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Come and check out Little Women - FULL & Edited Movie Reaction- Available on the drive now!

FULL: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1K4H2EPWXAxroeOLaHYsafzBoRx6UsmTE/view?usp=sharing

Edited: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1K72PlNohgasiORBMlHV7L6oxOj0q9fLm/view?usp=sharing

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Comments

E. Kensington

I totally understand your feeling of this is better because it was a major part of my childhood/adolescence. In my case I couldn’t stomach the chilling adventures of Sabrina just because the Melissa Joan hart Sabrina the teenage witch meant so so much to me growing up. If you don’t have Salem as Salem what is the point ;) Personally I like this movie since it seems more dynamic to me and it’s a very artistic movie but different people enjoy different things so I hope you enjoyed it for what it was. In this movie I am very much like Amy and therefore really love her character but my older sister was a lot like Jo growing up. If you really want to be well versed on little women though the 1994 version was not the original, there have actually been six movie/TV show adaptations of the classic book. I think the earliest one was from 1933 and starred Katherine Hepburn as Jo. A lot of scenes in the 1994 one are almost shot by shot remakes of that but that’s what you get with fiction. I mean, you could see a dozen versions of Romeo and Juliet on stage and enjoy every single one for their unique nuances

Ashleep

It was so cool to re-watch this with you guys, especially BECAUSE one of you was such a big fan of the Winona Ryder/Claire Danes version and the other wasn't familiar! I wasn't too into the 90s movie version but I did love the book growing up. I enjoy this version for a few reasons: the cast is largely stellar, the production value/cinematography is wonderful, and I appreciate how they juxtaposed the past against the present to tell the story through time and through feelings/colors. That said, I can also now see how it is confusing for those who aren't already familiar with the story. The thing that I most appreciate is the cheeky convo at the end between Jo and her publisher, which explains why Jo March the Character ended up married (seemingly against Jo's whole philosophy of life), even though Louis May Alcott did not--i.e., to suit the whims of the publisher/social market, a compromise that allowed for her book to be published, show there was an audience, and drive a little bit of change. As someone who perhaps *overidentifies* with Jo, the ending of the story/this version would have felt disappointing without such a blatant "wink" at the audience about why Jo/Louisa "sold out" ;P. Thanks for watching and thanks to the sponsor who selected!