Saoirse Ronan and Timothée Chalamet as Jo and Laurie
Photo: Sony Pictures
Little Women won 'Best Costume Design'
Photo: Sony Pictures
Emma Watson as Meg, the eldest of the March girls
Photo: Sony Pictures
The March sisters together in their childhood home in Massachusetts
Photo: Sony Pictures
Greta Gerwig speaks to Emma Watson on set
Photo: Sony Pictures
Saoirse Ronan as Jo, the character Louisa May Alcott based largely on herself
Photo: Sony Pictures
The March sisters performing together in costume
Photo: Sony Pictures
Meryl Streep as the formidable Aunt March
Photo: Sony Pictures
Eliza Scanlen as Jo's sister and dearest confidant, Beth
Photo: Sony Pictures
Laura Dern as the March matriarch Marmee
Photo: Sony Pictures
Timothée Chalamet as Theodore "Laurie" Laurence with Florence Pugh as the youngest March sister, Amy
Photo: Sony Pictures
Saoirse Ronan and Timothée Chalamet as Jo and Laurie
Photo: Sony Pictures
Little Women won 'Best Costume Design'
Photo: Sony Pictures
Emma Watson as Meg, the eldest of the March girls
Photo: Sony Pictures
The March sisters together in their childhood home in Massachusetts
Photo: Sony Pictures
Greta Gerwig speaks to Emma Watson on set
Photo: Sony Pictures
Saoirse Ronan as Jo, the character Louisa May Alcott based largely on herself
Photo: Sony Pictures
The March sisters performing together in costume
Photo: Sony Pictures
Meryl Streep as the formidable Aunt March
Photo: Sony Pictures
Eliza Scanlen as Jo's sister and dearest confidant, Beth
Photo: Sony Pictures
Laura Dern as the March matriarch Marmee
Photo: Sony Pictures
Timothée Chalamet as Theodore "Laurie" Laurence with Florence Pugh as the youngest March sister, Amy
Photo: Sony Pictures
1 / 11

They’ve got ambition and talent as well as just beauty,” Saoirse Ronan’s Jo March declares of her sisters in the first trailer for Greta Gerwig’s Little Women. “I’m so sick of people saying that love is just all a woman is fit for. I’m so sick of it.” The message is clear: this is Louisa May Alcott’s progressive masterpiece – with the volume turned up on the feminist messaging. Diehard fans of the novel, however, will be relieved that many classic scenes appear as written by Alcott herself – with plenty of nods to the 1994 film, starring Winona Ryder and Christian Bale, as well.

Of course, the best moments in the trailer belong to Ronan and Timothée Chalamet, who plays the March girls’ wealthy neighbour Laurie, who falls deeply in love with the capricious Jo. Gerwig of course directed Ronan and Chalamet together in Ladybird, cementing their status as Hollywood darlings in the process.

Among the other highlights? Laura Dern at her most charming as matriarch Marmee, and Meryl Streep as the perpetually grouchy Aunt March, who gives Downton Abbey’s Lady Violet a run for her money with her barbed one-liners. “You’ll need to marry well,” she warns Jo, only for her niece to point out, “But you’re not married, Aunt March.” Her hilarious response? “Well, that’s because I’m rich.” Rounding out the starry cast are Emma Watson as Meg; Eliza Scanlen as Beth; Florence Pugh as Amy; and James Norton as John Brooke. Watch the trailer in full below, and stay tuned for film, set to hit cinemas on 25 December.

Originally published on British Vogue.