cute little women

Elissa 2022-04-22 07:01:21

The girls in the movie are very cute, the mother is strong and loving, Meg gave up a good life for love, she was so beautiful and she was so beautiful since she was a child and finally chose to marry a poor priest;

The talented girl of Beth, silently sacrifices for her family, does not bow her head to the disease, she is not afraid of death;

Amy is very sober. Some people may say that she worships money, but at that time, her family was really poor and marrying a rich person might be the best way. In the end, she gave up decisively and was really brave and decisive for true love;

Finally, the protagonist, Joe, may seem restless to outsiders, but she is the first to awaken the female consciousness. She is gifted, unwilling to bow her head, young, frivolous and irritable, pursues freedom, fears marriage, and is like a hedgehog, which is why Missed love with Teddy.

Maybe timing is really important in love. Of course, the most fundamental reason why Joe and Teddy are not together is that they don't love deeply enough. That is different. That's it. The four girls love each other deeply, support each other, and have quarrels, but they soon let go, like when Joe learned that Amy and Teddy were engaged, Amy was afraid that Joe would hate her, but Joe quickly changed. I got the mentality and said, "Life is too short, you shouldn't use it to be angry with your sisters", this part is really touching

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Extended Reading
  • Doris 2022-03-22 09:01:44

    "Let's dance, Meg, let's dance"... When I was young, I chased cartoons after school every day, and the theme song was still catchy to this day. "Little Women" is a growth enlightenment book that many girls can't get around in their youth. Although it has the same realistic background of the Civil War as "Gone with the Wind", no matter how you shoot it, there is always a fairy tale atmosphere. The 94 Winona version has always been my favorite, and I have brushed it many times over the years. The new version this time is generally not bad, but after reading this story after a few years, my understanding of Jo is more interesting. Women like Jo are the portrayal and self-referentiality of the original author Louisa May. In those times, of course, she would not have a romantic fairy tale ending. Like Jane Austen, she is destined to be single for life. This is made clear at the end of the new edition with a conversation between Jo and the publisher, thank you director. Although I don't believe that there is any girl in the world who can refuse Sweet Tea's courtship, Sweet Tea's temperament is too younger, not to mention Ronan's violation of peace, as if he is several years younger, even if he and his sister Amy group CP with a young face.

  • Rowan 2022-03-24 09:01:47

    Saoirse Ronan is so good at acting, and it nourishes every emotion in every situation of the character. Jo, Gerwig, and Ronan seem to be condensed in this character across time and space. The paragraph that touched me the most was a seemingly inconspicuous line: "I'm fed up with them saying that women can only be in love, and feelings are all women. I'm really tired of hearing it, but I'm really lonely." This is a kind of stereotype pressure that is very easy to ignore but ubiquitous. Women who want to break through the stereotype are under enormous pressure and predicament in order not to fall into the stereotype, and they even want to resist the love that should be easy. It's like being under pressure to take a test for fear of falling into the "blacks are dumber than whites" stereotype. Therefore, I am also very disgusted that every time a female movie is under a group of people accusing "this is not feminism, how should feminism be?", do they really know what feminism is, and they don't care about the reasons for feminism and how much This is a face-to-face presentation. They only stare at whether the posture you are presenting is proper. In the end, they just hate these presentations and hope they all shut up.

Little Women quotes

  • Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: Short answers save trouble.

  • Jo March: I suppose marriage has always been an economic proposition. Even in fiction.