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Anastasia

  • 1997
  • G
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
143K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,480
52
John Cusack, Meg Ryan, Hank Azaria, Christopher Lloyd, Liz Callaway, Jim Cummings, and Jonathan Dokuchitz in Anastasia (1997)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:30
3 Videos
99+ Photos
Hand-Drawn AnimationAdventureAnimationDramaFamilyFantasyMusicalMysteryRomance

The last surviving child of the Russian Royal Family joins two con men to reunite with her grandmother, the Dowager Empress, while the undead Rasputin seeks her death.The last surviving child of the Russian Royal Family joins two con men to reunite with her grandmother, the Dowager Empress, while the undead Rasputin seeks her death.The last surviving child of the Russian Royal Family joins two con men to reunite with her grandmother, the Dowager Empress, while the undead Rasputin seeks her death.

  • Directors
    • Don Bluth
    • Gary Goldman
  • Writers
    • Susan Gauthier
    • Bruce Graham
    • Bob Tzudiker
  • Stars
    • Meg Ryan
    • John Cusack
    • Christopher Lloyd
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    143K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,480
    52
    • Directors
      • Don Bluth
      • Gary Goldman
    • Writers
      • Susan Gauthier
      • Bruce Graham
      • Bob Tzudiker
    • Stars
      • Meg Ryan
      • John Cusack
      • Christopher Lloyd
    • 270User reviews
    • 54Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 10 wins & 23 nominations total

    Videos3

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:30
    Trailer
    Anastasia (1997)
    Trailer 2:30
    Anastasia (1997)
    Anastasia (1997)
    Trailer 2:30
    Anastasia (1997)
    Anastasia (1997)
    Clip 1:59
    Anastasia (1997)

    Photos240

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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Meg Ryan
    Meg Ryan
    • Anastasia
    • (voice)
    John Cusack
    John Cusack
    • Dimitri
    • (voice)
    Christopher Lloyd
    Christopher Lloyd
    • Rasputin
    • (voice)
    Kelsey Grammer
    Kelsey Grammer
    • Vladimir
    • (voice)
    Hank Azaria
    Hank Azaria
    • Bartok
    • (voice)
    Bernadette Peters
    Bernadette Peters
    • Sophie
    • (voice)
    Kirsten Dunst
    Kirsten Dunst
    • Young Anastasia
    • (voice)
    Angela Lansbury
    Angela Lansbury
    • The Dowager Empress Marie
    • (voice)
    Rick Jones
    • Czar Nicholas
    • (voice)
    • …
    Andrea Martin
    Andrea Martin
    • Phlegmenkoff
    • (voice)
    • …
    Glenn Walker Harris Jr.
    Glenn Walker Harris Jr.
    • Young Dimitri
    • (voice)
    Debra Mooney
    Debra Mooney
    • Actress
    • (voice)
    Arthur Malet
    Arthur Malet
    • Travelling Man
    • (voice)
    • …
    Charity James
    Charity James
    • Anastasia Impostor
    • (voice)
    Liz Callaway
    Liz Callaway
    • Anastasia
    • (singing voice)
    Lacey Chabert
    Lacey Chabert
    • Young Anastasia
    • (singing voice)
    Jim Cummings
    Jim Cummings
    • Rasputin
    • (singing voice)
    Jonathan Dokuchitz
    • Dimitri
    • (singing voice)
    • Directors
      • Don Bluth
      • Gary Goldman
    • Writers
      • Susan Gauthier
      • Bruce Graham
      • Bob Tzudiker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews270

    7.2142.6K
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    Featured reviews

    9TheLittleSongbird

    This blew me away!

    This is my personal favourite of the Don Bluth movies. I also recommend American Tail, Land Before Time and All Dogs Go To Heaven. Anastasia is just beautiful, and was one of the most requested films when we had our family cinemas. A couple of years ago, I got it on video, and all those memories came back. I love this movie so much. The animation is gorgeous. The characters are well drawn, and the backgrounds and colours are stunning. There is a lot of wit between the characters. Not to mention a truly sweet romance between Anastasia and Dimitri. Whoever hated this movie, must be told, that this is so much more watchable than Richard Rich's King and I. Anastasia herself is so beautiful. The highlights were Anastasia's dream and the scene on the train. The songs are what make this movie. My favourite is "Once Upon a December" as it is so nostalgic, haunting and poignant. All the other songs are well done and move the story forward. Even "Dark of the Night". As for the story, yes it is historically inaccurate, but so is Pocahontas, and this is marginally better. It was so well told. In some Don Bluth movies, they lose the essence right from minute one, but not here. As for the voice talents, they were all impeccable. Meg Ryan was suitably feisty as Anastasia, and Liz Callaway did her singing voice beautifully. John Cusack put an immense amount of charm into his voice-over, although Dimitri was for me was the weakest character in the movie. Kelsey Grammar has great fun as Vladmir, and also check him out as Zozi in Bartok the Magnificent. Christopher Lloyd voices villain Rasputin with over the top menace, and the villain loses his body parts here. We have all had days like that. Hank Azaria is also great as Bartok.Underrated Broadway actress Bernadette Peters has a great french accent, and I had so much fun with her singing "Paris hold the key to your heart." For me, Angela Lansbury provides a completely human and poignant character in the Dowager Empress. Her prologue was so well paced, and there was a side to the great character actress that I never knew she had. In conclusion, a sweet and beautiful animation that is essential to all animation lovers. 9.5/10 Bethany Cox
    8TheOneManBoxOffice

    Far from historically accurate, but still a good family flick.

    In the late 1990s, we had two animated movies that were based on a certain event in a country's history. In 1995, Disney gave us an American "history lesson" (and I use that term loosely) with Pocahontas, but in 1997, 20th Century Fox did exactly what Disney did, except give us a look at a bit of Russian history (again, using the term "history" loosely) about the daughter of Czar Nicholas II, Anastasia Romanov, simply called...well...Anastasia. However, one thing to consider when going into this film is that this is a family picture ("kids movie" for short), so if you're looking for a true-to-life history lesson a la a PBS or History Channel documentary, you might as well throw that out the nearest airlock.

    In this film, Anastasia, voiced by Meg Ryan, is a princess that went missing for several years after the attack on the Romanov family during a party, which was led by the Romanov's former confidant Rasputin, voiced by Christopher Lloyd of Back to the Future fame, who is an undead, evil sorcerer in this movie. Anastasia, now with a case of amnesia and dubbed Anya, eventually joins two con men, Dimitri (John Cusack) and Vladimir (Fraiser's Kelsey Grammar), who are convinced that she really is the missing Romanov princess, and travel to Paris, France, where her grandmother, the Dowager Empress, resides, to hopefully reunite them, all while Rasputin is seeking her unfortunate demise.

    I won't judge this movie on historical accuracy, as all (or most) of us can tell that the general audience for this film is younger children, though adult audiences will also be entertained, since there was a lot of effort put into the creation of this film. That, and I wouldn't dismiss it as a "Disney knockoff" right away, because the directors of the film, Don Bluth and Gary Goldman, were former Disney animators, so it's easy to confuse this for a Disney picture like Beauty and the Beast. As a family film alone, it is pretty damn good. The artwork and animation is great, the songs are enjoyable, and the voice acting is pretty decent.

    The film was such a success that it became co-director Don Bluth's comeback after a slew of mediocre to bad animated films he directed throughout most of the decade, and his highest grossing film to date. Not only that, but it warranted a direct-to-video follow up film starring the villain's sidekick, Bartok the Bat (voiced by The Simpsons' Hank Azaria in both films).

    Overall, the film serves as a great choice to have playing during a family movie night, unless you're extremely picky on historical accuracy, in which case, go do something else for 97 minutes.
    Doylenf

    Has the sumptuous look of a Broadway musical...delightful entertainment...

    Some of the most beautiful animation and backgrounds in recent history are a central ingredient of "Anastasia", a charming full-length feature based on the famous title character and set against the period of the Russian revolution. Expert vocal work by Angela Lansbury (Dowager Empress), Meg Ryan (Anastasia), John Kusack (Dimitri) and many others, make the characters seem more dimensional than in most animated features. Particularly Dimitri and Anastasia, whose love-hate relationship seems startlingly real given the superb animation.

    The score is studded with some Oscar-nominated music and the sinister moments have the kind of villain you love to hate (Rasputin). Some of the scenes might be too intense for small children--as well as a realistic railway scene on a runaway car--but all in all, should delight young and old. Angela Lansbury's voice is especially effective as the Empress. The art of animation doesn't get any better than this! This Don Bluth/Gary Goldman production is as good as anything Disney might have attempted.
    siathegirl

    Still Magnificent

    I'm somewhat biased: I watched this movie as a child dozens of times. The first because it had the same name as mine, and all of the times afterwards and still today because I love the movie by itself.

    After years, I watched it once more tonight. The fact that it's not factual in the least doesn't take anything away from the movie to me, though I must admit cross-referencing did distract me from the movie until I just put that to the side and decided that the movie is just fiction and to leave it at that. Avoid looking at the facts very much until after the movie.

    The music, characters, and scenes took me back to my childhood. The first ballroom scene and remembrance of it is my absolute favorite. I remembered the wonder of being a child throughout watching the movie, but I also held wonder for some more little details in the scenes I hadn't noticed before.

    Only two things made me cringe: the pronunciation of Anastasia and Rasputin's undead body's antics.

    I've grown up listening to almost everyone pronounce the name not as the Greek origin or the Russian adaption (Ah-na-stah-see-uh / Ah-na- stah-shyah), but as the common English pronunciation - which this movie uses. I'm both Greek and Russian, so it does tend to rub me wrong even more in that aspect. I've grown up around both cultures and done further research on the name, and I'm certain it's pronounced wrong. It's funny how what bothers me the most is the pronunciation.

    Overall, this is a magnificent movie which all children (and those childlike at heart) will enjoy and should watch at least once. It definitely encourages imagination in its own way.
    8Avwillfan89

    Better than I remembered

    The last time I saw this, I thought there were maybe too many songs in it that distracted the feel from the movie. But now that I've seen it again, it's clear that the songs are well written, along with the storyline.

    This is not based on a true story, only loosely on a few rumors that the real Anastasia survived the killing of her family. The heroine Anya is like a Disney princess who is desperate to find out who she is and where she belongs, after suffering from amnesia following the separation of her family. The villain is the brilliant Rasputin, back from the dead, intent on extracting revenge on the Romanovs, thus starting the Russian Revolution. Dimitri and Vladimir at first are looking to find the ideal Anastasia look alike in order to get the riches from her real mother in Paris.

    A lot of Bluth's films revolve around a journey and a couple involving some history on Russia. I really enjoyed the songs that played over the end credits, "At the Beginning" and "Journey To The Past" sung in her own way by Aaliyah, the beautiful angelic voiced R&B singer who left way too soon.

    Brilliantly animated for its time and enjoyable for adults, Anastasia remains a classic family film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In real life, Olga really did say that Anastasia's drawing looked like a pig riding a donkey. This was stated by Anastasia in a letter to her father, and the image used in the movie is a reproduction of the original picture.
    • Goofs
      Throughout the film, Anastasia is often referred to as a Princess, while her proper title was "Velikaya Knyaginya". However, while the literal translation of this title is "Grand Duchess", it is essentially equivalent to the British title of a Princess, so it is a reasonably accurate semantic translation to English, which is the language of the film after all. In any case, Anastasia is also called a Grand Duchess during the film, which means that the filmmakers were fully aware of the alternative translation.
    • Quotes

      Anastasia: Men are such babies.

    • Crazy credits
      Clips of the characters are shown along with the names of their respective actors during the beginning of the second part of the initial credits.
    • Alternate versions
      The version shown on HBO and related channels contains extra credits for the Spanish-language version of the film. The song over those credits, a Spanish version of "Journey to the Past," was on the film's soundtrack album.
    • Connections
      Edited into Bartok the Magnificent (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Once Upon a December (Prologue)
      Music by Stephen Flaherty

      Lyrics by Lynn Ahrens

      Performed by Angela Lansbury and Lacey Chabert

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    FAQ22

    • How long is Anastasia?Powered by Alexa
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 21, 1997 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • Russian
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The Music Box
    • Production companies
      • Twentieth Century Fox
      • Fox Animation Studios
      • Twentieth Century Fox Animation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $50,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $58,406,347
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $120,541
      • Nov 16, 1997
    • Gross worldwide
      • $139,804,348
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 34 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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    John Cusack, Meg Ryan, Hank Azaria, Christopher Lloyd, Liz Callaway, Jim Cummings, and Jonathan Dokuchitz in Anastasia (1997)
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