who sings and dances in the streets for fun, ending up at the home of a wealthy lady, and eventually in the film they have a musical based on Uncle Tom's Cabin, complete with white actors in "blackface" makeup.Pluto Region1 wrote:if you watch a Shirley Temple movie
Hattie McDaniel actually won earlier, as Best Supporting Actress for Gone With The Wind. But in terms of actor/actress, yeah, James Baskett was the first.Pluto Region1 wrote: James Basket won an Oscar and was the FIRST African American Actor (per IMDB.com) to have won an Academy Award, period.
GWTW was produced by Selznick International, and distrubted by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. When Turner acquired the pre-1986 MGM library, he distributed it, until finally his library went to Time Warner (WB), where they distributed it on DVD and such. Anyways, I'm pretty sure none of them every had any bad lip about releasing GWTW, because the financial draw was always bigger to them than the historical draw. Far be it from a major studio to hold back a masterpiece on the grounds of its portrayal of blacks in a pre-during-and-post Civil War epic.Kram Nebuer wrote:Did WB or Paramount or whatever get some bad lip for releasing Gone with the Wind on DVD/video multiple times?
Escapay