Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Emma Watson and Rebecca Solnit talk about 'Little Women'



[Gallery] [Screencaps] [Fashion] [Beauty] [Version française]




You might remember that almost three weeks ago I posted photos of Emma interviewing Rebecca Solnit before I was asked to delete them. Well, today Emma started to post a couple of photos and a video of their meeting.












Une publication partagée par Emma Watson (@emmawatson) le




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9 comments:

Gacek870 said...

So let me put this straight. Greta Gerwig is gonna change (or I should say already changed) an ending of one of the most iconic american novel, on an assumption that Louisa May Alcott wasn't allowed to wrote an ending she originaly wanted. There is no proof to support this theory. I am right, or I didn't understand Emma correctly?

Anonymous said...

She looks GORGEOUS here, really love the look. She's maturing quite well.

GoldenGemster said...

I have not heard that theory about Louisa May Alcott before. I loved the book and the follow up books, Good Wives, Jo's Boys etc. However I will be interested to see how it DOES end - but it had better be good and not just another showground for feminism today.

Anonymous said...

She looks stunning here!

Anonymous said...

Facebook Q&A live session will take place today. All 3 sisters+Laura+Timothy. No Emma. Why??!??

Anonymous said...

It might be animal free, eco friendly etc, but that is a shockingly ill fitted suit that Emma is wearing.

Trivial I know, but an uncle was a bespoke tailor and one thing guaranteed to set him off was poorly fitted suits, particularly sleeve/trouser length.

So bloodline angst. :)

Gacek870 said...

GoldenGemster said...
''I have not heard that theory about Louisa May Alcott before.''

Maybe because this theory is complete nonsense.

Anonymous said...

The theory is not nonsense, many fans of the book and also academics who have analyzed Alcott’s work have said for years the ending feels forced and doesn’t match the story well. By the way Gerwig doesn’t change the ending in her adaptation, what she does is to leave for the interpretation of the audience if everything they’re watching happens “for real”. I don’t how else to explain it, it’s actually very clever and you should see the movie before judging it.

Gacek870 said...

I don't judge, I just asked and I definitely gonna see the movie. But with all due respect, there is no evidence for that theory, just assumptions of current fans, who don't like the original XIX century ending. In the end I have a question, Have you already seen the movie?