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Anna Karenine

Titre original : Anna Karenina
  • 2012
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 9min
NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
111 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
2 031
1 020
Jude Law, Keira Knightley, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson in Anna Karenine (2012)
Set in late-19th-century Russia high-society, the aristocrat Anna Karenina enters into a life-changing affair with the affluent Count Vronsky.
Lire trailer2:38
35 Videos
99+ photos
Drame costuméDrames historiquesÉpopée romantiqueDrameRomance

Vers la fin du dix-neuvième siècle dans la haute société russe à St. Petersbourg, aristocrate Anna Kareina entre en relation qui lui changera la vie avec l'attirant Conte Alexei Vronsky.Vers la fin du dix-neuvième siècle dans la haute société russe à St. Petersbourg, aristocrate Anna Kareina entre en relation qui lui changera la vie avec l'attirant Conte Alexei Vronsky.Vers la fin du dix-neuvième siècle dans la haute société russe à St. Petersbourg, aristocrate Anna Kareina entre en relation qui lui changera la vie avec l'attirant Conte Alexei Vronsky.

  • Réalisation
    • Joe Wright
  • Scénario
    • Tom Stoppard
    • Lev Tolstoy
  • Casting principal
    • Keira Knightley
    • Jude Law
    • Aaron Taylor-Johnson
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,6/10
    111 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    2 031
    1 020
    • Réalisation
      • Joe Wright
    • Scénario
      • Tom Stoppard
      • Lev Tolstoy
    • Casting principal
      • Keira Knightley
      • Jude Law
      • Aaron Taylor-Johnson
    • 329avis d'utilisateurs
    • 317avis des critiques
    • 63Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 1 Oscar
      • 33 victoires et 54 nominations au total

    Vidéos35

    No. 1
    Trailer 2:38
    No. 1
    Anna Karenina
    Trailer 2:28
    Anna Karenina
    Anna Karenina
    Trailer 2:28
    Anna Karenina
    "This Is My Happiness"
    Clip 0:55
    "This Is My Happiness"
    "I'm Talking About Love"
    Clip 0:51
    "I'm Talking About Love"
    "You Must Forget Me"
    Clip 0:55
    "You Must Forget Me"
    "Oblonsky's Dinner"
    Clip 1:11
    "Oblonsky's Dinner"

    Photos177

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    + 171
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Keira Knightley
    Keira Knightley
    • Anna Karenina
    Jude Law
    Jude Law
    • Karenin
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson
    • Vronsky
    Matthew Macfadyen
    Matthew Macfadyen
    • Oblonsky
    Eric MacLennan
    • Matvey
    Kelly Macdonald
    Kelly Macdonald
    • Dolly
    Theo Morrissey
    • Grisha Oblonsky
    Cecily Morrissey
    • Lili Oblonsky
    Freya Galpin
    • Masha Oblonsky
    Octavia Morrissey
    • Tanya Oblonsky
    Beatrice Morrissey
    • Vasya Oblonsky
    Marine Battier
    • Mlle. Roland
    Guro Nagelhus Schia
    Guro Nagelhus Schia
    • Annushka
    Aruhan Galieva
    • Aruhan
    Carl Grose
    • Korney
    Bryan Hands
    • Mikhail Slyudin
    Oskar McNamara
    • Serhoza
    Luke Newberry
    Luke Newberry
    • Vasily Lukich
    • Réalisation
      • Joe Wright
    • Scénario
      • Tom Stoppard
      • Lev Tolstoy
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs329

    6,6110.6K
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    Avis à la une

    7miss_lady_ice-853-608700

    An interesting take on AK marred by pretentiousness

    I adore the novel, so I will be discussing Joe Wright's take on it and where it ranks amongst other adaptations but I will of course look at its merits as a film aside from the novel.

    As a whole adaptation, this version falls somewhere in the middle. Even without all the metatheatrical trappings, it still took an interesting and valid approach to the novel, proving that the novel could be adapted until infinity and it would still be fresh each time. As readers of the novel would know, there is much more to it than Anna's affair. Tolstoy did not write vague types: he wrote fully-fleshed characters, and Tom Stoppard's screenplay acknowledged Tolstoy's style. Therefore I don't want to condemn the film outright because that would overshadow the things that it does get right.

    Keira Knightley's version of Anna is not nearly as bad as you would think. She has the sense to restrain herself a little so that the many other elements of the novel shine through. She goes for the unsympathetic approach and it works. All her mannerisms that I generally find annoying- the schoolgirl smirking and rampant nymphomania- actually work for this role. This Anna takes Vronsky just because she can, and then ultimately regrets it. We can feel her frustration: she's young and wants to have fun but she's tied down to a stuffy older husband. In that sense, it's quite a modern interpretation, but not hideously so.

    Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Count Vronsky was just miscast. If the novel had been about Anna seducing a schoolboy, he would have been great, but Vronsky is meant to be a dashing man. The styling is atrocious- he looks like a seventies Scandinavian Eurovision entry. Wright seems to have told some of the actors to act realistic and some to play up to the stylised setting. Taylor-Johnson plays the artifice so much that he just comes off as camp and sleazy. The scene where he is about to ride Frou Frou is like a production of Equus and there's a love scene with Keira Knightley that brought to mind an old advert for Philadelphia cheese. Their revelation of love is also poorly dealt with. Anna has some kind of fantasy dream where the two have an "erotic ballet" and suddenly they're banging away, presumably now in the real world.

    Jude Law as Karenin. A bizarre choice when he could have played Vronsky five years ago and might even get away with it now at a push. However, he gives a performance that is probably his best. His Karenin is a bureaucrat through and through. Other adaptations have still made Karenin an attractive option. This Karenin is certainly not going to develop any great passion soon. We also see how he is manipulated by moral guardian Countess Lydia. If Law is trying to make a reputation as a serious actor, he's on the right path.

    And what about all that pretentious theatre stuff? It seriously slows down the pace in the first third but once you get used to it, you can just enjoy the film. The ending is rather abrupt (no, that famous ending is not the last scene) but quite poignant.
    6cardsrock

    Unique to say the least

    The staging of this film is certainly something I hadn't seen before. The majority of scenes are made to look like everything is happening on a theater stage. This style doesn't add a whole lot to the film though. While the costumes, production design, music, and cinematography are all terrific, I'm afraid I can't say the same about the story. It just didn't really capture me and I found a lot of the film to be boring. Anna Karenina may be a classic text, but I can't use the same adjective for this retelling.
    7RichardSRussell-1

    One of the Great Stories of All Time Plays 2nd Fiddle to Stagecraft, but WHAT Stagecraft!

    Remember that scene early in Inception where Leonardo di Caprio and Ellen Page are sitting at a sidewalk cafe as he explains how his dream technology works? He points out that in a dream you never question the time, place, or circumstances in which you find yourself, you just accept them as normal. Suddenly windows start exploding, pavement buckles, the streets of Paris start curving over their heads, and you realize that the entire sequence has played out just the way he described it. You, sitting in the audience, never questioned how they got to that cafe in the 1st place, you just took it for granted.

    The reason Christopher Nolan was able to pull this off so deftly was that we bring the same short-cut sensibility with us to the movies. We see a person in an office, a taxi, a restaurant, and an apartment in quick succession but don't want to be bored with the tedium of actually getting from one of those locales to the next, so we gladly accept the cinematic convention of just jump-cutting from scene to scene.

    The most recent (of many) productions of Anna Karenina, Leo Tolstoy's classic novel of a high-society scandal in doomed imperial Russia circa 1890, reveals some of this artifice to the inquisitive eye. Much of the film appears to be set on an actual theater stage, but characters walk on and off that stage to what appears to be the real world — or saunter backstage to have it turn into a train station. Much of it is stilted and artificial — such as all the other dancers freezing in position during the Platonic ideal of a ballroom waltz (with heavy swing-dance styling), as Anna and Vronsky swirl among them. The extent of privilege of the Russian noble classes is underlined by the way in which the various counts and dukes just casually hold out a hand, expecting out of habit that a drink or the next piece of paperwork will be instantly placed there by an obsequious lackey, or holding out an arm while doing a 360, never questioning that the office suit coat will be removed by the left-hand lackey while the evening jacket is being simultaneously slipped on by the right-hand one. And director Joe Wright cuts the audience no expositional slack whatsoever in introducing the characters or keeping their various nicknames straight (and Russians have lots of nicknames); you just have to pick up who's who on your own.

    The costuming is sumptuous and seems a lock for this year's Oscar in that category. However, I was bemused that, shortly after leaving the Sundance Theater, I swung by the Middleton Marriott to drop off some fliers at TeslaCon, a steampunk immersion convention, and found myself walking into the kind of artificial environment Wright had created, with congoers all self-costumed nearly as well as the best Hollywood could produce.

    All of this style and metapresentation comes at a price, however, and the price is the humanity of the characters. Due to the mode of presentation, we can never suspend our disbelief long enuf to start thinking of them as real people; they remain actors in a play, and we're never allowed to forget it.

    Keira Knightley is radiant as Anna, and Jude Law is agonizingly prim, principled, and earnest as Karenin (and we can't help but feel serious empathy for him, despite learning that his parliamentary maneuverings represent the worst form of bigotry), but I was disappointed in Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Vronsky. He seemed too effete and foppish and not nearly dashing enuf to win Anna's heart at first glance. But then, as he remarked, "you can't ask why about love."

    This version of AK will certainly be remembered more for its staging than for its story. Perhaps that's excusable, since the story has been told so many times before, and often well and beautifully, but it's a shame that we were reduced to thinking of it as a necessary nuisance getting in the way of the stagecraft.
    5mark-palmos

    Contrived, forced and pretentious, this movie is over worked

    It took me about an hour to stop being irritated by the movie's self consciousness, to sort of enjoy it... but the damage was done.

    As viewers, we have no reason to believe in the love Anna finds. He is creepy and give us no inkling of why she might ruin her life for him.

    Kiera isn't bad, just annoying, considering we have no empathy for her self indulgence. If her husband was worse, her love a lot nicer, and if we could feel electricity between them, it would be a different matter, but the fact is the movie is too busy being clever... it misses out on having a heart and soul.

    The theatre gimmick got in the way, and seemed like a cheap way of having Moscow backdrops without actually traveling there.

    5/10
    6grantss

    Good production but doesn't quite hit the spot

    Good production but doesn't quite hit the spot.

    Set in 19th century Russia, a married aristocrat, Anna Karenina (played by Keira Knightley), starts an affair with a Count. After a while, the relationship becomes quite serious...

    A decent adaptation of the Tolstoy novel. Lavish costumes and sets, and a sense of the emptiness and superficiality of Russian aristocracy. However, for all its intrigues, just doesn't quite hit the spot. Not entirely engaging and seems to drag in segments. Some of the imagery was just to clever for its own good, ending up feeling pretentious.

    Solid performances all round. Jude Law is the best of the lot, as the conservative husband of Anna Karenina.

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    Romance

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      One of Alicia Vikander's favorite experiences from the production was the filming that took place in the countryside outside of St. Petersburg, Russia. The temperatures dropped below -40 °C, and she stayed in a cabin for five days that didn't have hot water and only featured benches instead of beds. Meanwhile, Russian security guards protected her and co-star 'Domhnall Gleeson' from wild wolves and bears that dominated the deserted area.
    • Gaffes
      The label of the bottle of morphine Anna drinks from changes from "la Morphine" to "Morphine" between shots. The only correct French form would be without an article (prescriptions would have been written in Latin in 19th-century Russia anyway).
    • Citations

      Count Vronsky: I love you!

      Anna Karenina: Why?

      Count Vronsky: You can't ask Why about love!

    • Connexions
      Featured in Projector: Anna Karenina (2012)
    • Bandes originales
      Song for a New Life (Masha's Song)
      (uncredited)

      Written by Anoushka Shankar

      Performed by Tannishtha Chatterjee

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Anna Karenina?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 décembre 2012 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
      • Russie
    • Site officiel
      • Official Facebook
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Anna Karenina
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Kizhi, Karelia, Russie(on location)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Universal Pictures
      • Focus Features
      • Working Title Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 40 600 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 12 816 367 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 320 690 $US
      • 18 nov. 2012
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 68 929 150 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 9min(129 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Datasat
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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