I was surprised not to see a thread about the new movie - if my search missed it, please delete this thread.
Have you seen it? Do you intend to? What are your thoughts?
My wife gave it a couple of big thumbs up. I was checking my watch less than an hour in.
I admit, I didn’t expect to like it going in, and only went because my wife wished to. I am not a huge Kiera Knightly fan - and in this she gave her standard performance showing emotion by either laughing hysterically while jutting her jaw, or clenching her jaw and speaking through her teeth really fast. And tho I enjoyed the book, I pretty intensely disliked both the title character and Vronsky, and far preferred the Levin story. While I appreciate the effort of the “play within the film”, I quickly found the conceit distracting. Jude Law was fantastic as always, tho, and the costuming was outstanding. I sure don’t imagine it drawing in tons of custom.
My wife was entralled to the point she didn’t even notice the old couple 3 rows up and to the right talking throughout it. She thought it was filmed and acted magnificently. Just about the only thing we agreed on was the costumes!
The critical consensus is that it deserves a “Gentleman’s C.” Only the presence of a lot of famous people who are usually in better movies earn it a thumbs up.
I liked it a lot. I’m actually a fan of Keira Knightley, but this wasn’t one of my favorite performances from her, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson is completely out of his depth as Vronsky. But the rest of the cast is wonderful, especially Jude Law and Matthew MacFadyen. It’s also one of the most visually striking films I’ve seen this year. The dance scene during the big ball near the beginning, with the constantly moving camera tracking the changing of partners? Wow. It’s highly cinematic in a way that you don’t see in a lot of prestige costume dramas. The conceptualization didn’t bother me; I thought it served nicely as a metaphor for the closed, claustrophobic qualities of upper-class Russian society. And I liked how it eventually moved outside the theater for Levin’s scenes, illustrating his breaking away from those constraints.
Overall, I admired its boldness and appreciated that they tried to do something completely different with the material. And for the most part, it worked for me.
Dinsdale, my date and I had the exact same experience (well, except for the talking old people). She loved it, and I thought it was a bunch of pretentious nonsense that just kept dragging on and on. (I suspect a lot of couples had mixed reactions.)
I couldn’t find anyone to root for, so I rooted for the train.
I’ve enjoyed the older versions on TCM. I’d like to see this just for the costumes and art direction. I’m a sucker for any costume dramas, historical movies. Such a refreshing change from the typical mens’s movies my SO insists I watch with him! A girl wearies of fart jokes, men in tights fighting crime, aliens and spaceships, and big 'splosions, all the time.
I thought it was Moulin Rouge for grownups. Yes it is “arty”. What the hell is wrong with something being artistic? I didn’t much care for Vronsky. I don’t see why a woman would ruin her life over him. But otherwise the film, to me, was incredible.
The sound alone was brilliant.
I thought the pace of the film was very fast. (compared to the book it certainly must be)
Saw it last night with the wife. We both didn’t care for it. It was poorly put together and difficult to follow. Good score, though, and beautifully shot. All the actors are trying their hardest and giving good performances, but either the script was bad or the editing was poorly done.
The wife wants to see it; I don’t. I can’t stand Keira “Jaws” Knightly, and really don’t get the attraction. I also made the mistake of jokingly referring to it as a chick flick, and now am in the doghouse.
Tell her you don’t want to see it until you’ve both read the book.
I have read the book, checked it out from the library,again again and again, and then again and then again. In all that time the end was never spoiled for me.
Beautiful clenching jaw describes AK perfectly. Her old man bores her, society life bores her, fish out of water poor anna.
If it’s artsy like the Russian Ark was, I would love to see it
I saw it a few weeks ago with my wife, and we both liked it, although I actually liked it a bit more than she did. I enjoyed the play-within-a-play aspect of the staging. I’m a big Keira Knightley fan and thought she was pretty good, although it wasn’t her best work (Pride & Prejudice, also directed by Joe Wright, is still my favorite film of hers). The supporting cast was all quite good. Beautiful cinematography and costumes, too.