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The Next Picture Show

#210: March Madness, Pt. 2 - Little Women (2019)

The Next Picture Show

Filmspotting

Tv & Film, Film History, Film Reviews

4.6 • 858 Ratings

🗓️ 21 January 2020

⏱️ 77 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We return to Orchard House and Concord via Greta Gerwig’s new LITTLE WOMEN, which takes a much less traditional approach to Louisa May Alcott’s famed novel than Gillian Armstrong’s 1994 version, while still hitting on enough nostalgic touchpoints to feel like a faithful adaptation. In this second half of our March family double feature, we dig into how we processed Gerwig’s approach as an intellectual experience versus an emotional one, and how the film’s bold ending works in the context of the familiar story as well as Gerwig’s career. Then we dive into how Gerwig’s film aligns with and diverges from Armstrong’s version in its depiction of love and marriage, talent and ambition, and charity and virtue. Plus, Your Next Picture Show, where we share recent filmgoing experiences in hopes of putting something new on your cinematic radar. Please share your comments, thoughts, and questions about any and all versions of LITTLE WOMEN, or anything else in the world of film, by sending an email to comments@nextpictureshow.net, or leaving a short voicemail at (773) 234-9730.  Works Cited: • “Little Women and the Marmee Problem,” by Sarah Blackwood (newyorker.com) Your Next Picture Show:  • Genevieve: DICKINSON on Apple TV+ • Scott: James Cameron’s THE ABYSS • Keith: Wim Wenders’ UNTIL THE END OF THE WORLD • Tasha: James Ivory’s HOWARDS END and Paul Downs Colaizzo’s BRITTANY RUNS A MARATHON Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Sitting quietly once you've made the house all shiny.

0:04.0

Down time can be just fine, playing bangers from the 90s.

0:08.0

Tea break.

0:09.0

Lunch break.

0:10.0

Maybe listen to the outbreak.

0:12.0

Sometimes it's not time for some tombola, right?

0:15.0

It's enjoying lasagna time, chilling with a book time, or time to visit your nan time go on play some other time

0:22.6

put your phone down

0:23.8

Tombollah

0:24.7

Open for fun

0:26.4

Terms apply 18 plus gamblerware

0:28.7

org

0:29.3

It's very difficult to keep the line

0:34.5

between the past and the present

0:36.1

You believe that someone out of the past can enter and take possession of a living being?

0:42.8

We may be true with the past, but the past is not through with us.

0:50.5

Welcome back to the next picture show, a movie of the week podcast to

0:54.0

a classic film in the way it shaped our thoughts on a recent release. I'm Keith Phipps, here again with

0:58.6

Josh Robinson, Genevieve Kosky. Scott Tobias. In our last episode, we discussed Little Women, directed by Gillian Armstrong. You'll be forgiven a sense of deja vu as we're talking about Little Women again, this time the version directed by Greta Gerwig. Though both are true in their own way to Louisa May Alcott's novel, there's no

1:14.6

mistaking one for another. Gerwig fills the film with young actors who've emerged over the past

1:19.1

few years, including Shorah Ronan, Florence Pugh, and Timothy Shalame. Emma Watson

1:23.7

counts as the old hand here thanks to her years playing Hermione in the Harry Potter films.

...

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