Reviewed by: Charity Bishop
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Better than Average |
Moviemaking Quality: |
|
Primary Audience: | • Family • Teens • Young-Adults • Adults |
Genre: | Drama Romance Adaptation |
Length: | 2 hr. 14 min. |
Year of Release: | 2019 |
USA Release: |
December 7, 2019 (premier) December 25, 2019 (wide release) DVD: April 7, 2020 |
1860s and American The Civil War
Relationships between sisters with divergent dreams
Mother and daughter relationships
Coming of age / girlhood versus womanhood
Personal ambitions
Grappling with life’s many clashing lures—with family, art, money, love, freedom, and the hope of being 100% who you are, creating your own unique story.
Ideals vs. real life
Personal discoveries, sacrifices and anger
Financial, artistic and domestic concerns
Generosity
Women’s rights
Is the Feminist movement the right answer to the mistreatment that some women endure in this sinful world? Answer
Biblical women with admirable character, include: Mrs. Noah, Mary (mother of Jesus), Esther, Deborah, and Milcah, daugher of Zelophehad
TRUE LOVE—What is true love and how do you know when you have found it? Answer
What is LOVE, for a follower of Christ? Answer
Is LOVE a feeling, an emotion, or an action? Answer
Featuring |
Saoirse Ronan … Jo March Emma Watson … Meg March Florence Pugh … Amy March Eliza Scanlen … Beth March Laura Dern … Marmee March Meryl Streep … Aunt March Chris Cooper … Mr. Laurence Timothée Chalamet … Theodore “Laurie” Laurence Maryann Plunkett … Mrs. Kirke Tracy Letts … Mr. Dashwood Bob Odenkirk … Mr. March James Norton … John Brooke See all » |
Director | Greta Gerwig — “Lady Bird” |
Producer |
Columbia Pictures New Regency Pictures See all » |
Distributor |
Columbia Pictures, a division of Sony Pictures |
Based on the beloved novel by Louisa May Alcott, “Little Women” is a humorous, touching, and memorable tale of four sisters on the cusp of womanhood.
Rambunctious tomboy Jo March (Saoirse Ronan) shoves into an editorial office to “sell a story for a friend.” She sits through a scathing criticism and agrees to the proposed changes, so she can earn enough to help support her ailing sister, Beth (Eliza Scanlen). When the downstairs professor, Frederick Bhaer (Louis Garrel), takes an interest in her work, she allows him to read a few of her sensational stories. Alas, he “does not like them” and, her feelings deeply hurt, Jo flounces upstairs, determined never to speak to him again.
Her elder sister, Meg (Emma Watson), is struggling for contentment, since her marriage to John Brooke (James Norton) does not allow her to purchase the beautiful things she covets. And the youngest March sister, Amy (Florence Pugh), travels across Europe with her crotchety Aunt March (Meryl Streep), desperate to either become the best artist she can be, or to marry into a fortune. On a ride in the park, she meets up with their childhood friend and neighbor, Laurie (Timothee Chalamet), who has allowed his melancholy after a rejected marriage proposal to turn him into a wastrel. Seven years earlier, the sisters met Laurie at a local social event. Little did they know a wild dance in secret and a twisted ankle would change all their lives forever. And, eventually, help Jo find her true voice as an author…
Unlike all other adaptations, this one starts in the middle and shows earlier events through flashbacks, to great success. It not only works as a narrative device by keeping up the momentum, it helps soften the blows—after losing a main character, we see them again at a much happier time in their life. The only sacrifice in the script is Professor Bhaer, who does not get much screen-time, but the audience loves and invests so much in Jo, that we believe in her fondness for him even if we have had little time to share it.
The writer and director, Greta Gerwig, allows all the sisters to shine, even though she frames the film, as she should, as “Jo’s story.” That is where its strength lies—as much in Jo’s passion for words, her frustration as a budding female author in a time when men dominated the bookshelves, and her ambitious desire to forge her own life through her pen, as in her tight-knit bonds with her sisters.
The girls feel real, both in their interactions as siblings (they quarrel, forgive, talk over each other, and tease each other) and in their failures and triumphs. In the book, Christianity is the driving force behind their collective desire for self-improvement. They wrestle with their sins (Amy’s is vanity, Jo’s is anger, Meg’s is conformity, and Beth’s is excessive shyness) and learn to become better. The film shows them improving, and Amy has a great deal of influence on the wayward Laurie, but with no mention of their beliefs. Marmee (Laura Dern) confesses to Jo she is “angry almost every day of my life,” but over forty years, has learned to curb her temper. The film casts them in a positive, but revolutionary light. They take a poor family their breakfast on Christmas morning, while in the background believers trot into a church building.
Content-wise, there is little to discourage family viewing. The usual thematic themes are present (the illness/death of a family member; a girl falls through the ice on a pond and almost drowns; Jo is forever punching Laurie on the arm or throwing pillows at her sisters). Jo complains she cannot support herself. Aunt March says she could, if she wanted to own a “cat house” (brothel) or become an actress which is “the same in my mind.” Meg wears a low-cut dress at a dance. Amy cries out, “Oh, my God!” in delight when her father comes home. Jo uses various non-profanities as exclamations (such as “Christopher Columbus!”). Laurie is drunk in one scene (Amy berates him for it).
There is one “dig” at the current political situation, when Professor Bhaer says he must travel west to where people have “less prejudice against immigrants.” Marmee says in one scene she has spent most of her life “being ashamed of her country” (presumably for indulging slavery, though that is not clear). The sisters each have feminist speeches (Jo says others should know women for their minds and souls, not just their marriage prospects; Amy rants about having no rights and not owning anything once she marries, even her children; Meg tells Jo “we may not have the same dreams, but mine are just as important”—to be a wife and a mother).
Every twenty years, there’s a new adaptation of this beloved novel. Most of them leave out the religious underpinnings but they’re so much a part of the narrative, Louisa’s desire to raise up a generation of “little women” of virtue and goodness still shines through. Here, the cast is excellent. The girls have a palpable sisterly chemistry and play off each other well. The writing allows Amy and Jo to shine. The costumes are authentic to the period. Gorgeous autumn colors, winter snowfall, and spring flowers fill the screen with joyous color.
I took my mother to see it. We laughed, we cried, and we agreed, it’s a beautiful tribute to one of our favorite books.
See list of Relevant Issues—questions-and-answers.
PLEASE share your observations and insights to be posted here.
My Ratings: Moral rating: Better than Average / Moviemaking quality: 5