I can't wait to see Little Women. I think Laurie and Amy are perfect for one another and he gets to be part of the family. I am still waiting for the adaptations of The Old Fashioned Girl and Eight Cousins/Rose in Bloom!
Buffista Movies Across the 8th Dimension!
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
I always liked Amy! You could so clearly see her grow up. And I loved her and Laurie together, which is apparently a very unpopular opinion. I could never see Jo loving him like that. Or being that kind of wife.
Professor Bhaer is right for Jo, I think. He is also fortunately named, so he seems like a Teddy Bear. And he can be loving and kind and calm, which is what she needs. And Jo can still be BFFS with Laurie. Jo is right- they are both too alike and too different to work romantically. They both need grounding, and left together, she would be the one to ground him or they would both kill each other. Amy grounds him just by being and letting him love and indulge her while she loves and indulges him.
Again, I recommend The Old Fashioned Girl for what people wanted Jo and Laurie to be.
Also, I was so young and naive the first time I read this that I thought Laurie was also a girl.
That Gerwig has Amy come right out and tell Laurie "You only courting me after my sister turned you down? You are really not in a position to be chucking asparagus at ME about how unromantic this all is" made me think about spiking my popcorn bucket in delight.
The subtext of "I don't have a lot of choices - if I'm going to essentially give up my status as a separate legal entity, why the hell shouldn't I be well compensated for that?" being made text is apparently putting a lot of people off? And I'm going "That was and still is the choice for far too many folks on this planet? They did come to love one another, which, yay!"
The subtext of "I don't have a lot of choices - if I'm going to essentially give up my status as a separate legal entity, why the hell shouldn't I be well compensated for that?"
Or as Peggy Carter says it in a different context, "I know my worth."
The subtext of "I don't have a lot of choices - if I'm going to essentially give up my status as a separate legal entity, why the hell shouldn't I be well compensated for that?" being made text is apparently putting a lot of people off?
Wha?? That was one of my favourite bits in the entire movie! The movie is practically centered around the two big Fuck the Patriarchy speeches, one given by Amy here, and one later given by Jo -- I loved the contrast between Jo's passionate heartbreak and Amy's flinty anger and practicality, each a railing against the limitation put upon by the world that considered women second class citizens.
I apparently have a lot of opinions about a movie I haven't seen, but people being upset by that shocks me. Surely they haven't read the book as an adult. That is pretty much there in the text, it just sounds like the movie gives it voice.
And Amy, even with the pickled limes, understands the current social conditions and how to navigate them to her advantage, always. Which seems to escape the rest of the family.
Right? "It's not romantic!" Given the choices available? Well, no. "Meg didn't marry well, Jo won't, Beth can't - so I will." Gerwig showing what that line meant is possibly more reality than some were expecting from a movie marketed like this one, especially if they haven't read the unabridged book.
Sophia, I think a lot of people only know it from the films and have never read the book. I know, I'm shaking my head, too.