The same way the American Civil War started in real life. On April 12, 1861, Confederate forces attacked Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina. In the movie, Mr. O'Hara mentions the battle with the line, "The South must assert ourselves by force of arms. After we fired on the Yankee rascals at Fort Sumter, we've got to fight. There's no other way."
how was the movie "gone with the wind compared to the civil war
The people of Atlanta during the Civil War.
"Gone with the Wind" is the famous movie that was made from a book by Margaret Mitchell which deals with the Civil War and its aftermath in the American South.
A battle scene.
The American Civil War, especially emphasizes the fall of Atlanta
The answer to your question is "yes". Margaret Mitchell's novel "Gone With the Wind" was first published in 1936. The movie of the same name was produced in 1939. World War II began in September 1939, after Hitler's invasion of Poland.
The American Civil War
The American Civil War.
The movie "Gone With The Wind" is a commentary about life in the antebellum or pre-civil-war South, and how that lifestyle was just "blown away" after the war.
Gone with the Wind, is a book written by Margaret Mitchell, (1900-1949) and it is about life in Georgia during the American Civil War. I recomend reading it, or seeing the movie, starring Clark Gable, (R.I.P.) Vivien Leigh (R.I.P.) And Olivia De Haviland.
The name of the melody in Gone with the Wind is Tara's theme. Tara was the plantation where Scarlett O'Hara lived before the war.
The US Civil War provides the background.