Laurie can you stop standing there and get the horses ready? Thank you. Love the way she talks to him, she seems to be very secure in her relationship and his affection.
I love how this book/movie says you can be a woman, be in love, get married, but that doesn't mean your separate ambitions must be inevitably sacrificed. Men marry and fall in love and don't abandon their passions, and this book says that's true for women too-- we may have to fight for it more in certain climates or era's, but it's true. You need not abandon yourself just because society makes you think that, you can be happy and still be great. Love is a force that holds every human, male or female, but it is not the only force. They are inherently intertwined. Edit: based on the many comments below, all of which are extremely interesting to read, id like to clarify that the post above says what's possible, not inevitable. Life is complicated for men and women alike and though the ideal is not always met, does not mean the ideal means nothing.
The scene of Jo and her publisher discussing her novel back and forth, while her family encouraging her to profess her love for Friedrich, were my favourite scenes. I love how they keep it ambiguous as to whether it's really happening, or just an elaborate fantasy of Jo's.
I really feel sad when I realize that Jo and Friedrich was fiction. In this film, they were kind of dropped while Amy and Laurie had a great development and in the '94 film it was Amy and Laurie who were dropped. *Solution*: joining the couple Jo and Friedrich from '94, Meg and John from '94 and Laurie and Amy from 2019, this would be a complete and wonderful adaptation!
I like the idea that it reflects both Alcott’s actual dilemma in life-she didn’t want to marry, and the idea was always pushed on her-and the modern Jo’s flexibility. In a way, this is Gerwig saying of romance and independence, “You can want both.”
@@Hugo-G nope..she gets married to professer bhaer in the books too...they got married in the second book 'good wives' or the third one 'little men' i cant remember..little men is basically about their married life and a school they've started to run at Plumfield
@@Hugo-G if you are talking about the actual author of the book, yes, Louisa M Alcott is indeed alone. However in the books, Jo got married and had sons.
@@587_3 I read somewhere that Alcott added Jo's marriage in on insistence of the publisher, much like what Greta Gerwig shows in the movie. Jo's and Friedrich's reunion in the novel wasn't as cliched as in the movie though, it was pretty low-key and sweet. Gerwig intentionally made it look over-the-top to add a note of a forced ending.
I love Amy, when she says "You love him! Doesn't she love him?" she is sooo adorable. I mean look at her now, believing in love again, because Laurie married her, while she was saying "marriage is an economic proposition" just a few days before.
Liza Johnson Haha to be honest I do live in Paris, so Louis Garrel going overseas is already too much to take, no matter if it’s in the March family or California 😉
i think you can really tell when it starts to deviate from her book to reality. the moment she closes the door and turns around to her family, it's no longer shot with the bluish cold filter that was reserved for the present/adulthood, but instead with the warm toned lense. then when it cuts to her with the publisher its cold. idk this was probably obvious but I just think great gerwig is so smart
asdfgh123456978 well, going by the entire movie, gerwig used a warm and cold filter to differentiate btwn past and prevent events respectively, so i don’t think that in this moment it was used to represent the present. i think the warm tint was used to mimic the idealized vision of their youth bc that’s what the editor wanted from jo-a romantic, perfect, ending. of course that’s just my interpretation tho hehe
I'm not going to lie. When I saw this scene in the theatre and saw him walking away I said out loud, "I swear if he just walks away". People looked at me, some laughed, some clapped. Not my shining moment. 😂😂
Lmao no that's the best lol 😂 I have heard occasional random comments like that in the theater and always laugh and other people laughing is funny. Making comments like we would if we were watching alone and people enjoying it lol it's a wholesome human moment. It's like double entertainment.
Same I love 💕 that line too if you wish me to stay! It’s was confusing ❤ when I first saw the movie 🎥 and the ending I didn’t know if Jo March was going to marry at the end or she was not? 😢but every time I watch this movie 🎥 it makes me cry 😢 I’m sure Jo does marry Fredrick or maybe she doesn’t who know 😢
When Amy yells “kiss him with tongue” as jo walks out of the carriage 😂 edit: I saw on subtitles its "kiss him with love" but it still sounds like tongue haha
I actually think the ending where she gets married but still has her ambitions and goals is very relevant for women. I know Alcott herself didn't get married, but she still wrote Jo's story in such a way that I think it was impactful for women. Even if the story wasn't entirely autobiographical, that's alright. It's still a good story with great messages for women, at that time and even today.
Simply because it was Amy's idea, and she was always a romantic. So to chase after ones love in the rain you must fetch the carriage even if that means you beat him to the train.
Having a carriage waiting was customary in these times and there was no yard. There would've been a mildly paved walkup at the most, he likely got into a carriage like 30 seconds after closing the door and was already on his way.
I don't care if it's just a fantasy, it's terribly romantic and I adore them together! I've heard that people criticize their relationship because he is critical of her writing, but I think Jo would want someone with a backbone who would be honest with her.
That is so true when I first watched it I stared to cry 😢 at the end at first it was a little confusing 😮because I was not sure who Jo liked Or who she was going to marry Laurie or Fredrick? But I watched it again 4 times and this scene at the end get to me every time ❤ I love 💕 this movie 🎥 I always have
Yes everyone is talking about Meg/Amy/Laurie/Frederick. Yes yes. They are amazing. But the publisher's "No. Noooo. That won't work at all." And "Who caaareeess." Steals the scene for me.
In the 1994 version, Jo never intended to marry either but they showed her randomly meeting and developing a relationship with Friedrich (they eventually end up together). That’s why I’m a sucker for this romantic ending (still haven’t seen the full version of this one though!!). I know Louisa May Alcott (author) never married, however I have always liked the idea that Jo did not have to choose between her independence and her love for writing, and finding love. I have always understood her as someone who didn’t believe in marriage for the wrong reasons (money/status) or the idea that women had to marry to mean anything to society. Just because one is independent doesn’t mean they will never find love either.
Florence Pugh is really a standout in this film.... “Laurie will you stop standing there!? And go get the horse ready. thank you!!😂😂😂i love every second of this movie😍😍😍
I love Jo's character when she was younger marriage didn't come to her mind she's too busy having an ambition to be a succesful writer and i love that in the end she became successful releasing her book and i think the love for her just comes unexpected but im happy that she got one too.
here I am, sat on my bed on lockdown in my apartment - have smoked a spliff, am enjoying simple sunflower seeds whilst watching a surprisingly beautiful remake of one of my favourite romantic movies of all time, contemplating the beauty of life at the the end of the world cheers friends, Godspeed
When Amy said "I am half as smart as you" that was lowkey sad tbh. She accepted that she is just not smarter than Jo and always below her. This is probably why Amy can't get satisfied with her paintings because Jo is her standard. He have the mindset that she won't be better than Jo
And she literally married the guy who proposed to jo first and said he’d rather die than face the fact jo didn’t love him…. I mean he clearly loves Amy but some part of her will always believe it’s because he couldn’t have jo. Poor girl walked herself into a life of seeing herself as second best
i love how jo is reveling in the company of her sisters in the carriage as they’re trying to fix her up on the way there, i feel like it’s the childhood love she was yearning to have back when she voiced how lonely she was but a grown up, matured version of it that can be sustained for decades to come. i am glad jo got this happy ending
Louis Garrel is an excellent actor!!! His pauses and the fact that his not using his body to intensify his words or emotions makes his acting so powerful and special in my opinion
Why do I get the feeling too many people in these comments believed this ending? This was intended to pay an homage and mock the ending of the book because Alcott was forced to write an ending where Jo fell in love. This sequence is clearly just an alternate ending sequence, and it doesn’t match up with the later scenes because this scene is in the book Jo wrote but not her own life.
@@analeite6466 it was very obvious though. With the change in acting style. Over dramatic cartoonish score playing in the kiss scene used in old time stereotypical romances. The proof is in the pudding
SHE DIDN'T ACTUALLY FALL IN LOVE WITH ANYONE, AND THE AUTHOR WANTED HER TO STAY ALONE. She was forced to end the story romantically because as the publisher states: "no one would read a book without romance"
I love how Amy talks to Laurie so passionately and bluntly in this scene. It makes me giggle. I'm the youngest of three Sisters and I share so many similarities to Amy. I say things and do things when others in my family are too polite and subtle to just come out and say it. 😂 sometimes you need a little push from the most observant Sister.
This is one of the few cases where I think the film did it better than the book, the ending at least. I know Alcott had her hands tied when she was writing the novel, but the ending felt so unsatisfying and of character for Jo. Gerwig made the film's end more ambiguous and therefore a little more believable.
i LOVE the mini scene of the publisher and his wife discussing their inlaws- so comical, Greta killed the scene adding this little snippet of daily ife. Also love how the parents are exasperated at the children making noise.
If you read Louisa's letter exchange with her publisher she was the one who came up with all the marriages. Friedrichs character in little women is based on philosopher Henry Thoreau Louisa was in love with him. Laurie is based on Ladislas Wisniewski a young man who was first flirting with Louisa and then betrayed him. In all of Louisa's novels these two male archetypes are constantly present. The Friedrich archetype is the humble hard working man (Fritz in lw, Mac in Rose in Bloom, David in Work) He has silent passion for the protagonist and the Louisa type of protagonist loves him and wants that equal relationship. Laurie archetype is charming but idle. He either puts his act together and falls for a female character (like Amy) who is stern with them or they fail and fet sucked into consuming toxic self-harming behavior. Little Women is all about Louisa's love life. That is why she had conflicted relationship towards it. Henry was 16 years older (same age difference than between Louisa and the professor) Ladislas was 10 years younger. Louisa and Henry, They did have an affair and almost a telepathic way of communication which is also present in the novels. Henry passed away 5years before LW was published. That is also why Louisa listed out to be nurse in the war. He had lost her sister Lizzie at the same time.
I noticed that the color grading started to change when they decided to go after the professor. At that moment, Jo became a girl in a book. She said 'if I was a girl in a book this would all be so easy, just give up the world happily.' I don't think she marries anyone in this movie. The ending where she opens the school is the ending she was forced to write by her publisher hence the golden color grading. And that scene paralleled with the real life situation where Jo's book get published just like Louisa May Alcott. Greta Gerwig said in one of her interviews that the book is the happy ending.
She's a great actress and I'm in love with her but her accent still comes out slightly as she does an American one. I never saw this movie so I can't be sure, but what little I saw in this clip, it comes out a bit.
I noticed this too, but we've heard her American accent in LadyBird and I dont remember it wavering at all. Emma Watson's and a few characters do that weird faux american/british accent which usually happens in older movies but I don't really feel like it was done right. I dont think they tried to do a regular modern day American accent bc it pulls you out of the story, but the accent they landed just sounds like they're real accent is slipping in. Except for florence's, she sounds like a modern day American which also was kind of weird bc no one else had that accent in the movie of the sisters. Timothy for example doesnt speak like he normally does bc of the era but it's still completely American, but not modern American. It's a weird accent, I'm not really sure what it's supposed to sound like, all I know is most did a different version and they didnt always mesh well.
When we saw this scene, my friends and I had a doubt. Is this really happening, or is it just how it will go in the book Jo is writing (that, as we know, is Little Women)? Because you see her talking with the publisher, and she still doesen't want her heroine, herself, to get married in the end. You may say that we see Fritz in the final scene, but we have this theory that maybe he was just working in Jo's school.
Thank you!! Everyone's acting like the scene in the rain is super romantic while I felt like it was a haphazard fiction Jo(author) had to assemble... to me it makes that scene really really sad
This actor was a great Professor. Though I was surprised they cast someone so young looking; in the book, he is a good 20 years older than Jo. But it doesn't matter, IMO. The chemistry between these actors is great!
I like this version more than the original much more. because this version the characters are better portraited. The actings are much more subtle, especially Jo, much better acting. Jo in this version is a much round person but Winona's acting was so blend. Also I love the ending of this version too. I like how the "happy ending" is what Jo wrote to please the publisher, not her real intention. It's more Jo than ever!
"I never thought I'd prepare a carriage to help Jo March chase a man but I like it!" best line ever.
Lindsey Blythe I was like “ wait, he loved her and proposed her in the 6/10 scene I just saw and now this?” Wtf lol
I have to watch the whole movie I guess
@@elcanbu5610 haha that might be a good idea
Lindsey Blythe I will!!
glenn hofer ikr
Laurie can you stop standing there and get the horses ready? Thank you.
Love the way she talks to him, she seems to be very secure in her relationship and his affection.
Amy totally being a boss :D
@Liza Johnson she calls him "My Lord" tho 🤭
@@sharrrrr I think that's just her being low-key kinky 👀 (but that's just me idk)
thanks for your comment was feeling down after an argument, but you put things into perspective
They're so married at this point. 😂
I love how this book/movie says you can be a woman, be in love, get married, but that doesn't mean your separate ambitions must be inevitably sacrificed. Men marry and fall in love and don't abandon their passions, and this book says that's true for women too-- we may have to fight for it more in certain climates or era's, but it's true. You need not abandon yourself just because society makes you think that, you can be happy and still be great. Love is a force that holds every human, male or female, but it is not the only force. They are inherently intertwined.
Edit: based on the many comments below, all of which are extremely interesting to read, id like to clarify that the post above says what's possible, not inevitable. Life is complicated for men and women alike and though the ideal is not always met, does not mean the ideal means nothing.
True ♥️
@@chromeuserisme3551 that doesn't mean she is lesbian. I believe Alcott was asexual.
you just made me tear up a lil bit :')
Exactly yes ❤️
Taylor Swift is a prime example of that as well ❤️
As cliché as kissing in the rain is, this scene was really cute. I really liked them together, and I kind of love his accent lol
The cliché is intended. The publisher wanted an overly dramatic romantic ending and that's what Jo gave him.
I think the clichéness of it all is a big part of what I love it. It’s tropey to the point of being sarcastic, and yet it’s still cute
IIRC, this scene is the origin of the trope. Or at least an important antecedent of it.
To clarify, this scene in the original novel.
I think it wasn’t cliche then.
I love how Amy is bossing around Laurie I’m dead I could not stop laughing 😂
😂😂
To be honest, in that moment I was ready to begin loving Amy :)
👌 🆗️ 🙆♀️ 👍 🆒️
Kinda reminds me of Ron and Hermione.
YES Literally best part
Friedrich roasted Jo so bad she fell in love with him lmao
Going for the Pride and Prejudice approach I see
That doesn't always work tho
@@primeshrimp6130 Yeah it's actually rare
jo is a sagittarius THATS HOW IT WORKS
Lol
The scene of Jo and her publisher discussing her novel back and forth, while her family encouraging her to profess her love for Friedrich, were my favourite scenes. I love how they keep it ambiguous as to whether it's really happening, or just an elaborate fantasy of Jo's.
Mine too!!
i hope it does truly happen though because in this movie Jo and Friedrich actually *make sense*. I thought they were a little weird in the book.
itsflowerside yea especially since he was like an old man
@@itsflowerside I'm the opposite, I prefer it in the book!
I really feel sad when I realize that Jo and Friedrich was fiction. In this film, they were kind of dropped while Amy and Laurie had a great development and in the '94 film it was Amy and Laurie who were dropped.
*Solution*: joining the couple Jo and Friedrich from '94, Meg and John from '94 and Laurie and Amy from 2019, this would be a complete and wonderful adaptation!
I like the idea that it reflects both Alcott’s actual dilemma in life-she didn’t want to marry, and the idea was always pushed on her-and the modern Jo’s flexibility. In a way, this is Gerwig saying of romance and independence, “You can want both.”
Michiko Manalang But this is a fake ending, she doesn’t actually do this...She’s alone at the end.
Hugo G It’s up to interpretation. I’m not wrong and neither are you.
@@Hugo-G nope..she gets married to professer bhaer in the books too...they got married in the second book 'good wives' or the third one 'little men' i cant remember..little men is basically about their married life and a school they've started to run at Plumfield
@@Hugo-G if you are talking about the actual author of the book, yes, Louisa M Alcott is indeed alone. However in the books, Jo got married and had sons.
@@587_3 I read somewhere that Alcott added Jo's marriage in on insistence of the publisher, much like what Greta Gerwig shows in the movie. Jo's and Friedrich's reunion in the novel wasn't as cliched as in the movie though, it was pretty low-key and sweet. Gerwig intentionally made it look over-the-top to add a note of a forced ending.
"LAURIECANYOUSTOPSTANDINGTHEREANDGETTHEHORSESREADYTHANKYOU" my fav
Omg you watch Anne With An E and Little Women... You're a kindred spirit! Ahhh
@@lynette576 OMG WE ARE. love your pfp btw. love aristocats.
@@theteretet i love yours too cole is iconic
@@theteretet wanna be friends? I feel like you're such a vibe
@@lynette576 he is …
Meg and Amy fangirling over Jo and Friedrich is total gold
I love Amy, when she says "You love him! Doesn't she love him?" she is sooo adorable. I mean look at her now, believing in love again, because Laurie married her, while she was saying "marriage is an economic proposition" just a few days before.
When Louis Garrel tells you he’s moving to California, you don’t let him.
And you say HELL NO, YOU WONT!!
Liza Johnson Haha to be honest I do live in Paris, so Louis Garrel going overseas is already too much to take, no matter if it’s in the March family or California 😉
Yesssss
OMG! That's the exact same thing I thought 😂
unless you live in califonia and then you say "hurry up!!!!"
"Laurie, could you stop standing there" Amy , Amy, Amy
i think you can really tell when it starts to deviate from her book to reality. the moment she closes the door and turns around to her family, it's no longer shot with the bluish cold filter that was reserved for the present/adulthood, but instead with the warm toned lense. then when it cuts to her with the publisher its cold. idk this was probably obvious but I just think great gerwig is so smart
Interesting..🤔
But isn’t the warm part the ‘present’?
asdfgh123456978 well, going by the entire movie, gerwig used a warm and cold filter to differentiate btwn past and prevent events respectively, so i don’t think that in this moment it was used to represent the present. i think the warm tint was used to mimic the idealized vision of their youth bc that’s what the editor wanted from jo-a romantic, perfect, ending. of course that’s just my interpretation tho hehe
I think they end up together since Friedrich is in the scene when the school opens.🤔
@@charmaine8770 Which is also shot in a warm filter.
I'm not going to lie. When I saw this scene in the theatre and saw him walking away I said out loud, "I swear if he just walks away". People looked at me, some laughed, some clapped. Not my shining moment. 😂😂
Ashley 😂
Lol 😂
Cute
r/thathappened
Lmao no that's the best lol 😂 I have heard occasional random comments like that in the theater and always laugh and other people laughing is funny. Making comments like we would if we were watching alone and people enjoying it lol it's a wholesome human moment.
It's like double entertainment.
“I would never leave if you wish me to stay!” I love that line so much ❤️
also the way Laurie smiles at Amy when she’s telling jo that she loves him is so sweet
Same I love 💕 that line too if you wish me to stay! It’s was confusing ❤ when I first saw the movie 🎥 and the ending I didn’t know if Jo March was going to marry at the end or she was not? 😢but every time I watch this movie 🎥 it makes me cry 😢 I’m sure Jo does marry Fredrick or maybe she doesn’t who know 😢
@@carolinecadwalader3170yes, the entire scene is so tender ❤
When Amy yells “kiss him with tongue” as jo walks out of the carriage 😂
edit: I saw on subtitles its "kiss him with love" but it still sounds like tongue haha
wow i never caught that before thank you so much ahahahah
Hahaha, underrated Amy moment alert! 😅
Wow, thank you for that, never caught that... it was the best !!!
I think it is kiss him with love
Omg I didn’t catch that either 😂
At 0:45 you can see Timothée mouth Florence’s lines.
I think it's because they had rehearsed the scene so many times.
Oh yes, I just picked up on that the third time I watched this movie! 😁😅
Wow lol
Nice catch
@@SuperMovieLvr933 That’s what I was thinking
I actually think the ending where she gets married but still has her ambitions and goals is very relevant for women. I know Alcott herself didn't get married, but she still wrote Jo's story in such a way that I think it was impactful for women. Even if the story wasn't entirely autobiographical, that's alright. It's still a good story with great messages for women, at that time and even today.
Excellent addition
Meg's "Amy is RIGHT" just ends me
And then Amy going “exACTly” 😂
Ahhhhg I love it
I love it when Amy says “Laurie would you stop standing there and get the horses ready “ and Laurie gets scared 😂 at 1:20
Yep. Honey moon phase is over.
My only thought throughout this whole scene: “Friedrich left like 10 seconds ago, why we gotta grab horses to catch this man?”
Maybe he was in a carriage too?
They spent time getting Jo ready before they ran off to catch him.
He's very efficient at walking.
Simply because it was Amy's idea, and she was always a romantic. So to chase after ones love in the rain you must fetch the carriage even if that means you beat him to the train.
@@hugemusiclover1837 yeah, because there is a carriage in the woods at 1:27
can i just confirm that at 3:29 Amy does in fact yell "kiss him with tongue"? I feel like i'm going insane.
katiesoup86 no she does
Yes She did and it was great !!
I think it is kiss him with love
How did I not hear that? I wish I could unhear it.
Do people kiss with tongue in that era?
Friedrich: "My hands are empty"
Jo: "They're not empty!"
I can confirm that I burst out crying at the delivery of these two lines
😭😭😭😭
I loved this line on the book! I was so happy that they included this :))
thats how we know Jane (writer) never found a man enough to roast her to love
😭😭😭❤️
A thousand + people are with you on this, including myself :P
This scene is so meta, and I absolutely love it. The shift between Jo and Louisa May Alcott true story is so significant
The way Timothée had a real reaction to Amy yelling at him 😂 1:19
I know right?🤣🤣
He was 100% zoning out. 🤣🤣
I can literally *feel* meg and amy's excitement
The sister relationships in this scene are the best part for me. It's just so blunt and loving.
2:50 is literally every shipper when we get an ending we don't like. 😂 And 2:58 is our response when the writers try to justify it.
True lol
Lmao so true
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
LMAO THAT HAS A POTENTIAL TO BECOME A MEME
@@foxynie.5861 make it!! 👏🏻
Does anyone else not think ‘he’s in the front yard... he just left just go after him there... you don’t need a carriage’
Elizabeth stop standing there go get the horses ready
Haha. True. Send Laurie running after him.
Yes!!!
Having a carriage waiting was customary in these times and there was no yard. There would've been a mildly paved walkup at the most, he likely got into a carriage like 30 seconds after closing the door and was already on his way.
Wait, you got a point tho lmao😭
I don't care if it's just a fantasy, it's terribly romantic and I adore them together! I've heard that people criticize their relationship because he is critical of her writing, but I think Jo would want someone with a backbone who would be honest with her.
That is so true when I first watched it I stared to cry 😢 at the end at first it was a little confusing 😮because I was not sure who Jo liked Or who she was going to marry Laurie or Fredrick? But I watched it again 4 times and this scene at the end get to me every time ❤ I love 💕 this movie 🎥 I always have
Can we just talk about how Laurie looks at Amy in this scene! Omg he looks so in love with her
Ikr I love them 😭😭
he fell so HARD for her
@@michs436 your classic she fell first but he fell harder.
My favourite part of this scene is the dynamic between the sisters, but Laurie's reactions to everything, especially Amy, are just great.
"You'll marry. You find a man and you marry him. And I will see."
Really? Laurie's prediction came true!
But Jo saw him get engaged first
@@biancabhardwaj8347 They eloped he and Amy ::d
am I the only one that just can’t stop looking at timothee hahaha
My eyes can't decide where to look - at Timothee or at Florence😄😄
It is hard not to look at him
1:05
Meg: Amy is rIGHT!
Amy: exAcTly
I just realised Amy yells "kiss him with tongue!" as Jo chases after Friedrich, what an amazing character
kiss him with love, but ok
I love Laurie and Amy’s dynamic in this scene
I don't know why people ship Jo and Laurie. Jo and the Prof are much cuter XD
In movie yes
In book idk
Idk the movie but not in the books, not at all.
In movie, okie yes I agree
In book, ...ok you have to think about it one more time
mi sa which book? I only read Little women
@@naomikisono7609 this scene appear in Good wires, the next book of little women seri, you can search about this
Yes everyone is talking about Meg/Amy/Laurie/Frederick. Yes yes. They are amazing.
But the publisher's "No. Noooo. That won't work at all." And "Who caaareeess." Steals the scene for me.
The publisher was basically the fans’ reaction 😂
In the 1994 version, Jo never intended to marry either but they showed her randomly meeting and developing a relationship with Friedrich (they eventually end up together). That’s why I’m a sucker for this romantic ending (still haven’t seen the full version of this one though!!). I know Louisa May Alcott (author) never married, however I have always liked the idea that Jo did not have to choose between her independence and her love for writing, and finding love. I have always understood her as someone who didn’t believe in marriage for the wrong reasons (money/status) or the idea that women had to marry to mean anything to society. Just because one is independent doesn’t mean they will never find love either.
"That's good instinct. You love him" is such a typical Mr. Lawrence thing to say.
Florence Pugh is really a standout in this film.... “Laurie will you stop standing there!? And go get the horse ready. thank you!!😂😂😂i love every second of this movie😍😍😍
I love Jo's character when she was younger marriage didn't come to her mind she's too busy having an ambition to be a succesful writer and i love that in the end she became successful releasing her book and i think the love for her just comes unexpected but im happy that she got one too.
It's nice to see florence Pugh happy and not drugged up forced to watch ritualistic sacrifices.
She's so versatile, I don't understand how she came from Midsummer to this
@@sofiu-v3p and she’s gonna be in black widow as well
OSHDJJDDJDJD NOOO LMAOOO
@@KoolKukumber and she did great on that as well!! truly an icon lol
@@sofiu-v3p and she was amazing in Fighting With my family, the first movie I ever watched of her
here I am, sat on my bed on lockdown in my apartment - have smoked a spliff, am enjoying simple sunflower seeds whilst watching a surprisingly beautiful remake of one of my favourite romantic movies of all time, contemplating the beauty of life at the the end of the world
cheers friends, Godspeed
and i love you for saying that, cheers friend!علي
this sounds so delightful wow
sadly, the world didn't end. maybe next time.
"That was fiction, He was practically begging for a reason to stay" My favorite Line I have heard in a movie so far hands down
and how sad/touched she says it! amy is adorable
Best two parts in this scene:
1. Amy yelling at Laurie
2. Meg and Amy screaming in the carriage
“But it’s raining outside”
“Well that doesn’t matter!”
I love Amy March
No. You love Emma Watson
@@traceyjoseph8452 Emma Watson played Meg March. Florence Pugh played Amy March.
When Amy said "I am half as smart as you" that was lowkey sad tbh. She accepted that she is just not smarter than Jo and always below her. This is probably why Amy can't get satisfied with her paintings because Jo is her standard. He have the mindset that she won't be better than Jo
😭 yo tambien senti eso xd
And she literally married the guy who proposed to jo first and said he’d rather die than face the fact jo didn’t love him…. I mean he clearly loves Amy but some part of her will always believe it’s because he couldn’t have jo. Poor girl walked herself into a life of seeing herself as second best
i love how jo is reveling in the company of her sisters in the carriage as they’re trying to fix her up on the way there, i feel like it’s the childhood love she was yearning to have back when she voiced how lonely she was but a grown up, matured version of it that can be sustained for decades to come. i am glad jo got this happy ending
Louis Garrel is an excellent actor!!! His pauses and the fact that his not using his body to intensify his words or emotions makes his acting so powerful and special in my opinion
0:54 I don’t know why but this moment makes me filled with giggles
The actor playing Mr. Bhaer looks rather young, but quite handsome.
Why do I get the feeling too many people in these comments believed this ending? This was intended to pay an homage and mock the ending of the book because Alcott was forced to write an ending where Jo fell in love. This sequence is clearly just an alternate ending sequence, and it doesn’t match up with the later scenes because this scene is in the book Jo wrote but not her own life.
Because we are women ! Lmao
That’s your point of view. Greta left it open for various interpretations.
@@analeite6466 it was very obvious though. With the change in acting style. Over dramatic cartoonish score playing in the kiss scene used in old time stereotypical romances. The proof is in the pudding
O O O again it’s not
@@analeite6466 it is. I gave an argument. U just said "its not." If u studied cinema u would understand. Its blatantly obvious. Hiding in plain sight
“I have never seen you so happy! I mean what else is love?”
Laurie: 👁👄👁
SHE DIDN'T ACTUALLY FALL IN LOVE WITH ANYONE, AND THE AUTHOR WANTED HER TO STAY ALONE. She was forced to end the story romantically because as the publisher states: "no one would read a book without romance"
may be author of little women was forced too to write an ending like this.
Did anyone else catch this. At 0:45 you can see Timotheè saying florance’s line “Jo you love him”
woah!!! good catch
-My hands are empty
-They’re not empty
I can’t I’m cryingg 😭
"my hands are empty."
"they're not empty."
that killed me.
I love how Amy talks to Laurie so passionately and bluntly in this scene. It makes me giggle.
I'm the youngest of three Sisters and I share so many similarities to Amy.
I say things and do things when others in my family are too polite and subtle to just come out and say it. 😂 sometimes you need a little push from the most observant Sister.
This is one of the few cases where I think the film did it better than the book, the ending at least. I know Alcott had her hands tied when she was writing the novel, but the ending felt so unsatisfying and of character for Jo. Gerwig made the film's end more ambiguous and therefore a little more believable.
i LOVE the mini scene of the publisher and his wife discussing their inlaws- so comical, Greta killed the scene adding this little snippet of daily ife. Also love how the parents are exasperated at the children making noise.
aww timothee mouthing you love him at 0:45
Amy: C'mon I need to fix you.
Best line ever
Amy was my fav in the movie. She is so filled with spirit and I just fell in love with her
Anyone else notice that Laurie is mouthing what Amy is saying at 0:45? Thought is was super funny!
If you read Louisa's letter exchange with her publisher she was the one who came up with all the marriages. Friedrichs character in little women is based on philosopher Henry Thoreau Louisa was in love with him. Laurie is based on Ladislas Wisniewski a young man who was first flirting with Louisa and then betrayed him. In all of Louisa's novels these two male archetypes are constantly present. The Friedrich archetype is the humble hard working man (Fritz in lw, Mac in Rose in Bloom, David in Work) He has silent passion for the protagonist and the Louisa type of protagonist loves him and wants that equal relationship. Laurie archetype is charming but idle. He either puts his act together and falls for a female character (like Amy) who is stern with them or they fail and fet sucked into consuming toxic self-harming behavior. Little Women is all about Louisa's love life. That is why she had conflicted relationship towards it. Henry was 16 years older (same age difference than between Louisa and the professor) Ladislas was 10 years younger. Louisa and Henry, They did have an affair and almost a telepathic way of communication which is also present in the novels. Henry passed away 5years before LW was published. That is also why Louisa listed out to be nurse in the war. He had lost her sister Lizzie at the same time.
I absolutely adore Amy in this scene
Amy bossing around Laurie made my day
I noticed that the color grading started to change when they decided to go after the professor. At that moment, Jo became a girl in a book. She said 'if I was a girl in a book this would all be so easy, just give up the world happily.' I don't think she marries anyone in this movie. The ending where she opens the school is the ending she was forced to write by her publisher hence the golden color grading. And that scene paralleled with the real life situation where Jo's book get published just like Louisa May Alcott. Greta Gerwig said in one of her interviews that the book is the happy ending.
Am I the only lonely single out there watching romantic movies and imagine themself in their position ?
No I definitely don't think you're the only one
Nope.
🙌
plenty of us around here. i'm a man and i don't even want to marry and can relate to jo and alcott in some measure.
Nope
3:31 idk but this is adorable
And laurie go outside looking at fred walking away so slowly, thinking why bother chase him all the way to the train station?
Okay Jo’s family being so supportive is adorable
1:19 my favorite part 😂
Florence’s perfect head shake of frustration- “YOU IDIOT!”
I love how Amy takes the reigns and sets Jo straight in this scene. She may not be as smart, but she's shown herself to have the most wisdom ❤
Thr scene with the publisher and his family was hilarious. The man was damn near checked out and good with it 😂
4:12 I fell in love with Saoirse(the way she says "it doesn't matter")
Saoirse’s little happy squeal/laugh thing was SO ADORABLE
"My hands are empty"
"It is not empty"
“The right ending is the one that sells.” That’s true.
3:29 lmao me supporting my bestie in her first date
3:31 me and my friend when we see our bestfriend talking to her crush
Omg....Amy and Laurie are hilarious 😂
People might say otherwise but I've always shipped them together ❤️
Amy is the superior child
"Come with me, I need to fix you" gets me every time lol
LaUrIe WoUld YoU sTop StaNdInG tHeRe aNd PrePArE tHe HoRsEs ahhh i love Amy
That shot of them kissing at the train station in the rain has to be one of the most iconic shots in film history
She's a great actress and I'm in love with her but her accent still comes out slightly as she does an American one.
I never saw this movie so I can't be sure, but what little I saw in this clip, it comes out a bit.
who jo?
There in England....
Garbage Bag they’re in America????
I noticed this too, but we've heard her American accent in LadyBird and I dont remember it wavering at all.
Emma Watson's and a few characters do that weird faux american/british accent which usually happens in older movies but I don't really feel like it was done right.
I dont think they tried to do a regular modern day American accent bc it pulls you out of the story, but the accent they landed just sounds like they're real accent is slipping in. Except for florence's, she sounds like a modern day American which also was kind of weird bc no one else had that accent in the movie of the sisters.
Timothy for example doesnt speak like he normally does bc of the era but it's still completely American, but not modern American. It's a weird accent, I'm not really sure what it's supposed to sound like, all I know is most did a different version and they didnt always mesh well.
Woah the music makes it 100% more goosebumps and feeling to this scene!!
"My hands are empty"
I was fully expecting Jo to say something like "then catch me"
Love when Amy and Meg screaming in the carriage🤣❤
"he would make a terrific friend... for me😏?"😂😂❤
When we saw this scene, my friends and I had a doubt. Is this really happening, or is it just how it will go in the book Jo is writing (that, as we know, is Little Women)? Because you see her talking with the publisher, and she still doesen't want her heroine, herself, to get married in the end. You may say that we see Fritz in the final scene, but we have this theory that maybe he was just working in Jo's school.
Thank you!! Everyone's acting like the scene in the rain is super romantic while I felt like it was a haphazard fiction Jo(author) had to assemble... to me it makes that scene really really sad
That was a tribute to Louisa May Alcott's original idea. In the book, Jo does end up with Friedrich
@@sohainhere Same! I totally agree and understand how you felt.
This actor was a great Professor. Though I was surprised they cast someone so young looking; in the book, he is a good 20 years older than Jo. But it doesn't matter, IMO. The chemistry between these actors is great!
When a German professor sounds French... 👀😜
If you know, the actor is french!
@@Sun.Shine- je sais mdr...j'habite en France 🙃
@@aeriacross770 ✌️
The ending for joe is to be alone and a famous writer. She don’t need no man!!!!!
I love the "chase" scene is less about the guy but more about the three sisters.
I like this version more than the original much more. because this version the characters are better portraited. The actings are much more subtle, especially Jo, much better acting. Jo in this version is a much round person but Winona's acting was so blend. Also I love the ending of this version too. I like how the "happy ending" is what Jo wrote to please the publisher, not her real intention. It's more Jo than ever!
GOD Florence Pugh was soooo GOOD in this film. Fun, feisty, sweet, heartbreaking, cute. SHE'S SOOO GOOD !!! xD