In the years after the Civil War, Jo March (Saoirse Ronan) lives in New York City and makes her living as a writer, while her sister Amy March (Florence Pugh) studies painting in Paris. Amy has a chance encounter with Th...
In the years after the Civil War, Jo March (Saoirse Ronan) lives in New York City and makes her living as a writer, while her sister Amy March (Florence Pugh) studies painting in Paris. Amy has a chance encounter with Th...
The film's central thesis explicitly critiques 19th-century patriarchal societal structures and economic limitations on women, championing female independence, artistic ambition, and self-determination.
The movie features traditional casting consistent with its 19th-century setting, without explicit race or gender swaps of established roles. Its narrative explores themes of female independence and societal constraints but refrains from explicitly critiquing traditional identities.
Greta Gerwig's 'Little Women' does not explicitly feature LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative centers on the March sisters' lives, ambitions, and heterosexual relationships in 19th-century society, without exploring queer identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The 2019 film adaptation of "Little Women" faithfully portrays all major characters with the same genders as established in Louisa May Alcott's original novel. No canonical male or female characters were depicted as a different gender.
The 2019 adaptation of "Little Women" features characters who are consistently portrayed by actors matching their established race from Louisa May Alcott's original novel and prior adaptations. No characters canonically or historically established as one race were portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources