Little Women

US (1949): Drama

This sumptuous 1949 film adaptation of the beloved Louisa May Alcott novel isn't as good as the 1933 Katharine Hepburn version, or even the 1994 remake starring an Oscar®-nominated Winona Ryder, but it does offer its own pleasures, especially in seeing an all-star cast put through its paces. Erstwhile tomboy June Allyson stars as Alcott's famed heroine Jo, the budding writer in Civil War New England who pines for adventure, independence, and her own career. With Father off to war, it's up to Jo, practical older sister Meg (Janet Leigh), frail sister Beth (Margaret O'Brien), and vain sister Amy (Elizabeth Taylor) to help Marmee (a saintly Mary Astor) keep the home fires warm while dealing with the rigors of adolescence.

It's all poured on with a generous amount of syrup, including lavish sets, hoop skirts, and petticoats, but anyone who's ever read Alcott's book will take comfort in its familiar story line. The dialogue is clunky but earnest, but you'd have to have a heart of stone not to get caught up in Jo's plight. And rarely do you get to see such stars go at it with such gusto: Allyson and Peter Lawford (as neighbor and rich boy Laurie) are a match made in B-movie heaven, Taylor is spunky and hilarious in an early comic performance, and Leigh does the matronly thing with aplomb. And nobody, but nobody, cries and suffers like Margaret O'Brien! The film also features Rossano Brazzi, Lucile Watson, C. Aubrey Smith, Leon Ames, Harry Davenport and Connie Gilchrist. Directed by Mervyn LeRoy for Metro. (Amazon.com)

 Use this link to view the original theatrical trailer for Little Women on TCM.com.


· Best Art Direction/Set Decoration (Color) 1949: Cedric Gibbons & Paul Groesse - Art Direction; Edwin B. Willis & Jack D. Moore - Set Decoration


· Cinematography (Color) 1949: Robert Planck, Charles Schoenbaum

2 nominations, 1 Award