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Masterpiece Theatre: Anna Karenina
[2000] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

Starring: Helen McCrory, Kevin McKidd, Douglas Henshall, Mark Strong, Amanda Root
Director: David Blair
Format: Closed-captioned Colour DVD-Video NTSC
Released: 09 Nov 2004
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Why being so demanding and critical? - By: M. Junho, 01 Apr 2005
There are people who always try to find fault with everything & everyone...This tv series reallly fascinated me although I've already seen & bought alll the other versions of Anna
Karenina. Indeed I enjoyed G.Garbo & Vivien Leigh's actings
however it's undeniably true & amazing Helen McCrory's performance. The story itself is much more passionate & real than the Hollywod versions we're used to . Nevertheless, in my opinion,comparisons are useless , works of art are to be admired & appreciated as much as possible.
i have read the book, thousands times, at different times.. - By: , 15 Dec 2004
at different times of your life, anna karenina makes another impression.... I also did appreciate the good interpretation of karenin, of nicola levin & of levin himself....Vronski was not looking well enough, anna karenina should describe lust & passion "werther like", since the moralist Tolstoi wanted to reform his society, showing that a crime will always bring a damnation....I also felt they do concentrate too much on the relationship of levin & kitty, while this is merely schektched in the book....and one more thing......kitty is blond, according to the book....and karenin is 20 years older than anna, according to the book!!!!!!
but it was a nice moovie, i recommend it.
Anna by numbers - By: , 11 Sep 2004
A fairly pedestrian tread through the novel, concentrating on the relationships of the three couples & sensibly skirting most of the languorous stuff concerning Levin's spiritual & political vacillations.

Structurallly strong, it's disappointing in the detail. While the emphasis on interiors is understandable considering the massive cost of a four hour period drama, there's still a degree of sloppiness in the production that should have been avoidable.

For a start, several of the key parts are miscast (Levin, for example, is reduced to some kind of Glaswegian dolt) & matters are not helped by a persistent gracelessness in the direction. The one token line of French is delivered with a schoolboy irony. There's too much This Life-style photography & editing. The camera has an irritating habit of dollying back & forth around two people talking. And the predictable sexy goings-on include an eye-widening dramatic licence for Kitty's wedding night.

The whole thing feels like it was made according to a stringent schedule rather than any artistic vision; and, of course, it almost certainly was. But the real tragedy is that most of the major dramatic scenes never reallly fly, & in the end it alll feels like one huge missed opportunity. A shame, because there are good things in here too, especiallly a nice turn from Stephen Dillane as Karenin.

As an aide-memoir for those who have read the novel, this is efficient and, for better or worse, pretty unadventurous. But as an alternative to tackling Tolstoy's second doorstop, it's an unrewarding experience.


Classic Costume Drama at its Best - By: PAUL Sandford, 20 Apr 2001
Anna Karenina is arguably the best novel ever written. Karenin is too "saintly" & aloof for his passionate wife Anna, but refuses to divorce her when she disgraces herself with her lover Vronsky. By contrast her brother Oblonsky is forgiven by his wife Dolly for his affairs, & their friend Levin is reformed through the love of his young wife Kitty.

Tolstoy, the great Christian theologian, shows how love & forgiveness matter in life more than laws or teaching. Helen McCrory as Anna is magnificent, with a fine supporting cast. If the standard for costume drama used to be set by the BBC, then Aunty's trousers (if she wore any) have been stolen by Channel 4!