One Damn Moment from the 1930s
The year was 1939 , and many lists and books on film history were greatly changed by “Gone with the Wind.”
It sold more tickets and made more money than any other film of its day, destroying the previous figures really.
AFI placed the Rhett Butler/Clark Cable “Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn” as the number one greatest line in all of cinema (or some other award of that nature and similar phrasing).
“Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn.”
If you haven’t seen “Gone with the Wind,” I will try not to ruin the ending. However, when I first saw it on the list as number one, I was shocked. It didn’t seem great or exceptional to me in anyway. I had the literal look on my face of a “SO WHAT” expression. It honestly meant nothing to me.
Then, one night earlier this year, I couldn’t get to sleep, and suddenly, I was metaphorically awakened by the gravity of it.
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