Anna Christie
- 1930
- Tous publics
- 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
960
YOUR RATING
A young woman reunites with her estranged father and falls in love with a sailor, but struggles to tell them about her dark past.A young woman reunites with her estranged father and falls in love with a sailor, but struggles to tell them about her dark past.A young woman reunites with her estranged father and falls in love with a sailor, but struggles to tell them about her dark past.
Salka Viertel
- Marthy
- (as Salka Steuermann)
Herman Bing
- Larry - the Bartender
- (uncredited)
Leo White
- Man at Bar
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaGerman-language version, filmed directly after Anna Christie (1930), using the same sets.
- Alternate versionsTwo versions of this film exist: this German-language version was directed by Jacques Feyder, while a simultaneously filmed English-language version was directed by Clarence Brown. The German version has a different running time and features a different supporting cast.
- ConnectionsAlternate-language version of Anna Christie (1930)
- SoundtracksLet Me Call You Sweetheart
(1910) (uncredited)
Music by Leo Friedman
Played on the Coney Island carousel
Featured review
It's sort of crazy, but I taped from TCM both, this german version of MGM's "Anna Christie", and the english one...but I got to see this one first, 'cos I'd heard that many people thought it was better than the english version.
Without having seen the other one, I cannot compare them, but anyway this is an excellent early talkie, with a straight-from-the-heart performance by Garbo. She looks very beautiful in this film, her face shines throughout, especially when Cameraman William Daniels, gets those gorgeous close-ups of her.
The atmosphere of the film seems different from the regular MGM stuff made on that era, it looks very similar to french or german expressionistic films from the thirties, well it was directed by a great french director, Monsieur Jacques Feyder, who had directed Garbo in 1929 in "The Kiss".
Theo Shall is excellent and gives an absolutelly believable performance as Anna's sweetheart, the hard-boiled, tough, sailor, who's just a kid in man's body. Also Hans Junkermann gives a very fine performance, as Anna's alcoholic father and Salka Viertel too, as a good-hearted old cheap floozie.
In all quite an experience, because it's the only film were you can listen to Garbo speak in a foreign language...'cos all the other films she did in either Sweden or Germany, were during the Silent Era.
Serious Flick.
Without having seen the other one, I cannot compare them, but anyway this is an excellent early talkie, with a straight-from-the-heart performance by Garbo. She looks very beautiful in this film, her face shines throughout, especially when Cameraman William Daniels, gets those gorgeous close-ups of her.
The atmosphere of the film seems different from the regular MGM stuff made on that era, it looks very similar to french or german expressionistic films from the thirties, well it was directed by a great french director, Monsieur Jacques Feyder, who had directed Garbo in 1929 in "The Kiss".
Theo Shall is excellent and gives an absolutelly believable performance as Anna's sweetheart, the hard-boiled, tough, sailor, who's just a kid in man's body. Also Hans Junkermann gives a very fine performance, as Anna's alcoholic father and Salka Viertel too, as a good-hearted old cheap floozie.
In all quite an experience, because it's the only film were you can listen to Garbo speak in a foreign language...'cos all the other films she did in either Sweden or Germany, were during the Silent Era.
Serious Flick.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.20 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content