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Anna Karenina

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2000
  • 6h
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
622
YOUR RATING
Helen McCrory in Anna Karenina (2000)
Anna Karenina
Play trailer1:00
1 Video
19 Photos
Drama

Anna Karenina is the young wife of an older husband. She has an affair with the handsome Count Vronsky. By following her desires, Anna complicates her life.Anna Karenina is the young wife of an older husband. She has an affair with the handsome Count Vronsky. By following her desires, Anna complicates her life.Anna Karenina is the young wife of an older husband. She has an affair with the handsome Count Vronsky. By following her desires, Anna complicates her life.

  • Stars
    • Douglas Henshall
    • Helen McCrory
    • Stephen Dillane
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    622
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Douglas Henshall
      • Helen McCrory
      • Stephen Dillane
    • 15User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Episodes4

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    TopTop-rated1 season

    Videos1

    Anna Karenina
    Trailer 1:00
    Anna Karenina

    Photos19

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    Top cast53

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    Douglas Henshall
    Douglas Henshall
    • Levin
    • 2000
    Helen McCrory
    Helen McCrory
    • Anna Karenina
    • 2000
    Stephen Dillane
    Stephen Dillane
    • Karenin
    • 2000
    Mark Strong
    Mark Strong
    • Oblonsky
    • 2000
    Paloma Baeza
    Paloma Baeza
    • Kitty
    • 2000
    Kevin McKidd
    Kevin McKidd
    • Count Vronsky
    • 2000
    Jackson Ellis Leach
    • Seriozha
    • 2000
    Kazimiera Utrata
    Kazimiera Utrata
    • Agatha
    • 2000
    Amanda Root
    Amanda Root
    • Dolly
    • 2000
    Gillian Barge
    Gillian Barge
    • Princess Shcherbatskya
    • 2000
    Malcolm Sinclair
    Malcolm Sinclair
    • Prince Shcherbatsky
    • 2000
    Victoria Carling
    • Annushka
    • 2000
    Deborah Findlay
    Deborah Findlay
    • Countess Lydia
    • 2000
    Emma Majewska
    • Dolly's Child
    • 2000
    Oliver Mangham
    • Dolly's Child
    • 2000
    Gabbi Majewska
    • Dolly's Child
    • 2000
    Tom Ward
    Tom Ward
    • Yashvin
    • 2000
    Paul Rhys
    Paul Rhys
    • Nikolai
    • 2000
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    7.2622
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    Featured reviews

    8heather_m1986

    A Taut Adaptation of a Daunting, Sprawling novel

    This Masterpiece Theatre production gives life to Tolstoy vast and ambitious masterpiece. It's a formidable task considering that Tolstoy was often a deeply psychological writer and spent hours probing the souls of his characters. That being said, the cast in this adaptation do a marvelous job in conveying their character's profound and often misguided humanity.

    Tolstoy co-protagonists, Anna Karenina and Constantine Levin are both idealists searching for love and meaning. Helen McCrory is not an obvious choice for Anna but the character has suffered from being played by picture perfect actresses who have trouble conveying Anna's passion. Helen McCrory's is believable as a mature woman who is seemingly very comfortable in her skin and has the grace and power to make men fall easily in love with her.

    Douglas Hensall plays Levin with gentleness as a sensitive, conflicted man plagued by doubt and his own inadequacies.He romance with Kitty is sweet and understated. His Scottish accent, beard, and awkward manners lend to his rusticism. However, as with any adaptation of Anna Karenina, much of Levin struggles with his own conflicted personal morality and faith are left out.

    The best performance comes from Stephen Dillane as Anna's dour, principled husband. A man who believes in keeping his emotions in check, Dillane's Karenin is a man who's suffering his wife's betrayal and is conflicted between the desire to punish her and his love for her. In the novel Karenin is a homely man in his fifties, but here he is far handsomer and about 10 years younger which is helpful because it prevents viewers from believing that Anna deserts old, ugly husband simply because he is old and ugly.

    Also of note is Mark Strong as Anna's bon vivant brother, Stiva, who, as in the book, remains likable despite being irresponsible and faithless to his wife, Dolly. Paloma Baeza, Amanda Root and Kevin McKidd also turn in fine performances and Levin's sweetheart, Dolly and Anna's lover, respectively.

    The film's use hand-held cameras, quick cuts, and odd angles were at times interesting and at times, very distracting. Admittedly,it was nice to see a period film not shot in the very staid and static fashion of most period films. This production is full of movement: train chug by, people run upstairs, skirts billow, couples argue violently.

    It has been said that readers should take Anna Karenina as a "piece of life" and this adaptation has an accessibility and realism and lacks that daunting glossy "period film" sheen. These people are people who could live in our time or any time
    ReluctantFan

    A very tedious adaptation but for Henshall and Strong

    I agree with the previous reviewer in finding that the main characters (Anna and her lover) though played by very good actors lacked both screen presence and chemistry. As a result the series seemed very tedious to watch and the love between them difficult to believe in - which in turn left me indifferent as to their predicament or its outcome. On the other hand, I found that the "Moscow set" stories and actors brought life to the series. In particular, Mark Strong (Oblonsky), Amanda Roots (Dolly), Paloma Baeza (Kitty) and Douglas Henshall (Levin) all gave lively performances. In the case of Henshall and Paloma Baeza the chemistry between the couple made the romance believable and moving. Henshall impersonated Levin's self-doubt and moral guilt particularly well. He made Kitty's delivery scene very memorable. His Scottish accent (which I normally like very much) seemed a bit distracting in this setting - especially in the scenes with his "brother". It reminded me of Billy Boyd in The Lord of the Rings!
    michel.anctil

    A disappointment

    Anna Karenina is one of the great novels of the nineteenth century that has inspired a great many adaptations for cinema or television. This most recent TV version (aired now in North America) is one too many. It is appallingly rudderless, maybe because it is increasingly more difficult to see a point in adding to the already high stack of versions. The acting lacks zest for the most part, the length or the treatment of this version does not do justice to the richness of the novel, and the sex scenes are so disingenuously artsy as to be laughable. More critically, the key characters of Anna and Vronsky are played by actors lacking both presence and chemistry. In my opinion, this version fares very poorly compared with the other TV miniseries, that of 1977 starring Nicola Pagett (Anna), Eric Porter (Karenin) and Stuart Wilson (Vronsky).
    8bnm81510

    Best adaptation yet

    Anna Karenina is my all-time favorite book, and having watched a number of Russian and English-language adaptations, including the 2012 Joe Wright film with Keira Knightly, I consider this 2000 Masterpiece Theater version the most faithful and watchable of them all. While Helen McRory may not be as conventionally pretty as many other actresses who played Anna, her acting is spot on, and she's closer to the character as envisioned and described by Tolstoy. The other characters are cast very well, and few liberties are taken with the plot. Aside from the now-dated 1977 BBC miniseries, this is the version which spends the most time on the Levin-Kitty storyline, as it should be. The main reason I deduct 2 points is that parts of the series inevitably felt like a breeze-through the book's themes - as no adaptation can truly capture the depth of the original novel.
    7dawn-sloan-716-992731

    Good Performances in this Version

    This was the first version of Anna Karenina that I saw and apart from the 'shaky camera' direction which seems to be in fashion these days it is a really good version.

    Kevin McKidd and Helen McCrory are excellent and give it their all in this tale of passion and love. It made me become a fan of both actors and seek out films with them in.

    All in all a good version, with the themes of the story, lust, love and passion coming through very strongly. I seem to remember this was shown in 3 or 4 parts over as many weeks and I could not wait to see the next part every week, a sign of good drama!

    Watch it and see if you agree.

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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Throughout the movie, any character who wears a wedding band is shown wearing it on their left hand. In the Slavic countries, such as Russia, Ukraine, and Poland, the wedding band is worn on the ring finger of the right hand. Wearing a wedding band on the left hand often indicates that the wearer is widowed.
    • Goofs
      The priest reads the prayers in Latin. No Russian Orthodox prayer is ever read in Latin; for Russian Orthodox priests this would be blasphemy. The prayers could be read either in Russian or Slavic.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Architect (2006)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 18, 2001 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Channel 4 (United Kingdom)
      • PBS (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ana Karenjina
    • Filming locations
      • Suomenlinna, Helsinki, Finland
    • Production company
      • Company Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 6h(360 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo

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