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Little Children on DVD (2006)

Little Children cover art
Play Little Children trailer
Average rating: (62%)
1327720131523
3.0
 
Starring: Kate Winslet | Patrick Wilson | Jennifer Connelly | Gregg Edelman | Sadie Goldstein | Ty Simpkins
Director: Todd Field
Studio: ENTERTAINMENT IN VIDEO
Run time: 130 mins
Certificate: 15
Collections: 100 Most Wanted
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Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Released: 30/04/2007

Brief synopsis of Little Children

Little Children centers on a group of young marrieds, whose lives intersect on the playgrounds, town pools and streets of their small community in surprising and potentially dangerous ways.

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Critics Reviews

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsKate is the Oscar line up!

A customer from Norwich , 17/01/2007

Blending the bleak irony and senstivity of 'American Beauty' with the sardonic wit of 'Desperate Housewives', This great film was one of the best of last year, despite having a low key cinema release.

Yet the film is perhaps more suited to the smaller screen reinforcing the claustrophobia of its surburban setting.

Kate Winslet plays Sarah, an uphappy new mum who begins affair with her equally disillusioned neigbour.

As their illict passion intensifies, we meet an array of intriguing number of characters each with their own secrets.

Although the ending is a little excessive, a funny and deeply moving portrait of a seemingly friendly community in crisis is captured with style.

The performances are all excellent, with Kate Winslet on truly expectional form - Oscar recognition is well deserved!

  63 out of 67 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsLittle Children

SAI81 from Tonbridge [Highly rated reviewer] , 18/03/2007

At their local playground Sarah Pierse (Winslet) and Brad Adamson (Wilson) meet and, much to the envy of the other mothers Sarah spends her days with, start talking. Soon a frienship is built and soon that evolves into an affair built around setting their children up on playdates.

At the same time a recently released pedophile (Haley) has moved back into their community to live with his mother (Somerville) only to find himself being harrassed by an ex-cop friend of Brad's (Emmerich).

It's taken Todd Field some time to follow up his directorial debut, the strong but overrated In The Bedroom (2001) but the result of not rushing is that he's found a project to really invest himself in and made a better film this time, one that really marks him out as a talent to watch.

This is an actors film and Field has assembled an excellent cast and draws fine work from all of them. There are two potential Oscar contenders here. Winslet will likely figure in the Best Actress race and though she'll probably lose to Helen Mirren's unstintingly overrated work in The Queen she certainly deserves the golden baldie. Dressing down she gives an excellent show as the housewife unhappy how her life has panned out and unable to connect with her child and makes the affair with Brad, and Sarah's thirst and need for it, believeable and compelling.

Even better is Haley whose nomination (Supporting Actor) will depend on how brave the Academy is feeling. As Ronnie he walks a difficult tightrope making us sympathise with him one moment and recoil the next. Particularly strong is his reaction to his mother saying he should find a girlfriend his own age, a mournful 'I don't want a girlfriend my own age Mommy, I wish I did'.

The cast is uniformly excellent though. Patrick Wilson builds on the promise of Hard Candy with a role 180 degrees away from that one, Noah Emmerich is sensational as the bitter, angry ex-cop and Jennifer Connely makes a nothing of a part play. Also worth mentioning is the ever brilliant Jane Adams whose one scene cameo it would be a crime to divulge, other than to say that it's another small masterpiece from a great actress.

Field is growing as a director, Little Children looks very good indeed and has several scenes that stand out, most notably the first appearence of Ronnie and an appalling reveal in the final minutes of the film.

So why not a top grade? There's one colossal miscalculation in the style that derails the films so completely every time it crops up that I very nearly didn't make it through the first act. Frequently Field drops in the voice of an omniscient narrator who seems to be reading direct from the Tom Perotta novel on which the film is based. This device (which TELLS us things we should be SEEING) is so annoying and so pretentious that I, and the rest of the audience, groaned each time it reccured. Fortunately this calms down after the first half hour but in an otherwise stunning film it's a baffling choice.

  59 out of 72 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsSurprising and sexual drama!

crockery from Belfast [Highly rated reviewer] , 28/04/2007

So tasty, in fact, that Little Children is one of the most interesting films of recent years. It is far from the greatest, and is not devoid of faults, but a genuine evocation of interest should be attributed to Field's story. Every character unflinchingly demands our attention. We want to know more about precisely everyone in the community. In the front row for fascination sits Ronnie, the resident child molestor, who pends between likable and freak. He is the overriding nominator for 'Little Children' – and his presence greatly upsets the parents.

Yet most salience is given to Kate Winslet and Patrick Wilson as Sarah and Pierce – two lonely, bored and desperate housespouses who, in the midst of having nothing to do, innocently begin an extramarital affair with each other. Through calm narration, the film introduces Sarah as an anthropologist and remarks how she is different from the contingent of housemoms. However it becomes apparent that the director is the anthropologist and not Sarah. Indeed Field studies human relationships accordingly, interweaving loneliness, desperation, jealousy, lust and betrayal. Sarah, in fact, loses her 'objective' stance and melts in with the rest as she indulges in her passion with Brad.

It needs to be said that 'Little Children' often tips over into comedy and it is this refreshing edge that bumps it up to 8/10 on my scale. It treats serious subjects, such as pedophilia, infidelity and loneliness – but it does so with the spark in the eye. A consistent cloud of laughter seemed to hover in the air of my theatre at the Stockholm Film Festival and Kate Winslet was undoubtedly the catalyst. She gives a fine performance with excellent emotional transparency, layered skill and above all with an inherent funny bone that translates to a goofy woman. The humour is surprisingly in-tune even with the other characters with all their quirks and afflictions, such as child-molestation and online pornography.

  40 out of 50 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsLittle Brats

Mbub from Westbury, Wilts , 12/10/2007

A woman with a unhappy life meets a guy one day in a park and they decide to start an affair, with a mixed bag of results. I must have missed something with this film as it would have been quite at home on BBC2 on a late Sunday evening. There is nothing realy special about it and unfortunately none of the characters were likeable, so when what happens at the end happens, you just think 'Good, they got what they deserve.' All in all I don't recommend this film to anyone, very basic and it is def. not a rush out and see movie.

  32 out of 55 people found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsLittle children

A customer from Newtonmore , 17/08/2008

Annoying and unsatisfying. Reasonable acting but didnt make me think wow..more like so what and they all deserved the life they got.

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Rated - 3 starsI still can't decide

belizetherabbit from Liverpool , 24/08/2008

I really enjoyed Patrick Wilson's performance in 'Angels in America' and have always liked Kate Winslett, but after reading the plot of this movie I wasn't sure what to expect.

I enjoyed the human relationships, and there were moments where I really cared about the characters.... but the children in the film were just 'there' and Jennifer Connolly barely got a look-in.

It was a clever film, and in parts fascinating - but I can't but feel they could have done more with it.

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