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Little Women

 
Movies:

Little Women

  • Director: George Cukor
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Coming-of-Age, Family Drama
  • Themes: Sibling Relationships, First Love, Women During Wartime
  • Main Cast: Katharine Hepburn, Joan Bennett, Paul Lukas, Frances Dee, Jean Parker, Edna May Oliver
  • Release Year: 1933
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 116 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

George Cukor directed this classic adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's sentimental novel with a shimmering lavishness that is a prime example of the classic Hollywood style at its best. The story concerns the lives of four New England sisters -- Jo (Katharine Hepburn), Amy (Joan Bennett), Meg (Frances Dee), and Beth (Jean Parker) -- during the time of the Civil War. Jo desires to leave home to become a writer, but decides to stay to help the family. But Meg announces her plans to get married, so Jo leaves for New York City. As she settles down to a writing career, she meets Professor Fritz Bhaer (Paul Lukas), who helps her with her work. While Jo is away, Amy falls in love and marries Jo's old flame Laurie Laurence (Douglass Montgomery). But Jo is forced to return to New England when she discovers Beth is dying. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

Review

One of Hollywood's original "chick flicks," this faithful adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's Civil War-era novel focuses almost exclusively on the ambitions, desires, and emotions of the titular four sisters. The expensive and attractive production literally embodies that most manipulative of cinematic clichés, "I laughed, I cried." Little Women's first half, focused on the sisters' effervescent and fun-loving youth, gradually gives way to a melancholy, downbeat second half, in which we witness confusion, disappointment, and death. The film's willingness to concentrate almost exclusively on these four sisters, who vary from confident to reticent, was an important step forward in the cinematic treatment of women. How the "little women" hold up as they undergo their trials and tribulations is also essential, as they survive and thrive without (and occasionally despite) men, who appear only in supporting roles, a tidy inversion of Hollywood tradition. Little Women's star-making performance was that of Katherine Hepburn, whose tomboyish spunk is wonderfully endearing in the role of Jo, the embryonic writer. However, the supporting work of Joan Bennett, Jean Parker, and Frances Dee is also key to the film's enduring appeal. Nominated for three Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director for George Cukor, Little Women won best adapted screenplay for Victor Heerman and Sarah Y. Mason. ~ Dan Jardine, All Movie Guide

Cast

Douglass Montgomery - Laurie Laurence; Henry Stephenson - Mr. Laurence; Spring Byington - Marmee March; Samuel S. Hinds - Mr. March; Mabel Colcord - Hannah; John Lodge - Brooke; Nydia Westman - Mamie; Marion Ballou - Mrs. Kirke; Harry Beresford - Dr. Bangs; June Filmer - Girl at Boarding House; Dorothy Gray - Girl at Boarding House; Olin Howland - Mr. Davis; Marina Schubert - Flo King

Credit

Van Nest Polglase - Art Director, Kenneth MacGowan - Associate Producer, Walter Plunkett - Costume Designer, George Cukor - Director, Jack Kitchin - Editor, Merian C. Cooper - Executive Producer, Max Steiner - Composer (Music Score), Mel Burns - Makeup, Henry W. Gerrard - Cinematographer, Hobe Erwin - Set Designer, Harry Redmond - Special Effects, Victor Heerman - Screenwriter, Sarah Y. Mason - Screenwriter, Louisa May Alcott - Book Author

Similar Movies

Anne of Green Gables: The Sequel; Anne of Green Gables; Friendly Persuasion; I Remember Mama; Little Men; Meet Me in St. Louis; My Brilliant Career; Pride and Prejudice; Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm; Little Men; Little Men
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Wikipedia: Little Women (1933 film)
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This article is about the 1933 film. For other uses, see Little Women.
Little Women

Original poster
Directed by George Cukor
Produced by Merian C. Cooper
Written by Victor Heerman
Sarah Y. Mason
Based on the novel by Louisa May Alcott
Starring Katharine Hepburn
Joan Bennett
Jean Parker
Frances Dee
Music by Max Steiner
Cinematography Henry W. Gerrard
Editing by Jack Kitchin
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release date(s) November 16, 1933
Running time 117 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Little Women is a 1933 American drama film directed by George Cukor. The screenplay by Sarah Y. Mason and Victor Heerman is based on the classic novel of the same name by Louisa May Alcott. This is the third screen adaptation of the book, following silent versions released in 1917 and 1918.

Contents

Plot

Set in Concord, Massachusetts during and after the American Civil War, the film is a series of vignettes focusing on the struggles and adventures of the four March sisters and their mother, affectionately known as Marmee, as they await the return of their father, who is fighting with the Union Army. Spirited tomboy Jo, who caters to the whims of their well-to-do Aunt March, dreams of becoming a famous author and writes plays for her sisters to perform for the local children. Amy is pretty but selfish, Meg works as a seamstress, and sensitive Beth practices on her clavichord, an aging instrument sorely in need of tuning.

The girls meet Laurie, who has come to live with his grandfather Mr. Laurence, the Marches' wealthy next-door neighbor. The Laurences invite them to a lavish party, where Meg meets Laurie's tutor, John Brooke. During the course of the next several months, Meg is courted by John, Jo has her first short story published, and Beth frequently takes advantage of Mr. Laurence's offer and practices on his piano.

Marmee learns her husband has been wounded and is recuperating in a Washington, DC hospital, so she leaves home to care for him. During her absence, Beth contracts scarlet fever from a neighbor's baby. She recovers but is left in a weakened state. Her parents return, and Meg marries John. Laurie confesses his love to Jo, who rejects him. When he snubs her in return, Jo moves to a New York City boarding house to pursue her writing career. There she meets Professor Baer, an impoverished German linguist. With his help and encouragement, Jo improves her writing and resolves her confused feelings about Laurie.

A debilitated Beth nears death, and Jo returns to Concord. After her sister dies, Jo learns Amy, who accompanied Aunt March to Europe, has fallen in love with Laurie, and eventually the two wed. Jo then accepts the proposal of marriage offered by the professor.

Production

Although David O. Selznick received no screen credit, he returned to RKO from MGM to supervise the production as the last film left in his contract with the studio.[1]

At the request of Katharine Hepburn, costume designer Walter Plunkett created a dress for her character copied from one worn by her maternal grandmother in a tintype Hepburn had. Plunkett also had to redesign several of Joan Bennett's costumes to conceal her advancing pregnancy, a condition Bennett intentionally had not mentioned to George Cukor when he cast her in the film. [2]

Louise Closser Hale originally was scheduled to portray Aunt March, but after her death on July 26, 1933, Edna May Oliver assumed the role. [3]

The film was budgeted at $1 million, and 4,000 people worked on it during the year-long production schedule. 3,000 separate items, including costumes, furnishings, and household appliances, were authenticated by research. Hobe Erwin, a former artist and interior decorator, was hired to oversee the set decoration, and he modeled the interior of the March home after Louisa May Alcott's Massachusetts house. [3]

Exteriors were filmed at Lancaster's Lake in Sunland, Providencia Ranch in the Hollywood Hills, and the Warner Bros. Ranch in Pasadena.

The film opened on November 16, 1933 at Radio City Music Hall, where it broke attendance records and earned over $100,000 during its first week of release. [3]

Cast

Critical reception

Mourdant Hall of the New York Times observed, "The easy-going fashion in which George Cukor, the director, has set forth the beguiling incidents in pictorial form is so welcome after the stereotyped tales with stuffed shirts. It matters not that this chronicle is without a hero, or even a villain,for the absence of such worthies, usually extravagantly drawn, causes one to be quite contented to dwell for the moment with human hearts of the old-fashioned days. The film begins in a gentle fashion and slips away smoothly without any forced attempt to help the finish to linger in the minds of the audience." [4]

TV Guide rated the film four stars, calling it "unabashedly sentimental" and "an example of Hollywood's best filmmaking." It added, "The sets, costumes, lighting, and direction by George Cukor all contribute greatly to this magnificent film, but the performances, especially Hepburn's, are what make the simple story so moving. There are laughs and tears aplenty in this movie, which presents a slice of American history in a way that children will find palatable. Released during the depths of the Depression, Little Women buoyed Americans' spirits. It still does." [5]

Awards and nominations

Husband-and-wife screenwriters Sarah Y. Mason and Victor Heerman won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture but lost to Cavalcade, and George Cukor lost the Academy Award for Best Director to Frank Lloyd for his direction of that film.

DVD release

The film was released on DVD for Region 1 markets (US, Canada, and US territories) on November 6, 2001 by Warner Home Video. It is closed captioned and features an English audio track in Dolby Digital 1.0 and subtitles in English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Georgian, and Chinese.

References

  1. ^ Edwards, Anne (1985). A Remarkable Woman: A Biography of Katharine Hepburn. New York: William Morrow & Company. p. 110. ISBN 0-688-04528-6. 
  2. ^ Edwards, p. 109
  3. ^ a b c Little Women at Turner Classic Movies
  4. ^ New York Times review
  5. ^ TV Guide review

External links


 
 
Learn More
Alcott, Louisa May (American writer and reformer)
Cukor, George (American filmmaker)
DVD Bookshelf: Little Women (2007 Language & Literature Film)

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