Moreover, for better or worse, the private company that owns
Gone with the Wind has every right to make that title available or not available on their streaming platform as they see fit. I’m still twiddling my thumbs waiting for
If Looks Could Kill, but I’m guessing my thumbs will be twiddling for awhile. If they want to spend $30 million (or more) crafting a finished version of Zack Snyder’s
Justice League, that’s their choice. And yes, there is a cultural issue with the availability (and conversation) around a given movie or TV show being almost entirely tied to whether it’s available for free on a given streaming service, but that’s to HBO Max’s gain so I don’t expect any changes on that front.
Here’s the best part. Here’s why HBO Max removing
Gone with the Wind is not censorship. Even if you ignore everything else stated above, you can still buy or rent
Gone with the Wind on every single major VOD platform around. Be it
Amazon AMZN, Google Play, FandangoNow, iTunes or any others I don’t feel like listing, you can rent the 233-minute epic for as little as $4 or you can digitally own it for as little as $10. If you’re still into physical media (bless you), it’s currently the top-ranked DVD
over at Amazon. You can even get the original novel on your Kindle for $0.65.
Just because it’s currently unavailable on
HBO Max, a single (less-than-a-month-old) streaming service does not mean the film is no longer affordably available for viewing. Oh, and if you’re upset about the new
Looney Tunes shorts (which are pretty damn good)
no longer featuring gun-toting antagonists, you should know that
HBO Max has plenty of older tunes with plenty of gun play for your viewing pleasure. I wish that the “ultimate edition” of
Batman v Superman were on the service instead (or along with) the theatrical cut, but that’s not censorship either.