When I was in high school, watching a movie with my classmates at the dormitory parent's house is a wonderful memory. I happily waited for Valentine's Day, but I still didn't go to the theater to see it. It was very different from what I expected. It was not a popcorn movie. It was very different from the high school version. Non-linear narrative, compared to the old version. The story of family members, the new version feels more focused on the different choices and growth of three girls with different personalities. More than 100 years have passed, and there are more ways for women to earn money, but women's freedom outside of marriage has not changed much. I feel that the director is not very supportive of marriage. Meg, who is pure and beautiful and longs for love, falls into a poor and lowly married couple. However, it was the most egoistic Amy who successfully married Gao Fushuai (Sweet Tea is so handsome!), Jo said in the paragraph "Women...They have minds, and they have suols as well as just heart, and they' ve got ambition, and they've got talent as well as just beauty, and I'm so sick of people saying that love is just all a woman is fit for, but I'm so lonely Different from more than a hundred years ago, there are more and more women trying to live out their lives like Jo, but the tolerance given to them by society is still so limited. It is disgusting and common to be regarded as a loser, and to do everything possible to marry well is to be a real success. At the end of the movie, Jo's acceptance of rewriting the ending in order to publish the book also shows the growth of the character - learning to compromise with life, not to change your own ideas, but to learn how to make your incompatible ideas and society get along better. ps It was really embarrassing to see Jo in a carriage chasing after the professor, and he committed cancer. Such Jo doesn’t need such a Cliche ending. Fortunately, the director’s slick arrangement allows audiences who accept or not accept this ending to get their own way; and Aunt March Great to see you!
Different from the version of Little Women I watched in high school more than ten years ago, this version is not complete but more real, and incorporates the thinking of more modern women, and my mentality and ideas have also changed a lot when watching Little Women. When I was a child, I thought how good the ending was, and I couldn’t accept the unsatisfactory. Now I find that the unsatisfactory is the normal state and the real life. We must learn to adapt and accept it.
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