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Anastasia

  • 1956
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Anastasia (1956)
Theatrical Trailer from 20th Century Fox
Play trailer2:16
1 Video
68 Photos
BiographyDramaHistoryRomance

An opportunistic businessman tries to pass off a mysterious impostor as the Grand Duchess Anastasia, and she is so convincing that even the biggest skeptics believe her.An opportunistic businessman tries to pass off a mysterious impostor as the Grand Duchess Anastasia, and she is so convincing that even the biggest skeptics believe her.An opportunistic businessman tries to pass off a mysterious impostor as the Grand Duchess Anastasia, and she is so convincing that even the biggest skeptics believe her.

  • Director
    • Anatole Litvak
  • Writers
    • Arthur Laurents
    • Marcelle Maurette
    • Guy Bolton
  • Stars
    • Ingrid Bergman
    • Yul Brynner
    • Helen Hayes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Anatole Litvak
    • Writers
      • Arthur Laurents
      • Marcelle Maurette
      • Guy Bolton
    • Stars
      • Ingrid Bergman
      • Yul Brynner
      • Helen Hayes
    • 78User reviews
    • 43Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 7 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Anastasia
    Trailer 2:16
    Anastasia

    Photos68

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    Top cast60

    Edit
    Ingrid Bergman
    Ingrid Bergman
    • Anna Koreff
    Yul Brynner
    Yul Brynner
    • General Sergei Pavlovich Bounine
    Helen Hayes
    Helen Hayes
    • Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna
    Akim Tamiroff
    Akim Tamiroff
    • Boris Adreivich Chernov
    Martita Hunt
    Martita Hunt
    • Baroness Elena von Livenbaum
    Felix Aylmer
    Felix Aylmer
    • Chamberlain
    Sacha Pitoëff
    Sacha Pitoëff
    • Piotr Ivanovich Petrovin
    • (as Sacha Pitoeff)
    Ivan Desny
    Ivan Desny
    • Prince Paul von Haraldberg
    Natalie Schafer
    Natalie Schafer
    • Irina Lissemskaia
    Grégoire Gromoff
    • Stepan
    • (as Gregoire Gromoff)
    Karel Stepanek
    Karel Stepanek
    • Mikhail Vlados
    Ina De La Haye
    Ina De La Haye
    • Marusia
    • (as Ina de la Haye)
    Katherine Kath
    • Maxime
    John Adams
    • Servant
    • (uncredited)
    Paul Beradi
    • Man in Bar
    • (uncredited)
    Paul Bildt
    Paul Bildt
    • Bit Part
    • (uncredited)
    Newton Blick
    • Maître d'
    • (uncredited)
    Ernest Blyth
    • Ballet Patron
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Anatole Litvak
    • Writers
      • Arthur Laurents
      • Marcelle Maurette
      • Guy Bolton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews78

    7.09.9K
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    Featured reviews

    Cue-ball

    A great argument for letter boxing

    This is a great movie with fabulous performances by Brynner, Bergman, and Hayes. My one complaint is not about the movie, but the videotape. Litvak made a beautiful movie and used every inch of the screen. There are multiple scenes where the three principals are located left, right, and center. With pan-and-scan you can never see more than two of them at a time. This movie deserves to be re-released in its original aspect; better yet, release it on DVD. But go ahead and see it; you will be moved by the story.
    6MOscarbradley

    An enjoyable movie about 'acting'

    As the woman who may or may not have been the Grand Duchess Anastastia, Ingrid Bergman was welcomed back with open arms by the Hollywood fraternity that had spurned her after her affair with Roberto Rossellini and she won her second Oscar for her performance. It is a fine piece of acting in a film that is all about acting; (Bergman plays a woman called Anna Koreff who is being groomed to pass as the Grand Duchess, though it is no "Pygmalion" as she may well indeed have been the person she is being hired 'to play', though DNA tests later proved the woman in question was not Anastasia).

    Yul Brynner is the Russian general who acts as her Professor Higgins and he's excellent. The same year he won an Oscar for "The King and I" but his performance here is just as good. Helen Hayes is superb as the Dowager Empress and there is a terrific turn from the great Martita Hunt as the Empress' lady-in-waiting. Anatole Litvak's direction isn't exciting in 'cinematic' terms but he knows he has a good yarn and he moves it along at a cracking pace. Between them, Bergman, Brynner and Litvak hold you in thrall.
    8bkoganbing

    The Real Deal

    A trio of unscrupulous Russian exiles Yul Brynner, Sacha Pitoeff, and Akim Tamiroff locate an amnesia victim among the flotsam and jetsam of refugees in post World War I Europe and attempt to pass her off as one of Czar Nicholas II,'s daughters, Grand Duchess Anastasia, who survived the massacre of the royal family in 1918.

    The role of "Anastasia" marked Ingrid Bergman's return to an American film production after her exile from America after 1949 and she won her second Oscar with it. She runs a whole gamut of emotions from absolute despair to an assumed air of royalty. After a while Brynner and his confederates think that just maybe Ingrid's the real deal.

    Of course the ultimate test is whether the Dowager Empress of Russia, Helen Hayes, accepts Ingrid as the Grand Duchess Anastasia. Although Ingrid got her Oscar, I've always felt that Hayes gives the best performance in the film.

    At the age Dowager Empress Marie was in the Twenties all she had left was memories. She's from the Danish Royal House and was the widow of Alexander III and the mother of Nicholas II of Russia. Her world was turned upside down in 1917 with the Russian Revolution, not just toppled from the privileged position she had, she lost her entire family of the next generation of Romanovs to political upheaval. Hayes is back in her native Denmark, a lonely proud, but regal woman with nothing but memories. She truly becomes the Empress Marie.

    Yul Brynner as General Sergei Pavlovich Bounine is one of that crowd of Russian refugees who apparently got out of Russia with more than just a skin. He's the owner of a Russian café in Paris and should be doing OK, but he's got a streak of larceny in him and a taste for high living. He's involved in bilking a whole lot of Russian exiles in a search for a Romanov heir to claim millions deposited by the late Czar for his children in the Bank of England. He's got to come up with an heir of some kind and fast. But he's a charming fellow and gives one charming performance.

    Both Brynner and Director Anatole Litvak with their own Slavic backgrounds give Anastasia a real flavor of authenticity for the main characters and the Russian exile background of the film. It was shot on location in both Paris and Copenhagen and the camera work is first rate.

    Anastasia became a milestone film for Ingrid Bergman and while Anna Koreff may have been a bogus Russian princess, as an actress Ingrid Bergman was always the real deal.
    7marcslope

    That's entertainment!

    Not the most accurate rumination on whether or not Anna was really Anastasia, perhaps, but creamy, expensive entertainment, expertly done. Many share in the credit. There's a witty, epigrammatic screenplay by the always reliable Arthur Laurents (love that closing line, and most of Helen Hayes' dialogue) that manages to speculate perceptively on the nature-of-performance theme without beating it into the ground; an evocative Alfred Newman score that surpasses virtually anything else he did at Fox; fine CinemaScope photography that really uses the outer reaches of the screen, though it does dabble in spectacle for spectacle's sake at times; a superb Hayes (she could be theatrically actressy or resort to little-old-lady tricks in other movies, but here she's the real deal); a delightful Martita Hunt; and chemistry between Ingrid Bergman and Yul Brynner that suggests all the underlying sexual tension without ever stating it explicitly. Also knock-your-eye-out costume design. In a time of rampant Hollywood bloat and slow-moving epics, this one moves along, without too much pretension. And Anatole Litvak's direction, while no great shakes, is nicely paced.
    9rupie

    Spectacular!!!

    What a wonderful movie!!!! They simply don't make them like this anymore. Start with the most mundane matters, the production values. The glorious wide screen aspect ratio is a delight, as is the wonderful Technicolor process, which gives us a vividness that is sorely lacking from movies nowadays. The great Alfred Newman wrote the score. Then consider the acting - first rate on all fronts. Yul Brynner and Ingrid Bergmann play beautifully off each other, and Akim Tamiroff shines in the type of role he excelled in, the sweaty, seedy, slightly comic con artist. Martita Hunt is wonderful as the slightly loony lady in waiting. Helen Hayes is off the charts as the Dowager Empress, in what was evidently a comeback role for her. To watch her display her ambivalent emotions as she deals with what could be her long-lost granddaughter are a revelation. Her wordless final embrace with Anna is a ten second master class in the heights to which great acting can rise through facial expression alone. Finally, the script; it impishly refuses to engage the central question - was Anna Anderson really Anastasia, or an impostor? (FYI, she was an impostor.) By the end, the question doesn't seem to matter, so beautifully has the script dealt with things like lost hopes, wishful thinking, doubt, deceit, treachery, nostalgia for a lost world, romance, and amnesia. Don't miss this great story, beautifully told in a lavish production.

    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Liam Neeson in La Liste de Schindler (1993)
    History
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      At the time of filming, those at Fox were not aware that the real Anna Anderson was still alive. After this came to their attention, they flew to her home in Germany and asked permission to use her name. It should be noted that, in the film, the full name "Anna Anderson" is never used, although "Mrs. Anderson" is briefly employed as an incognito in the later stages of the story.
    • Goofs
      While on the train to Copenhagen, Anna, studying a photograph of the fictional Prince Paul, can't remember how old she was when she was engaged to him. Bounine answers, "Sixteen."

      In reality, neither the Grand Duchess Anastasia nor any of her three sisters were ever engaged.
    • Quotes

      Anastasia: The poor have only one advantage; they know when they are loved for themselves.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: PARIS 1928

      RUSSIAN EASTER
    • Connections
      Featured in Concept (1964)
    • Soundtracks
      Wildfeuer Polka
      (uncredited)

      Written by Johann Strauss

      Arranged by Maurice De Packh

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    FAQ22

    • How long is Anastasia?Powered by Alexa
    • What is 'Anastasia' about?
    • Is 'Anastasia' based on a book?
    • Why would Bounine and his friends want to present a fake Anastasia to the world?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 27, 1957 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Anastasia, la princesa vagabunda
    • Filming locations
      • Knebworth House, Knebworth, Hertfordshire, England, UK(Palace of the Empress)
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,520,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.55 : 1

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