Prime Video is removing Little Women, Florence Pugh's highest-rated movie, this month.
Marking Barbie director Greta Gerwig's second feature, Little Women boasts a star-studded cast including Saoirse Ronan, Timothée Chalamet, Emma Watson, Eliza Scanlen, Laura Dern and Meryl Streep.
Set in the US in the years after the civil war, the film follows four sisters as they carve out different life paths while coming up against the societal expectations of the time.
The synopsis reads: "In 19th century Massachusetts, the March sisters – Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy – on the threshold of womanhood, go through many ups and downs in life and endeavor to make important decisions about their futures."
Based on Louisa May Alcott's 1868 novel of the same name, the 2019 film is leaving Prime Video in 13 days, meaning fans have until 26 August to catch it.
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Little Women is Pugh's highest-rated film on Rotten Tomatoes along with Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, which both have a score of 95%.
Many critics praised Gerwig's directing, with The New Yorker saying: "A work of poetic smuggling: a movie made within the norms of the industry that also reflects Gerwig's own personal artistic ideas, ideals, and obsessions."
"Greta Gerwig's take on Louisa May Alcott's novel is intelligent and fleet, refreshing if not radical, and as organic in its feminist convictions as it is in its depiction of close-knit sororal love," penned The New Republic.
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"One-hundred-and-fifty-year-old literature never felt so alive," wrote The Observer, while The Chicago Reader said: "The latest adaptation gives the March sisters more power than ever."
Vulture wrote: "That Gerwig in only her second feature film manages to meet the likes of Alcott partway is a blooming miracle."
"Gerwig has taken a treasured perennial of popular American literature and reshaped it for a new generation," concluded The Hollywood Reporter. "Which should give the captivating film a long shelf life.
Little Women is leaving Prime Video in 13 days.
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Reporter, Digital Spy
Harriet is a freelance news writer specialising in TV and movies at Digital Spy.
A horror enthusiast, she joined Digital Spy after working on her own horror website, reviewing films and focusing largely on feminism in the genre.
In her spare time, Harriet paints and produces mixed-media art. She graduated from the University of Kingston with a BA in fine art, where she specialised in painting. She also has an MA in journalism from Birkbeck University.
















