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Little Women

EMAILPRINTColumbia Pictures

Little Women reviews
87
9.2 User Score:

Movie Info

Genre(s): Drama  |  Family/Kids  |  Romance  |  War

Written by: Robin Swicord
Louisa May Alcott (novel)

Directed by: Gillian Armstrong

Release Date:
Theatrical: December 21, 1994
DVD: April 25, 2000

Running Time: 115 minutes, Color

Origin: USA

Summary

RATING: PG

Starring Winona Ryder, Trini Alvarado, Kirsten Dunst, Samantha Mathis, Claire Danes, Susan Sarandon, Christian Bale, and Gabriel Byrne

With her husband off at war, Marmee (Sarandon) is left alone to raise their four daughters, her little women. There is the spirited Jo (Ryder); conservative Meg (Alvarado); fragile Beth (Danes); and romantic Amy (Dunst and Mathis). As the years pass, the sisters share some of the most cherished and painful memories of self-discovery, as Marmee and Aunt March (Wickes) guide them through issues of independence, romance and virtue. (Sony Pictures)

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

100

Boston Globe Jay Carr

[The novel's] themes have never not been fresh and they gleam here under the sympathetic and enlivening touch of Armstrong and her cast, who move through the events with sunny assurance and complete immersion in character. [21 Dec 1994]

100

Chicago Tribune Johanna Steinmetz

Armstrong and screenwriter Robin Swicord have pared the work's sentimentality and bolstered its intellectual content, [21 Dec 1994]

100

Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum

A graceful, unsentimental, well-made movie.

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100

Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy

It's a celebration of American female screen acting, it's a study of early feminism that feels relevant today, it's a carefully mounted exercise in period filmmaking and it's a beloved novel come to life for the fourth time. [23 Dec 1994]

100

USA Today Susan Wloszczyna

Director Gillian Armstrong takes the delicate snow globe that is Little Women and gives it a bold new shake. [21 Dec 1994]

90

Village Voice Georgia Brown

The new Little Women, directed with grace by Gillian Armstrong, adapted with tact by Robin Swicord, and starring an extraordinary ensemble, has made my holiday.

90

Dallas Observer Matt Zoller Seitz

It respects its characters, its source material, and its audience, and its inherent melodrama is ennobled by the scrupulous intelligence of its director.

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90

Time Richard Corliss

Director Gillian Armstrong and writer Robin Swicord have fashioned an entrancing film from this distinctly unfashionable classic.

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90

Los Angeles Times Kevin Thomas

Armstrong, screenplay adapter/co-producer Robin Swicord and their colleagues have got everything just right. [23 Dec 1994]

90

Variety Todd McCarthy

This handsomely produced period piece is easily the most emotionally effective bigscreen melodrama since "The Joy Luck Club," as well as the most intelligent.

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90

The New York Times Janet Maslin

Ms. Armstrong instantly demonstrates that she has caught the essence of this book's sweetness and cast her film uncannily well, finding sparkling young actresses who are exactly right for their famous roles.

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88

TV Guide Ethan Alter

Director Gillian Armstrong's feminist spin on classic material retains the moving humanity of Louisa May Alcott's novel while reworking it with welcome freshness.

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88

Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

Director Gillian Armstrong finds the serious themes and refuses to simplify the story into a "family" formula. "

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88

The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Elizabeth Renzetti

Gillian Armstrong's adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's 1868 novel is lively and thoughtful and beautifully formed. [21 Dec 1994]

83

Christian Science Monitor Staff (Not Credited)

What makes the movie a superior specimen of traditional screen storytelling is largely the exquisite care director Armstrong has taken to make every shot as radiantly appealing as possible, bathing even the melancholy aspects of the plot in a glow that's as pleasing to the eye as it is warming to the heart. [23 Dec 1994]

80

Empire s

It's beautifully mounted to capture the age and the passing seasons, though director Gillian Armstrong never lets the production values overwhelm the gentle sketches of girlish hopes and pastimes tempered by the trials of life.

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80

Chicago Reader Jonathan Rosenbaum

The film has a fresh and imaginative feel for period detail that the talented cast - which also features Gabriel Byrne, Christian Bale, Eric Stoltz, John Neville, and Mary Wickes - obviously benefits from.

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80

Washington Post Rita Kempley

Armstrong applies a dusting of contemporary feminism, but the stubborn sentimentalism of Alcott's endearing family portrait endures. [21 Dec 1994]

78

Austin Chronicle Marjorie Baumgarten

Armstrong presents a warm, funny, and believable rendering of the March family.

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75

Baltimore Sun Stephen Hunter

The best part of Little Women is that it tells a great big story. [24 Dec 1994]

75

ReelViews James Berardinelli

This tale of four independent sisters of differing temperaments is undeniably melodramatic, but it's very good melodrama, with an accumulation of vitality and charm that elevates the movie to an unexpectedly high level.

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75

San Francisco Chronicle Edward Guthmann

Meticulously crafted, and warmly acted by a cast that includes Winona Ryder as Jo and Susan Sarandon as her mother, the devoted Marmee, Little Women is one of the rare Hollywood studio films that invites your attention, slowly and elegantly, rather than propelling your interest with effects and easy manipulation.

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70

Wall Street Journal Amy Gamerman

Ms. Armstrong's Little Women, which has enough sugar to make your teeth sing, if not your heart. [29 Dec 1994]

What Our Users Said

The average user rating for this movie is 9.2 (out of 10) based on 8 User Votes

Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Jimmy gave it a10:
When judgment day comes, and mankind is evaluated on the merits of its spiritual and cultural achievements, this film alone will redeem the infinite inequities of humanity. It will usher us to paradise.

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