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- Little Women
-
-
- (November 27, 1933)
-
- A scene in which four adolescent girls dressed in too many
- petticoats cluster around their mother and tearfully promise to
- obey their absent father's admonition to behave like little
- women does not sound like one which would excite a contemporary
- U.S. cinema audience. Neither does one in which the same four
- are to be seen squeaking and yapping near their Christmas
- breakfast and yapping near their Christmas breakfast table, out
- of enthusiasm for the idea of presenting their sausages to the
- poor family down the road. The charm that surrounds such
- episodes in this picture springs from the delicate and
- understanding humor with which Director George Cukor translated
- Louisa May Alcott's 65-year-old semi-classic Little Women into
- the cinema, a humor that becomes richer and sadder as the four
- heroines grow up. They and the snug New England town in which
- they live, touched by the sentimental melancholy which surrounds
- things that happened long ago, have become as real as people and
- places in the cinema can ever be.
-
- That Little Women attains so perfectly, without seeming
- either affected or superior, the courtesy and rueful wisdom of
- its original is due to expert adaptation by Sarah Y. Mason and
- Victor Heerman, to Cukor's direction and to superb acting by
- Katharine Hepburn. An actress of so much vitality that she can
- wear balloon skirts and address her mother as "Marmee" without
- suggesting quaintness, she makes Jo March one of the most
- memorable heroines of the year, a girl at once eager and
- puzzled, troubled changing and secure.
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