As some of you may have noticed, we updated our photo gallery with promotional stills and screen captures from Return to Hogwarts, an HBO special that aired on the 1st of January, in celebration of Harry Potter’s 20th anniversary. I had been holding out on making a post about it, because I wanted to have a chance to re-watch all of the movies, and then the special, first.
Alas, that hasn’t happened yet (there’s 8 of them, and they’re long!), so I figured I should just post it. I’ll just leave a note here when I finally watch it (assuming I’ll survive).
Film Productions > Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return to Hogwarts (2022) > Screen Captures
We have updated our photo gallery with screen captures of Emma’s scenes in “Little Women“! The movie premiered during Christmas last year, and it has recently been released on Blu-Ray and On Demand. You can buy/rent it on Amazon, and it is also available on Best Buy, Target and many other stores. If interested, we strongly suggest you order it online, as we know many of our visitors live in countries that are currently dealing with the covid-19 pandemic, and so it’s best to stay at home.
Hello Emma fans! Our gallery has been updated with new production stills and posters featuring Emma in Little Women, thanks to Angie from jennifer-garner.net!
Film Productions > Little Women (2019) > Promotional Stills
It has been released the first theatrical trailer for Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s novel Little Women, which stars Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Timothée Chalamet and Saoirse Ronan. In case you might have missed it, Emma plays Meg March – the oldest of the March sisters. Director Greta Gerwig’s spoke briefly with Entertainment Weekly in honor of the trailer release, about casting Emma for the role of Meg. The trailer and the piece of article can be found below. Little Women is set to be released in theaters on December 25, 2019.
To play Jo’s elegant sister Meg, Gerwig turned to Emma Watson. “To me, [Watson] embodies everything that I was interested in, in terms of who the March women were,” Gerwig says. “She’s just smart. She’s on multi-governmental organizations that speak to the U.N., and she’s so thoughtful and present. She is way out there trying to do everything she can.”
Watson, an outspoken activist for gender equality, is best known for playing a witch and a princess who refuse to be limited by systemic oppression or social expectations — but here, she is not the obviously feisty Jo, but her much more outwardly conventional sister. “For me personally, Meg March is a character that is long misunderstood,” Gerwig says. “In terms of what [Watson] did with the character, she has so much open-heartedness and so much love combined with that much intelligence, it’s heartbreaking and potent. Because she’s absolutely herself with understanding the struggle of who that character is.”
The actress (and noted feminist book clubber) “would always bring so much to the conversation” from her extensive reading and research, Gerwig says. “She is all-in, not just as an actor, but as a mind.”