Anna Karenina 10/10 This is the most beautiful movie I have ever seen. It is a ballet, it is an opera, it is a play. The settings are luscious and gorgeous. And believe it or not it is well-acted. I thought Kiera Knightly did a very good job; Jude Law was outstanding as the wronged husband. The actor who played Vronsky, Aaron Taylor Johnson (who also played the lead in 2010's "Kick ***"), was good, but he was six years younger than Ms. Knightly, and it shows. It was just noticeable.
I thought Knightly did a very good job of showing Anna as a complex character.The only other flaw for me was that Knightly played Anna as a trifle histrionic when her world was falling apart; I'm reading the book now, and I think her character's grief, while still profound, would be of a quieter and more intense nature. I think she really got it right in the scene just after she gave birth, and the scenes where she is falling in love she is quite transcendent.
Interestingly, I found this interview with her on her role on NPR, and she had this to say about playing anger:
"My dad gave me my probably one and only acting lesson before I did Pride and Prejudice, where he sat me down — I was 18, I think — and he sat me down and he went, 'Right. You've been doing really well on getting by on instinct alone but I think you actually need a couple of tools here.' So he basically talked me through a bit of Stanislavsky and gave me a very, very good note actually, which I've always said. He said, 'Beware of playing anger.' He said, 'Anger isn't very interesting. If you think you're going to go there, really think about it because maybe there's a more interesting route.' And I've actually always held to that because I think he's quite right."
The rest of the interview is here:
http://www.npr.org/2012/12/08/166066...-the-innocence
I have to admit I like Joe Wright. His movies are so painterly, and in this instance all the elements came together spectacularly. Tom Stoppard's screenplay is also well done.


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