It was impossible to make a truly "authentic" rendition of Steinbeck's novel as a mass-audience movie in 1940. The prevailing standards of censorship simply would not permit it.
Given those restrictions, the movie was still a powerful and generally pretty faithful adaptation of the book. It is still one of the most subversive mass-audience pictures released before the 1960s.
TGOW was adapted to a stage play in 1990 starring Gary Sinise. That version is more faithful to the original novel but there are still some significant omissions/ changes.
I think a remake could be made now, sticking much closer to the original novel. It would be less optimistic and more fatalistic than the 1940 movie but it could still be well done.
The directors/producers/writers/cast would have to walk a fine line to not fall into near-parody in some segments which pretty much must be done verbatim, and also resist the temptation to just change stuff for the hell of it, to show you are doing your "own" version.
And casting would be absolutely key.
Some guys who might be very good as Tom Joad (David Straithairn, Billy Bob Thornton, Sinise, George Clooney) are now the wrong age. Tom is supposed to still be fairly young, in his 30s at the oldest. He is not supposed to be an old man or even middle-aged.
Edward Norton might be able to do a good Tom Joad, but at 43, he is also moving out of the age-group in which he would be credible in the role.
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4) You ever seen Superman $#$# his pants? Case closed.
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