Anna Karenina (2012)
Starring Keira Knightley, Jude Law, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Alicia Vikander, Domhnall Gleeson, Matthew Macfadyen, Kelly Macdonald, Olivia Williams, and Emily Watson
Directed by Joe Wright
Oh, what a conundrum Anna Karenina places me in. It's not really a conundrum, I guess, so much as disappointment. Considering all that is good about this re-telling of the classic Leo Tolstoy novel (of which I was entirely unfamiliar with), it pains me to not be able to recommend this one. Despite some ingenious direction and a career-best performance from Keira Knightley, this flick just can't get past the fact that there's not enough story -- or at least not enough interesting story -- to cause the audience to give a damn. I'm not quite sure there's anything director Joe Wright could have done -- and he certainly tries -- to have made this late 19th century soap opera appealing to a modern audience.
I knew absolutely nothing about Anna Karenina prior to venturing into this film. In fact, I'm not even sure I saw a complete trailer for the movie, let alone cracked open a Cliffs Notes version of the book. However, I knew going in (and this was probably incredibly helpful) that director Joe Wright had rather cleverly set up the film as if it was all being performed on a stage. Sets move in and out fluidly. Cast members are sometimes seen playing different roles in the background. We see stage props and the unfinished backsides of backdrops. This stylized, grandiose approach certainly kept my attention throughout and provides many glorious scenes that I truly loved.
Unfortunately, this story is just too formulaic and too banal to have any reason to be filmed. Maybe the novel was a revelation in 1877, but now the whole thing reads as a trite soap opera elevated to importance only because people speak in British accents (despite the fact that this takes place in Russia...but that didn't bother me in the slightest). Keira Knightley is the title character, a young mother who is seemingly stuck in a marriage with a husband, Alexei (Jude Law), who monetarily provides for her, but fails to express love for her and her son. While on a visit to see her brother (Matthew Macfadyen), Anna meets Count Vronsky (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and instantly becomes mesmerized with him (as he does with her). They begin a rather torrid affair that isn't exactly kept as secretive as it should be. With Anna already in a marriage and Vronsky set to be betrothed to the young Kitty (Alicia Vikander), this doesn't sit well with the community and Anna finds herself being ostracized and looked down upon by all.
Had the Anna-Vronsky-Alexei triangle been all that we had to worry about, I may have been okay with the premise. However, we then get sidetracked to a forlorn Kitty, sullen and upset that Vronsky left her, falling into the arms of the less wealthy Konstantin (Domhnall Gleeson). Frankly, despite a decent effort by the actors to convince me otherwise, I couldn't have cared less about the Kitty-Konstantin angle and found that it slowed down the movie to uncomfortable levels. It certainly doesn't help that Anna's now-ruined life is drawn out seemingly ad infinitum as well.
And the shame of it all is that Keira Knightley is pretty fantastic. Even in her better roles (like last year's A Dangerous Method), Ms. Knightley still relied on her ever-present crutch of jaw-clenching to express frustration, anger, or fear. Somehow, she's grown quite a bit as an actor and her director (whom she's worked with twice before) has nixed that jutting jaw of hers. Anna is her most mature role yet with Knightley exuding passion, sexiness, heartbreak, and maternal instincts. It really is a well-rounded performance in a movie whose story doesn't permit her character to soar the way it deserves.
I knew absolutely nothing about Anna Karenina prior to venturing into this film. In fact, I'm not even sure I saw a complete trailer for the movie, let alone cracked open a Cliffs Notes version of the book. However, I knew going in (and this was probably incredibly helpful) that director Joe Wright had rather cleverly set up the film as if it was all being performed on a stage. Sets move in and out fluidly. Cast members are sometimes seen playing different roles in the background. We see stage props and the unfinished backsides of backdrops. This stylized, grandiose approach certainly kept my attention throughout and provides many glorious scenes that I truly loved.
Unfortunately, this story is just too formulaic and too banal to have any reason to be filmed. Maybe the novel was a revelation in 1877, but now the whole thing reads as a trite soap opera elevated to importance only because people speak in British accents (despite the fact that this takes place in Russia...but that didn't bother me in the slightest). Keira Knightley is the title character, a young mother who is seemingly stuck in a marriage with a husband, Alexei (Jude Law), who monetarily provides for her, but fails to express love for her and her son. While on a visit to see her brother (Matthew Macfadyen), Anna meets Count Vronsky (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and instantly becomes mesmerized with him (as he does with her). They begin a rather torrid affair that isn't exactly kept as secretive as it should be. With Anna already in a marriage and Vronsky set to be betrothed to the young Kitty (Alicia Vikander), this doesn't sit well with the community and Anna finds herself being ostracized and looked down upon by all.
Had the Anna-Vronsky-Alexei triangle been all that we had to worry about, I may have been okay with the premise. However, we then get sidetracked to a forlorn Kitty, sullen and upset that Vronsky left her, falling into the arms of the less wealthy Konstantin (Domhnall Gleeson). Frankly, despite a decent effort by the actors to convince me otherwise, I couldn't have cared less about the Kitty-Konstantin angle and found that it slowed down the movie to uncomfortable levels. It certainly doesn't help that Anna's now-ruined life is drawn out seemingly ad infinitum as well.
And the shame of it all is that Keira Knightley is pretty fantastic. Even in her better roles (like last year's A Dangerous Method), Ms. Knightley still relied on her ever-present crutch of jaw-clenching to express frustration, anger, or fear. Somehow, she's grown quite a bit as an actor and her director (whom she's worked with twice before) has nixed that jutting jaw of hers. Anna is her most mature role yet with Knightley exuding passion, sexiness, heartbreak, and maternal instincts. It really is a well-rounded performance in a movie whose story doesn't permit her character to soar the way it deserves.
The RyMickey Rating: C
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