Little Women review: A ravishing spectacle without grit, substance or satire

The glossiest, prettiest movie of 2019 is overstyled and primed for the Oscar red carpet

Writer-director Greta Gerwig reunites with Lady Bird stars Saoirse Ronan and Timothée Chalamet for a new adaptation of classic American novel Little Women. Video: Sony Pictures
Little Women
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Director: Greta Gerwig
Cert: PG
Genre: Drama
Starring: Saoirse Ronan, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Eliza Scanlen, Laura Dern, Timothée Chalamet, Meryl Streep, Chris Cooper
Running Time: 2 hrs 15 mins

Greta Gerwig’s eagerly-awaited adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s best-loved work is the glossiest, fanciest, prettiest movie of the year. Forget Little Women: this extravagant fantasia is a Vanity Fair September issue photoshoot inspired by Little Women.

Every character is overstyled, overwigged, and made up for the Oscar red carpet. Every scene is either windswept tableau or fabulous period interior. Every table is adorned with the most gorgeous cakes and wines to be found in whatever hip Brooklyn eatery produced them. The games and plays staged by the sisters have props and costumes that would give the Royal Opera a run for its money.

It’s a ravishing spectacle. The trouble is that the unremitting gorgeousness robs the material of all its grit, of its satire, of the sense of precariousness that one experiences on the characters’ behalf, of the fear of hunger, and of the dread that any chill or fever might be a death sentence.

Unremitting gorgeousness: Beth’s demise, which so profoundly affects Jo in the book, is an excuse for a lovely day at the beach and too much blusher
Unremitting gorgeousness: Beth’s demise, which so profoundly affects Jo in the book, is an excuse for a lovely day at the beach and too much blusher

The wait for the family patriarch to return from the frontlines is an afterthought. Beth’s demise, which so profoundly affects Jo in the book, is an excuse for a lovely day at the beach and too much blusher.

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The perfumed, powdered aesthetic makes for a strangely sexless version of a book that is jollied along by curiosity. They might look amazing but there is no sexual chemistry between Saoirse Ronan’s Jo and Louis Garrel’s Friedrich, a void that makes a nonsense of the film’s final supposedly romantic dash.

Emotional clout

In fact, the only real moments of emotional clout happen between Beth and her kindly benefactor next door, Mr Laurence snr, played by Chris Cooper.

Taking the movie on its own glamorous, flighty terms, it’s a fun, frolicsome affair. Florence Pugh, who is saddled with Amy, the youngest and brattiest March sister, not only makes her character loveable, she steals every scene she’s in, even when going toe-to-toe with Meryl Streep (who brings a riff on her Florence Foster Jenkins).

Ronan is a terrific, perennially breathless Jo, albeit a version of Jo that owes at least as much to Greta Gerwig as she does to her literary predecessor.

Timothée Chalamet’s Laurie bounces well off Ronan and Pugh – a blazing break-up row with the former is a highlight – but he fizzles with lesser screen partners. Dern is better than saintly Marmee deserves.

Gerwig’s lightly metatextual script cleverly plays with chronology and Louisa May Alcott’s biography in ways that will require close attention from those unfamiliar with the literary source. This is a pleasing fairy tale. But we’ve been prouder of our Little Women.

Opens December 26th

Tara Brady

Tara Brady

Tara Brady, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a writer and film critic