Sunday, January 5, 2020

Little Women

The next movie in my winter break marathon was Little Women which I saw with both of my sisters late at night on Christmas.  I could not have loved this movie more!  In fact, I loved everything about it!  This movie is an updated version of the beloved novel by Louisa May Alcott recounting how the March sisters, including Jo (Saoirse Ronan), Meg (Emma Watson), Amy (Florence Pugh), and Beth (Eliza Scanlen), come of age in Concord, Massachusetts during the Civil War.  The movie begins with Jo pursuing her dream of being a writer in New York.  She is forced to compromise in order to sell her stories and her friend and fellow resident at her boardinghouse, Friedrich Bhaer (Louis Garrell), criticizes her for it which angers her.  There are then flashbacks to the trials and triumphs of her adolescence with her sisters and mother "Marmee" (Laura Dern), her neighbor Theodore "Laurie" Laurence (Timothee Chalamet), his grandfather Mr. Laurence (Chris Cooper), and her Aunt March (Meryl Streep).  In between these flashbacks we see Jo encounter sorrow in the death of a sister, disappointment in love with Laurie, redemption as she writes a story to be proud of, and, ultimately, love with Friedrich.  I really love the structure of the narrative because every time there is a flashback it is a memory that informs the present situation.  We learn why Beth is ill, why Meg wants beautiful things, why Amy wants to marry well, and why Jo is so determined to succeed.  The cast is absolutely perfect!  I really love Ronan's portrayal of Jo's strength, especially when she negotiates with her publisher for control of the copyright for her book, and her vulnerability, particularly when she rethinks turning down Laurie's proposal because she is lonely.  However, I was so impressed by Pugh's performance because Amy is a character that I usually dislike (I always want Jo to end up with Laurie).  She portrays Amy as precocious rather than bratty and I liked the fact that she secretly loves Laurie throughout the whole movie because it makes their relationship more understandable.  Chalamet is so charming as Laurie, Dern (who is hit or miss with me) is perfect as Marmee, Cooper is more sentimental rather than curmudgeonly as Mr. Laurence, and Streep steals every scene she is in as Aunt March.  I love the costumes, the production design (especially the attic in the March house where the sisters perform their plays), and the beautiful score by Alexandre Desplat (one of my favorite film composers).  I am sure that this is a movie that I will watch over and over again (I've already seen it twice) and I highly recommend it for a lovely movie viewing experience!

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