Kit Kittredge: An American Girl


Posted on Aug 4, 2008 By Elizabeth Edwardsen

Like all her American Girl  counterparts, Kit Kittredge has the determination, courage, and pluck to overcome the obstacles of her day.

In case you haven't known any little girls in the past 20 or so years, each American Girl in the wildly popular doll, book, and now movie, series, represents a period in U.S. history. Kit lives in Cincinnati during the Great Depression, and she watches as neighbors lose their homes and her father loses his car dealership and moves to Chicago to find work.

This is a children's movie, so some of the financial hardships of the Depression are rather cheerfully displayed; the hobo camp where Kit, played by Abigail Breslin, helps solve a mystery is Mayberry-esque in its friendliness. But enough loss and suffering comes through to let young viewers know that these were very hard times. One character affected by the economic losses could very well be a 2008 resident of any U.S. community. Gracie the Bassett Hound, abandoned on the street with a sign indicating her previous owner can't afford to keep her any more. As I watched this movie with my own American Girl fan, I thought of all the /dogs left adrift by the ongoing U.S. foreclosure crisis/ [link to Nose post on foreclosure crisis ] and hoped that Kit's nice mother, played by Jula Ormond, would let her take Gracie home. (Of course she did.)

Gracie doesn't play as big a role as some of the other supporting actors -- a hilarious group of boarders that include Joan Cusack, Stanley Tucci, Jane Krakowki, Glenne Headley and Stirling Howard IV (of Mr. Magorium's Magic Emporium) -- but she holds her own against the other acting animal, a sneaky but cute little monkey.

Like all the American Girl stories, there's a gripping plot that includes a nice kick of girl empowerment in Kit Kittredge's tale. It's a story of friendship and of love and it manages to sneak a little history in. If any young girl in your house has not yet talked you into escorting them to this yet, go see it. It's one of those kids' movies that is as enjoyable for parents as kids and will spark a good conversation on the way home. If your daughter's grandparents didn't live through the Depression, or if your neighbors have not lost a house to foreclosure, use the movie to talk about dog abandonment and rescue and the state that the foreclosure crises has left the nations shelters in.


Presence of dogs: reelreelreelreel
Respect for dogs: reelreelreelreel
Canine star quality: reelreelreelreel
Family friendly: reelreelreelreel


 

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