
I’m “biast” (con): nothing
(what is this about? see my critic’s minifesto)
It’s Big in reverse (and gender swapped)… and it doesn’t work. Like, at all. When boss-from-hell tech CEO Jordan Sanders (Regina Hall: Vacation, Death at a Funeral) is nasty to the wrong nerdy little girl, Stevie (Marley Taylor), the kid curses Jordan to revert to being a powerless child herself. And so Jordan wakes up the next morning a kid again, played by 14-year-old Marsai Martin, who isn’t only a producer of this limp yet desperate comedy but supplied the idea for it as well. Yet in spite of some grownup involvement — from director Tina Gordon, who cowrote the script with Girls Trip’s Tracy Oliver — Little plays like a kid’s idea of what it means to be an adult and what the grownup world is like.
At first there’s a surprising self-assurance in appealing young Martin’s (Fun Mom Dinner) impersonation of adult Jordan’s arrogance and bullying, but it soon becomes apparent that watching a child pretend to be an adult is less than amusing, and, as it plays out here, often unintentionally obnoxious and occasionally rather disturbing, as when tween-Jordan comes on to not one but two adult men (Justin Hartley [A Bad Moms Christmas] and Luke James); thankfully, they are also horrified. In another bizarre sequence that is either badly edited or, oddly, suddenly deliberately coy, it is strongly suggested that adult-in-a-kid’s-body Jordan has been drinking alcohol, yet that is not overtly depicted. Instead we get what is presumably the drunken aftermath, which takes the form of a cringey musical interlude.

Cheap, forced, very lowbrow comedy is the main game here, as now-little Jordan must contend with attending middle school again, and re-navigating the bullies-eat-nerds ecosystem that, back in the 90s, had prompted her to turn from prey to predator. Meanwhile, Jordan’s harried and abused executive assistant, April Wiliams (Issa Rae), is trying to hold down the office — all those grownup “meetings” and “pitches”! — while simultaneously learning how to assert herself and use the boss’s absence to bring her own long-quashed ideas to the fore.
It takes Little way too long to figure out who its audience is — adults who miss being a kid? kids who can’t wait to be adults? anybody coping with a bully? (and never settles on any of these) — or who its protagonist is. The hugely charismatic Rae’s April really deserves center stage, not least because she’s the only character who isn’t a cartoon, but, well, Jordan bullies her out of it. Yet it’s almost impossible to care if Jordan is redeemed and becomes a better person: she doesn’t deserve it and she doesn’t earn it. Worse, the subplot about kid-Jordan trying to convince a little gang of middle-school dorks (JD McCrary, Tucker Meek [A Walk in the Woods], and Thalia Tran) to stand up for themselves is painfully unconvincing. The kids don’t feel like real kids at all, and it’s instantly plain that Jordan’s plan threatens to end up with a lesson that will be either banal (“Be yourself no matter what!”) or wrong-headed (“Turning nasty and bullying is a good life plan!”). Neither will make for a satisfying finale.
It’s terrific to see a mainstream film getting a wide release where the main creative forces both in front of the camera and behind the scenes are black women, but apart from cursing Stevie and her toy wand, there’s little “black girl magic” — a phrase that is specifically invoked — in Little. I wish it were otherwise.


















Aaaaaaand finally saw it in second run.
I liked this better than you did even though I don’t disagree with most of your criticisms. Marsai Martin was fun to watch, and she was in most of the scenes, so that was worth the $3.50 for me.
While it doesn’t negate all the problems, there’s one tiny bit of social commentary that doesn’t call attention to itself and has gone unnoticed, as far as I’ve seen. After the movie jumps from actual 13-year-old Jordan to adult Jordan, I lamented the fact that adult Jordan straightened her hair when kid Jordan’s hair was so unbelievably cool. Jump forward again to adult-in-13-year-old-body Jordan and EVERYBODY IS TOUCHING HER HAIR, OMG, STOP TOUCHING HER HAIR. I was a little disappointed when re-adulted Jordan chose to keep straightening it, but by then I kinda sympathized.
Oh … there was one detail that’s also gone unmentioned elsewhere and really bugged me. In the opening sequence, the bullying incident that makes Jordan decide to become a bully herself? The one that happens in full view of an entire auditorium? Lands Jordan in the actual hospital with actual broken limbs. Maybe I’m just suffering from middle school hangover myself, but I kept waiting for somebody to say something about consequences for the girl who did that. Even the “just ignore them” adults would’ve had to take some kind of action.
I realize there’s not really space for that in a movie like this. But they could’ve made the incident one that clueless adults would tend to ignore. As it was, it set the stage for the movie being unrealistic in ways it shouldn’t, even for a body-swap story.