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|director = [[Alfonso Cuarón]]
 
|director = [[Alfonso Cuarón]]
 
|producer = [[Alan C. Blomquist]]<br />Dalisa Cohen<br />[[Amy Ephron]]<br />[[Mark Johnson]]
 
|producer = [[Alan C. Blomquist]]<br />Dalisa Cohen<br />[[Amy Ephron]]<br />[[Mark Johnson]]
|screenplay = [[Richard LaGravenese]]<br />[[Elizabeth Chandler]]
+
|writer = [[Richard LaGravenese]]<br />[[Elizabeth Chandler]]
|based on = {{Based on|''A Little Princess''|Frances Hodgson Burnett}}
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|based_on = {{Based on|''A Little Princess''|Frances Hodgson Burnett}}
 
|starring = [[Liesel Matthews]]<br />[[Eleanor Bron]]<br />[[Liam Cunningham]]<br />[[Vanessa Lee Chester]]
 
|starring = [[Liesel Matthews]]<br />[[Eleanor Bron]]<br />[[Liam Cunningham]]<br />[[Vanessa Lee Chester]]
 
|music = [[Patrick Doyle]]
 
|music = [[Patrick Doyle]]
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|budget = $17 million
 
|budget = $17 million
 
|gross = $10,015,449}}
 
|gross = $10,015,449}}
A Little Princess is a 1995 drama fantasy film directed by [[Alfonso Cuarón]], starring [[Liesel Matthews]], [[Eleanor Bron]], Liam Cunningham, and Vanessa Lee Chester. Set during World War I, it focuses on a young girl who is relegated to a life of servitude in a New York City boarding school by the headmistress after receiving news that her father was killed in combat. Loosely based upon the novel A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett, this adaptation was heavily influenced by the [[A Little Princess (1939)|1939 cinematic version]] and takes creative liberties with the original story.
+
'''A Little Princess''' is a 1995 drama film directed by Alfonso Cuarón, starring Eleanor Bron, Liam Cunningham (in a dual role) and introducing Liesel Matthews with supporting roles done by Vanessa Lee Chester, Rusty Schwimmer, Arthur Malet, and Errol Sitahal.
   
  +
It is loosely based upon the novel "A Little Princess" by Frances Hodgson Burnett, this adaptation was heavily influenced by [[A Little Princess (1939)|the 1939 cinematic version]] and takes creative liberties with the original story.
Due to poor promotion by [[Warner Bros.]], the film hardly made back half its budget. However, the film was critically acclaimed and given various awards, such as an Academy Award nomination for its significant achievements in art direction and cinematography, among other aspects of its production.
 
   
 
Due to poor promotion by Warner Bros., the film hardly made back half its budget. However, the film was critically acclaimed and given various awards, such as two Academy Award nominations for its significant achievements in art direction and cinematography, among other aspects of its production.
 
==Plot==
 
==Plot==
  +
{{Template:Spoiler}}
In 1914, Sara Crewe loves her childhood home in India, but she has to leave it when her beloved father, Captain Crewe enlists to fight for the British in World War I. He enrolls her at Miss Minchin's Seminary for Girls in New York, the same school Sara's late mother attended, and spares no expense to make sure his daughter will be comfortable while he is gone.
 
  +
Sara Crewe (Liesel Matthews) is the kind, caring daughter of Captain Crewe (Liam Cunningham), a wealthy aristocrat living in India. Her mother died when she was very young, and she has to leave her beloved childhood home and friends when her father volunteers to fight for the British as an officer in World War I.
   
  +
He enrolls her at a girls' boarding school in New York and instructs the headmistress Miss Minchin (Eleanor Bron) to spare no expense making sure his daughter will be comfortable while he is away. He has reserved her the school's largest suite & gives Sara a specially-made French doll named Emily telling her that if she wants to talk to him, just speak to Emily and he will hear it.
Sara quickly becomes popular and well-liked by the other students, whose boring, mundane lives are made exciting by the wonderful stories from "The Ramayana" that Sara tells. The school's spoiled bully, Lavinia, becomes angry over Sara's increasing popularity. She often clashes with the severe headmistress, Miss Minchin, who attempts to stifle Sara's creativity and sense of self-worth. Sara attempts to befriend the school's African-American servant girl, Becky, but is told to avoid her. Miss Minchin throws Sara a lavish birthday party in order to extract more money from Captain Crewe. However, when word comes that Captain Crewe has been killed in battle and his estate has been seized by the British government, she forces Sara to become a servant. Miss Minchin also confiscates most of Sara's possessions, except for her favorite doll, Emily, given to her by her father before the war. Sara's belief that "every girl is a princess" is put to the limit and she stops telling stories. Her friendship with Becky grows and her other school friends sneak up to the attic to see her. Feeling sorry for her, Sara's friends decide to surprise her by stealing her locket back. Touched by this, Sara continues The Ramayana.
 
   
  +
Even though she finds the strict rules and Miss Minchin's harsh attitude stifling, Sara becomes popular among the girls, including the scullery maid Becky (Vanessa Lee Chester), for her kindness and strong sense of imagination. She writes constant letters to her father, which are a great source of happiness for him on the battlefields of Europe.
Meanwhile, in the mansion next door, a rich old man named Charles Randolph has recently received word that his son, John, also fighting in WWI, is MIA, resulting in his being relegated to a wheelchair. He is cared for by an Indian immigrant named Ram Dass who had traveled to America on the same ship as the Crewes. Ram Dass keeps an eye on Sara, knowing that she is a kindhearted girl. Mr. Randolph is called to a military hospital hoping an unidentified soldier suffering from blindess and amnesia due to exposure to poison gas is his son. However, the man is not. Ram Dass convinces Mr. Randolph to take the injured soldier in anyway, reminding him that the soldier may know what happened to John.
 
   
  +
Due to a body being misidentified, Captain Crewe is declared dead when he is actually seriously injured and suffering from amnesia and the British government seizes his company and assets.
One evening, as Sara tells the girls a frightening tale of Ravana, the girls scream in terror and Miss Minchin finds them. She orders the girls to go back to their own rooms, and punishes Sara and Becky by denying them any food the next day. Miss Minchin then taunts Sara of still being a princess (believing it to be lie). But when Sara stands to her, and tells her that she and the rest of the girls were princesses: despite their miserable lives from "living in tiny old attics, dressing in rags and not being pretty, smart or young"; in frustration, she threatenly warns her she will be thrown out of the school, if she finds her with the girls again before storming out of her room, locking up both Sara and Becky and breaks down before leaving. To stay full rather than starve, Sara suggests to Becky that they eat a feast for the night before going to sleep. The two girls then pretend to have a banquet in the room as Ram Dass watches. The next morning, they wake up to find that the room has turned into a palace-like bedroom, with the same food they dreamed of eating the night before, courtesy of Ram Dass. Later in the night, Miss Minchin enters the room and accuses Sara of stealing everything (including her own locket). She turns her in to the police and the girls decide that Sara must try to escape. Using a plank as a bridge, Sara narrowly crosses from the school to Randolph's house. The police arrive and enter the house to find her, and to arrest Becky (for helping Sara escape) as well. In Randolph's house, Sara meets the soldier and realizes that he is Captain Crewe. He is unable to remember her however, even though she tries to remind him. Miss Minchin (who, the police, Ram Dass and Randolph, finds her with Captain Crewe, and realizes the reunion between father and daughter) tells the police that Sara has no family, though she clearly recognizes Sara's father. Just as she is being taken away by the police, however, Ram Dass helps Captain Crewe to regain his memory and rescue her.
 
   
  +
When Miss Minchin hears the news, she is in the middle of throwing a lavish party for Sara, hoping to extort more money from her father. When Crewe's solicitor arrives and tells her there will be no more money, Miss Minchin is furious.
The film ends with Sara, Captain Crewe, whose assets and fortune have been restored by the British government, and Becky all leaving for India together. Sara says goodbye to all of the girls and leaves them Emily as a present. Even the bullying Lavinia overcomes her jealousy and parts with Sara on good terms. Mr. Randolph learns of how Sara's father attempted to save his son's life in the trenches during the gas attack, and becomes the school's new headmaster. Meanwhile, Miss Minchin looks on, defeated and miserable, having been reduced to a chimney sweep, working for a boy she previously mistreated.
 
  +
  +
Since Sara is now penniless and has no known relatives, Miss Minchin decides to move her into the attic with Becky to work as a servant where she will report to Mabel (Peggy Miley) at 5:00 AM.
  +
  +
Meanwhile, the elderly neighbor Charles Randolph (Arthur Malet) has received word that his son John, also fighting in Europe, is missing in action. He is asked to identify a soldier suffering from amnesia, but he is discouraged to discover it is not John. His Indian assistant Ram Dass (Errol Sitahal) encourages him to take in the man anyway, reminding him that he may know what happened to his son.
  +
  +
Though her life is bleak, Sara remains kind to others and continues to hold onto her belief that all girls are princesses. She and Becky later do a chimney prank on Miss Minchin after she scolds a young chimney sweep boy (Jonás Cuarón).
  +
  +
Sara even showed sympathy toward Miss Minchin's sister Amelia (Rusty Schwimmer) who has a crush on the Milkman.
  +
  +
When her friends later sneak up to see her and are caught by Miss Minchin, she protects them by saying she invited them. As punishment, Miss Minchin locks Becky into her room and assigns Sara to perform both Becky's and her own chores for the next day without anything to eat for both of them. To distract them from their hunger, they imagine a huge banquet. The next morning, they wake to find their dream has come true, having secretly been left there by Ram Dass.
  +
  +
Later that night, Amelia sneaks out of the school and runs off with the milkman. When Miss Minchin discovers all the finery in their rooms, she summons the police. Sara narrowly avoids arrest by perilously climbing over to the Randolph house. While hiding from the police searching the house, she comes across the soldier and realizes it is her father. Captain Crewe, though sympathetic to the girl, does not recognize her at all.
  +
  +
As she tries to make him remember, Miss Minchin and the police arrive. Though the headmistress clearly recognizes Crewe, she claims that Sara has no father and has the police officers take her away. As the police are about to take Sara away along with Becky, Crewe suddenly regains his memory and rescues his daughter.
  +
  +
Some time later, Captain Crewe had cleared things up with Miss Minchin's superiors and the bank. The boarding school is given to Mr. Randolph and his efforts make it a much happier place for the girls.
  +
  +
The Crewe family's wealth is restored to them and they adopt Becky. Captain Crewe tells Mr. Randolph his son died in a gas attack, giving the man closure. Miss Minchin is seen reduced to a chimney sweeper and working for the chimney sweeper boy she previously mistreated (who appears to be enjoying his revenge on Minchin).
  +
  +
After saying goodbye to all the girls, Sara leaves with her family to return to India.
  +
==Cast==
  +
*Eleanor Bron as Miss Minchin, a cruel and selfish woman who runs a boarding school where Sarah is enrolled. She is Amelia's older sister.
  +
*Liam Cunningham as Captain Crewe
  +
*Liam Cunningham also portrays Prince Rama, a character from Sara's story.
  +
*Liesel Matthews as Sara Crewe, the daughter of Captain Crewe.
  +
*Vanessa Lee Chester as Becky, Miss Minchin's servant who lives in the attic of the school.
  +
*Rusty Schwimmer as Amelia, Miss Minchin's long suffering sister.
  +
*Arthur Malet as Charles Randolph, a kind old man that lives next door to the school. He is loosely based on Mr. Carrisford.
  +
*Errol Sitahal as Ram Dass, Randolph's servant who later befriends Sara.
  +
*Alison Moir as Princess Sita, a character from Sara's story.
  +
*Lomax Study as Monsieur Dufarge, a French teacher at Miss Minchin's school.
  +
*Vincent Schiavelli as Mr. Barrow
  +
*Taylor Fry as Lavinia, a bully who hates Sara for be popular with the girls, To the Ending, When Sara is going To India, she changes of attitude and leaves to get hate with her.
  +
*Heather DeLoach as Ermengarde
  +
*Peggy Miley as Mabel, a cook that works for Miss Minchin.
  +
*Darcie Bradford as Jesse
  +
*Rachael Bella as Betsy
  +
*Alexandra Rea-Baum as Gertrude
  +
*Camilla Belle as Jane
  +
*Lauren Blumenfeld as Rosemary
  +
*Kelsey Mulrooney as Lottie
  +
*Kaitlin Cullum as Ruth
  +
*Jonás Cuarón as Chimney Sweeper (uncredited)
  +
  +
==Production==
  +
Filming for "A Little Princess" began on April 11, 1994 and ended on July 11, 1994.
  +
  +
The filming locations took place at the Warner Bros. Burbank Studios in Burbank, California, Chicago, Illinois and the Taj Mahal in India.
  +
  +
The stores on the film's main street are named after various crew members and some of the extras in the flower lady scene also played the parents in the parents day scene.
  +
==Box Office==
  +
"A Little Princess" was first given a limited release on May 12, 1995 where it grossed only $28,612 during its opening weekend.
  +
  +
During the film's wide theatrical release, it debuted at #6 at the box office, grossing $2,038,782 during its opening weekend.
  +
  +
In the United Kingdom, "A Little Princess" grossed £723,238. Domestically, it has grossed $10,015,449.
  +
==Critical Reception==
  +
"A Little Princess" received positive reviews from critics upon its release. The film holds a 97% 'Fresh' rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 32 reviews with the critics consensus, "''Alfonso Cuarón adapts Frances Hodgson Burnett's novel with a keen sense of magic realism, vividly recreating the world of childhood as seen through the characters''."
  +
  +
Janet Maslin called the film "''a bright, beautiful and enchantingly childlike vision''", one that "''draw[s] its audience into the wittily heightened reality of a fairy tale''" and "''takes enough liberties to re-invent rather than embalm Miss Burnett's assiduously beloved story''."
  +
  +
She concludes:
  +
  +
"''From the huge head of an Indian deity, used as a place where stories are told and children play, to the agile way a tear drips from Sara's eye to a letter read by her father in the rain, A Little Princess has been conceived, staged and edited with special grace. Less an actors' film than a series of elaborate tableaux, it has a visual eloquence that extends well beyond the limits of its story. To see Sara whirling ecstatically in her attic room on a snowy night, exulting in the feelings summoned by an evocative sight in a nearby window, is to know just how stirringly lovely a children's film can be''."
  +
  +
Rita Kempley of The Washington Post called the film Cuarón's "''dazzling North American debut''" and wrote it "''exquisitely re-creates the ephemeral world of childhood, an enchanted kingdom where everything, even make-believe, seems possible....Unlike most distaff mythology, the film does not concern the heroine's sexual awakening; it's more like the typical hero's journey described by scholar Joseph Campbell. Sara, the adored and pampered child of a wealthy British widower, must pass a series of tests, thereby discovering her inner strengths''."
  +
==Videos==
  +
===Trailer===
 
[[Category:1995 films]]
 
[[Category:1995 films]]
 
[[Category:Films]]
 
[[Category:Films]]
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[[Category:Magic realism films]]
 
[[Category:Magic realism films]]
 
[[Category:Films based on children's books]]
 
[[Category:Films based on children's books]]
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[[Category:Warner Bros. Family Entertainment films]]
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  +
[[Category:Films with a single song]]
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[[Category:Rated G]]

Revision as of 14:07, 24 July 2021

A Little Princess is a 1995 drama film directed by Alfonso Cuarón, starring Eleanor Bron, Liam Cunningham (in a dual role) and introducing Liesel Matthews with supporting roles done by Vanessa Lee Chester, Rusty Schwimmer, Arthur Malet, and Errol Sitahal.

It is loosely based upon the novel "A Little Princess" by Frances Hodgson Burnett, this adaptation was heavily influenced by the 1939 cinematic version and takes creative liberties with the original story.

Due to poor promotion by Warner Bros., the film hardly made back half its budget. However, the film was critically acclaimed and given various awards, such as two Academy Award nominations for its significant achievements in art direction and cinematography, among other aspects of its production.

Plot

Spoiler Warning: The following contains important plot details of the entire film.

Sara Crewe (Liesel Matthews) is the kind, caring daughter of Captain Crewe (Liam Cunningham), a wealthy aristocrat living in India. Her mother died when she was very young, and she has to leave her beloved childhood home and friends when her father volunteers to fight for the British as an officer in World War I.

He enrolls her at a girls' boarding school in New York and instructs the headmistress Miss Minchin (Eleanor Bron) to spare no expense making sure his daughter will be comfortable while he is away. He has reserved her the school's largest suite & gives Sara a specially-made French doll named Emily telling her that if she wants to talk to him, just speak to Emily and he will hear it.

Even though she finds the strict rules and Miss Minchin's harsh attitude stifling, Sara becomes popular among the girls, including the scullery maid Becky (Vanessa Lee Chester), for her kindness and strong sense of imagination. She writes constant letters to her father, which are a great source of happiness for him on the battlefields of Europe.

Due to a body being misidentified, Captain Crewe is declared dead when he is actually seriously injured and suffering from amnesia and the British government seizes his company and assets.

When Miss Minchin hears the news, she is in the middle of throwing a lavish party for Sara, hoping to extort more money from her father. When Crewe's solicitor arrives and tells her there will be no more money, Miss Minchin is furious.

Since Sara is now penniless and has no known relatives, Miss Minchin decides to move her into the attic with Becky to work as a servant where she will report to Mabel (Peggy Miley) at 5:00 AM.

Meanwhile, the elderly neighbor Charles Randolph (Arthur Malet) has received word that his son John, also fighting in Europe, is missing in action. He is asked to identify a soldier suffering from amnesia, but he is discouraged to discover it is not John. His Indian assistant Ram Dass (Errol Sitahal) encourages him to take in the man anyway, reminding him that he may know what happened to his son.

Though her life is bleak, Sara remains kind to others and continues to hold onto her belief that all girls are princesses. She and Becky later do a chimney prank on Miss Minchin after she scolds a young chimney sweep boy (Jonás Cuarón).

Sara even showed sympathy toward Miss Minchin's sister Amelia (Rusty Schwimmer) who has a crush on the Milkman.

When her friends later sneak up to see her and are caught by Miss Minchin, she protects them by saying she invited them. As punishment, Miss Minchin locks Becky into her room and assigns Sara to perform both Becky's and her own chores for the next day without anything to eat for both of them. To distract them from their hunger, they imagine a huge banquet. The next morning, they wake to find their dream has come true, having secretly been left there by Ram Dass.

Later that night, Amelia sneaks out of the school and runs off with the milkman. When Miss Minchin discovers all the finery in their rooms, she summons the police. Sara narrowly avoids arrest by perilously climbing over to the Randolph house. While hiding from the police searching the house, she comes across the soldier and realizes it is her father. Captain Crewe, though sympathetic to the girl, does not recognize her at all.

As she tries to make him remember, Miss Minchin and the police arrive. Though the headmistress clearly recognizes Crewe, she claims that Sara has no father and has the police officers take her away. As the police are about to take Sara away along with Becky, Crewe suddenly regains his memory and rescues his daughter.

Some time later, Captain Crewe had cleared things up with Miss Minchin's superiors and the bank. The boarding school is given to Mr. Randolph and his efforts make it a much happier place for the girls.

The Crewe family's wealth is restored to them and they adopt Becky. Captain Crewe tells Mr. Randolph his son died in a gas attack, giving the man closure. Miss Minchin is seen reduced to a chimney sweeper and working for the chimney sweeper boy she previously mistreated (who appears to be enjoying his revenge on Minchin).

After saying goodbye to all the girls, Sara leaves with her family to return to India.

Cast

  • Eleanor Bron as Miss Minchin, a cruel and selfish woman who runs a boarding school where Sarah is enrolled. She is Amelia's older sister.
  • Liam Cunningham as Captain Crewe
  • Liam Cunningham also portrays Prince Rama, a character from Sara's story.
  • Liesel Matthews as Sara Crewe, the daughter of Captain Crewe.
  • Vanessa Lee Chester as Becky, Miss Minchin's servant who lives in the attic of the school.
  • Rusty Schwimmer as Amelia, Miss Minchin's long suffering sister.
  • Arthur Malet as Charles Randolph, a kind old man that lives next door to the school. He is loosely based on Mr. Carrisford.
  • Errol Sitahal as Ram Dass, Randolph's servant who later befriends Sara.
  • Alison Moir as Princess Sita, a character from Sara's story.
  • Lomax Study as Monsieur Dufarge, a French teacher at Miss Minchin's school.
  • Vincent Schiavelli as Mr. Barrow
  • Taylor Fry as Lavinia, a bully who hates Sara for be popular with the girls, To the Ending, When Sara is going To India, she changes of attitude and leaves to get hate with her.
  • Heather DeLoach as Ermengarde
  • Peggy Miley as Mabel, a cook that works for Miss Minchin.
  • Darcie Bradford as Jesse
  • Rachael Bella as Betsy
  • Alexandra Rea-Baum as Gertrude
  • Camilla Belle as Jane
  • Lauren Blumenfeld as Rosemary
  • Kelsey Mulrooney as Lottie
  • Kaitlin Cullum as Ruth
  • Jonás Cuarón as Chimney Sweeper (uncredited)

Production

Filming for "A Little Princess" began on April 11, 1994 and ended on July 11, 1994.

The filming locations took place at the Warner Bros. Burbank Studios in Burbank, California, Chicago, Illinois and the Taj Mahal in India.

The stores on the film's main street are named after various crew members and some of the extras in the flower lady scene also played the parents in the parents day scene.

Box Office

"A Little Princess" was first given a limited release on May 12, 1995 where it grossed only $28,612 during its opening weekend.

During the film's wide theatrical release, it debuted at #6 at the box office, grossing $2,038,782 during its opening weekend.

In the United Kingdom, "A Little Princess" grossed £723,238. Domestically, it has grossed $10,015,449.

Critical Reception

"A Little Princess" received positive reviews from critics upon its release. The film holds a 97% 'Fresh' rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 32 reviews with the critics consensus, "Alfonso Cuarón adapts Frances Hodgson Burnett's novel with a keen sense of magic realism, vividly recreating the world of childhood as seen through the characters."

Janet Maslin called the film "a bright, beautiful and enchantingly childlike vision", one that "draw[s] its audience into the wittily heightened reality of a fairy tale" and "takes enough liberties to re-invent rather than embalm Miss Burnett's assiduously beloved story."

She concludes:

"From the huge head of an Indian deity, used as a place where stories are told and children play, to the agile way a tear drips from Sara's eye to a letter read by her father in the rain, A Little Princess has been conceived, staged and edited with special grace. Less an actors' film than a series of elaborate tableaux, it has a visual eloquence that extends well beyond the limits of its story. To see Sara whirling ecstatically in her attic room on a snowy night, exulting in the feelings summoned by an evocative sight in a nearby window, is to know just how stirringly lovely a children's film can be."

Rita Kempley of The Washington Post called the film Cuarón's "dazzling North American debut" and wrote it "exquisitely re-creates the ephemeral world of childhood, an enchanted kingdom where everything, even make-believe, seems possible....Unlike most distaff mythology, the film does not concern the heroine's sexual awakening; it's more like the typical hero's journey described by scholar Joseph Campbell. Sara, the adored and pampered child of a wealthy British widower, must pass a series of tests, thereby discovering her inner strengths."

Videos

Trailer