Stunning as always: Keira Knightley turns in a great performance as Anna Karenina
Last updated at 1:59 AM on 27th January 2012
Keira Knightley, as Anna Karenina, emerges from the mist, her gaze focussed on her husband — and her lover — played by Jude Law and Aaron Johnson, respectively.
The actress is wearing an embroidered coat that sweeps the floor, a hat trimmed in fox fur — and £1 million worth of Chanel gems, dangling from her ears.
The costume designer, Jacqueline Durran, has at the request of director Joe Wright, created a hybrid look for Keira, in which 1870s style meets fitted Fifties couture, and the result is stunning.
Big screen starlet: Keira Knightley
Anna Karenina is Tolstoy's giant meditation on the aspects of love, and Keira, now 26, is clearly up to the task of playing one of the greatest heroines in literature.
I've been following Keira's career for years, but as I stood looking at her on the set of Anna Karenina, something had changed. The film's hair and make-up designer Ivana Primorac articulated my thoughts. 'Keira looks like a proper woman,' she says
Director Joe Wright, who is filming the train station scene at Shepperton studios, tells me: 'There's fire in Keira's belly.'
He's directing her for the third time, having worked with her on Pride And Prejudice and Atonement.
And he agrees that Keira has grown up. 'She's her own woman — she's got so much fight in her at the moment,' he says, as he watches her being framed by Seamus McGarvey, the director of photography, and camera operator Peter Robertson.
She's a star: The actress puts in a star turn as Anna Karenina
He tells me that Keira's taken a lot of stick in England, in the years since they last worked together.
'A lot of young actors would have gone "Up yours!' and gone off to Hollywood. But she braved it out, and it has made her stronger — and fiercer,' Wright adds, with a slightly nervous laugh.
The director believes Keira is more than ready to play Anna — but not a 20th-century feminist version of Anna, 'following her heart'.
'As far as Tolstoy was concerned, he was writing a book about a woman who was a sinner — a fallen woman,' Wright says. 'He wasn't writing about her as a heroine. He started off writing this book about a good husband and a bad wife. But then, as he wrote, he fell in love with Anna.'
Wright's basing his version of Tolstoy's great novel on a powerful screenplay by Tom Stoppard, in which the playwright gives equal weight to the parallel stories of Anna's cuckolding of her husband Karenin (Law), and her passionate affair with Count Vronsky (Johnson), and also the romance between Levin (Domhnall Gleeson) and Kitty (Alicia Vikander).
Stoppard's view is that most previous versions made the mistake of favouring Anna's story over Levin's. 'Tom turned in one draft and it was all there,' marvels producer Paul Webster.
Tim Bevan of Working Title, who is making the film for Focus Films and Universal, told me it's the first time Wright has worked with a great screenplay. 'Joe's had good scripts, but this is a great one,' says Bevan, a man not known for idle overstatement.
Wright and his long-time design collaborator Sarah Greenwood checked out locations in St Petersburg, and stately homes in the UK (particularly in Yorkshire) which could double as Russian homes.
But the more Wright studied Russian cultural history, the more he realised he didn't want to shoot a conventional costume drama.
The eureka moment came as he pored over Orlando Figes's study of Russian cultural history, Natasha's Dance, which suggested the aristocrats of St Petersburg in the 1870s were more western European in their behaviour than Russian.
'The aristocrats spoke Italian, English and French — and Russian only to the serfs. There was a sense that they were always playing parts,' producer Webster explained.
So Wright hit on the idea of doing an expressionistic version of Anna Karenina, emphasising that theatricality. Greenwood designed a theatre on a soundstage at Shepperton, from which the action would flow. You go through a door and there's a train station; go through another and there's a snowy street, or a forest of silver birch.
While most of the filming was done on lavish sets, there were real life locations, too; and some shooting is being done in Russia, for the more naturalistic scenes involving Levin and Kitty.
The scenes I watched looked amazing. Ornate tableaux peopled with extras of Russian heritage, all choreographed to move in a certain way.
And the cast is as rich as Greenwood's sets. Ruth Wilson plays Princess Betsy; Olivia Williams is Countess Vronsky; Emily Watson plays Countess Lydia; Kelly Macdonald is Dolly; and Matthew Macfadyen, Oblonsky.
Downton Abbey's Michelle Dockery has been cast as Princess Myagkaya, while her former co-star Thomas Howes (William, the ill-fated footman) plays Yashvin.
Michael Stipe of REM and Frances McDormand were staring at themselves.
Tilda Swinton, wearing a loose-fitting, white silk trouser suit, was standing in front of a painting of herself, sleeping.
The works were by Tilda's partner, Sandro Kopp, and he created the pieces, displayed around the walls of the Lehmann Maupin gallery in New York's Lower East Side, by having people sit for him via Skype, the internet phone service.
Art's sake: Sandro Kopp and Tilda Swinton pictured at Istanbul '74 Presents Sandro Kopp 'There You Are' at Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York
'On average, I would need people to sit for at least three hours,' Kopp told me.
'I'd be in Scotland and the people could be on the other side of the world, or just upstairs.'
His models included Kirsten Dunst, Willem Dafoe — and his own mother.
Upstairs at the gallery, there was a video installation showing Kopp going through the creative process.
After her Manhattan sojourn, Tilda will star in Joon-ho Bong's film Snow Piercer, a psychological thriller set 20 years in the future. 'It's the end of the world, and a group of people are stuck on a train on a snowy landscape,' Tilda explained. She wouldn't say much about her character, except that she's quite funny.
Following Snow Piercer, Tilda will make Jim Jarmusch's as-yet-untitled next picture. And just as I was being given this information, I saw Jarmusch in the flesh, studying his Skype portrait.
Rom-com: Rashida Jones who co-wrote and stars in Celeste and Jesse Forever
Rashida Jones, who co-wrote and stars in the movie Celeste And Jesse Forever, a beautifully observed romantic comedy which had a good reception when it screened at the Sundance Film Festival. Jones and Andy Samberg play a divorced couple who still live together. Celeste is razor sharp; Jesse, less so.
Celeste co-owns a design/branding company with Elijah Wood and she's brutally honest, with a deliciously fiery temperament. For me, she was the heart of the film — the heat went when she wasn't on screen.
Ari Graynor, who is hilarious in For A Good Time Call . . ., another Sundance film. She plays a young woman who runs a telephone sex line from her New York flat. But her sideline is in danger of being cut off when she's forced to take in a prim flatmate (Lauren Anne Miller, who co-wrote the film with Katie Anne Naylon). It's Bridesmaids-style silliness, but Graynor's superior comic performance makes you take notice. She's like a young Bette Midler.
Quvenzhane Wallis, an eight-year-old who plays six-year-old Hushpuppy, a bright and inventive girl at the heart of the Cajun fairy tale Beasts Of The Southern Wild. Set in southern Louisiana, it's an incredible movie and is the stunning directorial debut of Benh Zeitlin. John Cooper, director of the Sundance Film Festival, told me it was the one movie that would tell me the most about the state of America. I hope Clare Stewart, the new director of the BFI London Film Festival, secures it this year, although I suspect it will turn up at Cannes first. It's a fabulous picture.
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