Scarlett O'Hara didn't think she was manipulating. That's just the way she got what she wanted.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I feel like if you're a girl in the South, you know 'Gone with the Wind' better than anything. Scarlett O'Hara is such a quintessential Southern woman.
I know I am right for Scarlett. I can convince Mr. Selznick.
I had a dresser who literally squeezed me in like Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With The Wind.
I really don't know why Scarlett has such appeal. When I began writing the sequel, I had a lot of trouble because Scarlett is not my kind of person. She's virtually illiterate, has no taste, never learns from her mistakes.
You know the passage where Scarlett voices her happiness that her mother is dead, so that she can't see what a bad girl Scarlett has become? Well, that's me.
People were always able to look at Bettie Page and see what they needed her to be and she gave them that permission to do so. So in that way she's a feminist but I don't think she was ever trying to be.
It must have been so impossible to think about it and dare to do that, so they feel compassionate for her. I don't think the movie would work otherwise.
Like Scarlett O'Hara, I won't be broke again.
When they tested Fatal Attraction, the audiences were so upset by her behavior, they literally demanded her blood.
In 'Fifty Shades,' seemingly, Christian has all the power and control - but actually, Anastasia does.
No opposing quotes found.