The Star Late Edition

A little humility goes a long way

- BEANDREA JULY

LITTLE

DIRECTOR: Tina Gordon Chism

CAST: Regina Hall, Issa Rae, Marsai Martin, Justin Hartley, Tone Bell, Issa Rae, Caleb Emery, JD McCrary, Luke James, Mikey Day, Abbie Gayle, Noree Victoria, Hannah Westerfiel­d, Kayte Giralt, Tucker Meek, Blair Jasin

RUNNING TIME: 109 min

CLASSIFICA­TION: 10–12PG L S

RATING: ★★★✩✩

WHEN boss from hell Jordan Sanders (Regina Hall) wakes up one morning back in her 13-year-old body (Marsai Martin) in director Tina Gordon’s

Little, the grown-up Jordan is forced to revisit painful moments of her adolescenc­e.

Fed up with her boss, Jordan’s assistant, April Williams (Issa Rae), uses this situation to take charge at work and feed her supervisor a much-deserved dose of humility.

A heart-warming allegory about the long-term effects of bullying on the psyche of a child and the adult she becomes, it’s a movie that is fun and carefree.

Hall is in about a third of the movie. But with her textbook physical-comedy chops and the way she zeroes in on what an adult woman with the emotional maturity of a teenager would look and sound like, you wish she could be in the whole thing.

Turns out it’s harder to make a movie where an adult reverts to childhood than the reverse. Little centres on different kinds of black women and girls and it quickly becomes clear just what a tall order phenom Marsai Martin, who executive produced the pic and pitched its original concept at age 10, has establishe­d.

Playing a grown woman in a girl’s body, Marsai has to walk a sometimes fraught line between child and adult. Her character delivers the kind of precocious diabolic humour Marsai has become known for as Diane Johnson on ABC’s Black-ish. But at other times, the line between what a teen girl does and what an adult woman does is cringewort­hy to watch.

When the jokes land, they really land, but when they bomb, they really bomb.

In many ways, Rae’s performanc­e holds the film together.

What works about Little easily surpasses what doesn’t. It’s one of an increasing number of movies with black casts that Hollywood is getting used to – movies that aren’t about the problems of blackness, but about the mundane existentia­l ups and downs that people who happen to be black confront.

Black girlhood is rarely explored with as much depth, care and wellintent­ioned humour on-screen as it is in Little.

You leave the theatre with a sense of how hard it is to be a black girl who wants to escape the stereotypi­cal boxes, and how liberating it can be when a grown woman gets to the place where she can finally exhale and accept her true self. | Hollywood Reporter

 ?? Little. ?? MARSAI Martin as 13-year-old Jordan Sanders with Issa Rae cast as April Williams, Jordan’s overworked assistant, in
Little. MARSAI Martin as 13-year-old Jordan Sanders with Issa Rae cast as April Williams, Jordan’s overworked assistant, in

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