‘Little Women’
Gillian Armstrong’s beguiling 1994 version of Louisa May Alcott’s novel brings alive the past vividly. Armstrong, screenplay adapter and co-producer Robin Swicord and their colleagues have got everything just right. In their vision, Alcott’s alter ego-heroine, Jo March (played by a perfectly cast Winona Ryder, right, with Trini Alvarado, center, and Claire Danes), is not a modern-day feminist but points the way to the future in her unladylike ambition and outspoken free thinking. The filmmakers acknowledge the second-class status of Victorian-era women without making a federal case about it (NBC Sunday at 8:30 p.m.).
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