Entertainment & Arts
Little Women and 1917: Possible Oscar rivals get rave reviews
One is a war film made by a James Bond director. The other is a new
version of Little Women from the last woman to get an Oscar nomination for best
director.
They have now both been billed as two of the best films of the year.
Reviews for 1917 and Little Women
have just come out, and critics are raving about both. Empire magazine said Little Women confirmed director
Greta Gerwig as "a major talent in American cinema".
And The Times declared Sam Mendes' 1917 "an Oscar-night
frontrunner".
'The definitive adaptation of Little
Women'
"If there were any remaining doubts that Greta Gerwig is a major
talent in American cinema, put them to rest now," wrote Empire critic
Helen O'Hara.
Gerwig received an
Oscar nomination for best director for Ladybird in 2017 - the only woman to
have been up for that award since 2010.
Now,
she might repeat that feat for adapting Louisa May Alcott's classic
autobiographical novel of sisterhood. The star-studded cast includes Saoirse
Ronan, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Laura Dern and Meryl Streep.
Little
Women has been on the big screen several times before, but O'Hara said this is
now the "definitive" version. "Gerwig takes several bold
storytelling choices that make this adaptation quite unlike any of its
predecessors," her five-star review said.
Vulture's
Alison Willmore said the film "feels, exhilaratingly, like the throwing down of a
gauntlet". She added: "It doesn't just brim with life, it brims with
ideas about happiness, economic realities, and what it means to push against or
to hew to the expectations laid out for one's gender."
Writing
in The Daily Mail, Brian Viner also gave the movie a glowing
five stars, saying Little Women was "a proper family treat for Christmas",
adding that Gerwig's vision had produced an "enormously engaging
adaptation".
Viner praised Gerwig's handling of the story, saying: "She has
ingeniously tinkered with the book's simple chronology, daring to move its
cherished Christmas Day opening and constantly whisking us forward and backward
in time."
However, Richard
Lawson of Variety had reservations. Overall, he conceded "it's often a lovely
experience" and admitted to leaving the cinema "with eyes
brimming".
But when it came to Gerwig's handling of the timeline, Lawson was not so
readily swayed. He felt the director was "too concerned with cramming in
every plot beat from her source material".
1917 is a 'single-shot masterpiece'
In 1917, Mendes, who
directed 007's Spectre and Skyfall, follows a mission by two messengers in
World War One - supposedly inspired by a story the director's grandfather told
him as a child.
The Times' Kevin Maher gave it five stars and wrote: "The resulting two
hours of amphetamine-rush cinema is both a monumental technical achievement
and, instantly, an Oscar-night frontrunner."
Peter Bradshaw, writing in The Guardian, also gave the film
five stars, describing it as a "single-shot masterpiece", adding:
"Sam Mendes's 1917 is an amazingly audacious film; as exciting as a heist
movie, disturbing as a sci-fi nightmare."
The movie
appears to have been shot in one take. Cinematographer Roger Deakins
"pushes the single-take concept into new territory", according
to IndieWire's Kate Erbland. "The idea is wild enough, but to make it look this
dazzling from moment to moment is something else entirely," she wrote.
Forbes critic Scott Mendelson declared that 1917 "might be
the best movie of 2019". He wrote: "Universal just dropped a bomb on
the ongoing Oscar season, because Sam Mendes' 1917 is indeed one of the best
movies of the year, if not THE best.
"It
works as a visual miracle, a violent action picture, a grim anti-war fable, a
character play and an emotional rollercoaster. It's everything it promises to
be, visually, narratively and emotionally, operating both as a technical
blow-out and just a damn great movie."
But Robbie
Collin, writing in The Telegraph, gave it a more lukewarm three stars, making a comparison with
Saving Private Ryan in his review.
"One
of the most devastating manoeuvres in the history of negative Oscar campaigning
was carried out in the 1999 season, when word was successfully put about - by
the office of Harvey Weinstein, no less - that Steven Spielberg's Saving
Private Ryan didn't amount to much more than its undeniably impressive opening
27 minutes.
"You
sense that slur would be received as rapturous praise by Sam Mendes's 1917,
which in spirit is those 27 minutes and nothing but, showily stretched out to
feature length."




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