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Little Women (1949)

Little Women (1949)
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Of the many film versions of Louisa May Alcott's Little Women, this 1949 MGM adaptation is by far the prettiest. Set in New England during the Civil War, the film relates the various adventures of the March sisters: Jo (June Allyson), Beth (Margaret O'Brien), Amy (Elizabeth Taylor) and Meg (Janet Leigh). Jo emerges as the main character, as she leaves hearth and home to try her luck as a novelist in New York. Moments of high comedy (the sisters' amateur theatricals) are counterpointed with grim tragedy (the death of the youngest March girl), with romantic interludes provided by the faithless Laurie (Peter Lawford) and the loyal Professor Bhaer (Rossano Brazzi). Unlike Selznick's 1933 Little Women or Gillian Armstrong's 1994 adaptation, this 1949 version tends to be more an extension of the old Hollywood contract-player typecasting system than a heartfelt evocation of the Alcott original. Even so, Little Women is consistently pleasing to the eye, especially when seen in its original Technicolor hues. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
June AllysonPeter Lawford, (more)
Director(s):
Mervyn LeRoy
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Little Women

Of the many film versions of Louisa May Alcott's Little Women, this 1949 MGM adaptation is by far the prettiest. Set in New England during the Civil War, the film relates the various adventures of the March sisters: Jo (June Allyson), Beth (Margaret O'Brien), Amy (Elizabeth Taylor) and Meg (Janet Leigh). Jo emerges as the main character, as she leaves hearth and home to try her luck as a novelist in New York. Moments of high comedy (the sisters' amateur theatricals) are counterpointed with grim tragedy (the death of the youngest March girl), with romantic interludes provided by the faithless Laurie (Peter Lawford) and the loyal Professor Bhaer (Rossano Brazzi). Unlike Selznick's 1933 Little Women or Gillian Armstrong's 1994 adaptation, this 1949 version tends to be more an extension of the old Hollywood contract-player typecasting system than a heartfelt evocation of the Alcott original. Even so, Little Women is consistently pleasing to the eye, especially when seen in its original Technicolor hues. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
122 mins

Complete Cast of Little Women


Director(s):
Mervyn LeRoy
Writer(s):
Andrew SoltSarah Y. MasonVictor Heerman
Producer(s):
Mervyn LeRoy
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    Member Reviews
     
    Emily S.

    I liked June Allyson's Jo, but it always bothers me when they get an actress to play Amy who is so old to begin with! This is worth a watch, but it's not my favorite version--I enjoyed Winona Ryder's version more.

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    Katherine E.

    June Allyson is a spunky Jo, but far to old for the role. Liz Taylor is simply ridiculous as Amy, who is obviously much older than Beth (Margaret O'Brian) in this version, while the young actress playing Beth only points out how much older the actresses are. Peter Lawford is too wimpy as Laurie. Although this version sticks closer to the book, I like the version with Susan Sarandon and Winona Ryder much better. Don't bother.

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    Laura D.

    This is my favorite version of "Little Women!" The cast and characters are superb! At the end of watching this film for the first time, I immediately rewound the VHS and watched it again. It's that good!

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