Gone with the Wind (1939)

Leaving for Battle

On his way to join the Confederate Army, Rhett (Clark Gable) professes his love for Scarlett (Vivien Leigh), but she rejects him harshly.

Directed by Victor Fleming, George Cukor, and Sam Wood.

Released in 1939 by Warner Bros..

Your MOVIECLIP has been shared on Facebook

related tags 

  • character-type: Pretty Woman
  • character-type: Ladies Man
  • action: Cry
  • action: Kiss
  • action: Slap
  • editors-choice: I Love You's
  • editors-choice: Break-Ups
  • editors-choice: Romantic Scenes
  • editors-choice: Insults / Comebacks
  • editors-choice: Getting Slapped!
  • editors-choice: Female Performances
  • editors-choice: Kissing
  • editors-choice: Male Performances
  • editors-choice: On-Screen Couples
  • editors-choice: Hunks
  • primary-genre: Classics
  • primary-genre: Romance
  • primary-genre: Drama
  • secondary-genre: Period Pieces
  • secondary-genre: Classic Dramas
  • secondary-genre: Dramas Based on the Book
  • secondary-genre: Dramas Based on Classic Literature
  • secondary-genre: Classics
  • secondary-genre: Pre-20th Century Period Pieces
  • secondary-genre: Epics
  • secondary-genre: Romance Classics
  • mood: Romantic
  • mood: Angry
  • primary-occasion: Well Wishing
  • primary-occasion: Romantic
  • secondary-occasion: I Love You
  • secondary-occasion: Farewell
  • prop: Horse
  • setting: Countryside
  • theme: Rejection
  • theme: War
  • theme: Love
  • actor: Vivien Leigh
  • actor: Clark Gable
  • director: Victor Fleming
  • director: George Cukor
  • director: Sam Wood
  • producer: David O. Selznick
  • cinematographer: Lee Garmes
  • cinematographer: Ernest Haller
  • composer: Max Steiner
  • costume-designer: Walter Plunkett
  • production-designer: William Cameron Menzies
  • role-name: Rhett Butler - Visitor from Charleston
  • role-name: Scarlett - Their Daughter
  • screenwriter: Sidney Howard
  • screenwriter: John Van Druten
  • screenwriter: Margaret Mitchell
  • screenwriter: Oliver H.P. Garrett
  • screenwriter: Ben Hecht
  • screenwriter: Jo Swerling
  • year: 1939
  • studio: Warner Bros.