Trending
MOST READ
2012 Best of San Antonio Food Winners List

2012 Best of San Antonio Food Winners List

Best of 2012: 2012 Best of San Antonio Food Winners List 4/25/2012
Stella Public House takes pizza and beer to the next level

Stella Public House takes pizza and beer to the next level

Food & Drink: The terms “wood-fired” and“brick oven pizza” have longbeen bandied about as guarantors of quality, though sadly they seldom ring true. What may arrive out... By Scott Andrews 5/15/2013

Best Sex Toy Shop

Best of SA 2012: Porn online we can understand, but to properly order pleasure products you need an expert guide. It helps if you can see and feel what you're getting yourself into... 4/25/2012
Best of SA 2013 - Food

Best of SA 2013 - Food

Best of SA 2013: 4/24/2013
Pairing Food and Beer The Granary Way

Pairing Food and Beer The Granary Way

Food & Drink: That beer goes with barbecue is a Texan article of faith, but as smoked meat purveyors gain cult status and the craft beer culture explodes, a Shiner... By Miriam Sitz 5/15/2013
Calendar

Search hundreds of restaurants in our database.

Search hundreds of clubs in our database.

Follow us on Instagram @sacurrent

Print Email

Screens & Tech

Joe Wright attempts to slap a new facade on an old 'Anna Karenina' barn

Photo: Courtesy photo, License: N/A

Courtesy photo

Keira Knightley gets period again in Anna Karenina.


Does Tolstoy really matter anymore? Directors regularly attempt to plunder the great master's musty catalog, among which the sweaty, love-drenched Anna Karenina ranks as one of the greats. The latest take on the doomed romance of poor dear Anna is a visually stunning, audaciously arty attempt to overwhelm us with a fury of technique and artifice, which may very well sweep viewers into its florid world of forbidden desires, gloriously blustery Russian winters, and endless layers of bureaucratic frippery.

Will the complicated social imperatives and moral concerns of 19th century Russia remain relevant to 21st century Americans? I ask because, after sitting through director Joe Wright's epic, bedazzling, and faintly numbing interpretation of the venerable favorite, I'm not sure if the problem is the razzle-dazzle or the substance underneath it.

More often than not in recent years, Anna Karenina has been adapted into TV serials, with multiple installments needed to properly contain the voluminous novel's many expansive side plots, philosophical musings, and meandering narrative. No such luck here, as the storytelling has been condensed into a busy rush of incidents, sets, and moments, like a hundred rapidly spinning teacups hanging in the air.

Director Joe Wright (Atonement) is less interested in Tolstoy's fixations on religious symbolism and the virtues of the simple agrarian lifestyle than he is in delivering a good old bodice-ripper. What's left is the skeletal framework of a doomed romance between married socialite Anna (Keira Knightley) and the dashing young officer Count Vronsky (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), a scandalous affair that leaves lives in ruin.

The trouble is that Wright and screenwriter Tom Stoppard have chosen to frame the whole thing inside a theatrical device in which most of the action occurs on a theatre stage, with gorgeous sets and props whizzing by as the camera swoops in around and over the players. When we get exterior scenes, they are deliberately artificial, high-contrast pieces of showy design work, which impress but don't invite. This approach is inventive and intriguing, but it only adds distance between us and the already somewhat formal and remote characters, who the actors try to force into life.

Knightley is Joe Wright's go-to gal, having teamed up with him in Atonement and Pride & Prejudice, but this may have been too many trips to the same well. The preternaturally slim and porcelain Knightley does most of her acting with her upper lip, which quivers wildly, as if she had an electric toothbrush permanently buzzing over her gums. As Vronsky, the youthful Taylor-Johnson (title character of Kick-Ass) is appropriately handsome but lacks authority; he feels a bit out of place in a period piece, and seems to always be looking for a cue card.

The surprise is Jude Law, who has morphed from dashing leading man into playing roles like the drab, bloodless Tsarist functionary Karenin, Anna's cuckolded but defiantly proud husband. Behind his thick, bristly beard, Law takes an intentionally stiff, boring character and makes him vital and alive, a tricky feat that seems just out of reach for everyone else involved.

For all its creativity and cosmetic excitement, this new Anna seems to be merely slapping a new façade on an old barn. There is just enough air between the characters and our sense of reality to make their dilemmas about morality, duty and status seem as quaintly antiquated and rare as a Faberge egg.

Anna Karenina

★★ ½ (out of 5 stars)

Dir. Joe Wright; writ. Leo Tolstoy, Tom Stoppard; feat. Keira Knightley, Jude Law, Aaron Taylor-Johnson (R)

Recently in Screens & Tech
  • 'Renoir': The painter, his model, and his son It is hard to think of a father-son combination that distinguished itself more in two different art forms than the Renoirs’ père et fils... | 5/15/2013
  • Primal Screen: 'American Masters' (8pm Mon, PBS) When you tune into an American Masters program about Mel Brooks, you know it’s going to be fun. As a Borscht Belt entertainer, TV comedy writer... | 5/15/2013
  • Primal Screen: 'North America' (8pm Sun, Discovery) This seven-part nature documentary takes us on a stunning tour of the continent, gliding from the Canadian tundra to the Utah desert to... | 5/15/2013
We welcome user discussion on our site, under the following guidelines:

To comment you must first create a profile and sign-in with a verified DISQUS account or social network ID. Sign up here.

Comments in violation of the rules will be denied, and repeat violators will be banned. Please help police the community by flagging offensive comments for our moderators to review. By posting a comment, you agree to our full terms and conditions. Click here to read terms and conditions.
comments powered by Disqus