Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. About this movie. As Anna Karenina (Keira Knightley) carries on an affair with the affluent Count Vronsky (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) she begins to question her happiness, witnesses change come to her family, friends, and community. The story unfolds in its original late 19th century tsarist Russia high-society setting and powerfully explores the ...

  2. Anna Karenina: With Santiago Cabrera, Lou de Laâge, Sydne Rome, Ángela Molina. Set in late-19th-century Russia high-society, the aristocrat Anna Karenina enters into a life-changing affair with the affluent and handsome Count Vronsky.

  3. Subscribe to TRAILERS: http://bit.ly/sxaw6hSubscribe to COMING SOON: http://bit.ly/H2vZUnAnna Karenina Official Trailer #1 - Keira Knightley Movie HDSet in l...

    • 3.9M
    • Rotten Tomatoes Trailers
  4. About this movie. Academy Award-nominee Keira Knightley, Academy Award-nominee Jude Law and Aaron Taylor-Johnson dazzle in this stunning new vision of Leo Tolstoy's epic love story. At the twilight of an empire, Anna Karenina (Keira Knightley), the beautiful high-ranking wife of one of imperial Russia's most esteemed men (Jude Law), has it all.

  5. Anna Karenina: Directed by Joe Wright. With Matthew Macfadyen, Eric MacLennan, Kelly Macdonald, Theo Morrissey. In late-19th-century Russian high society, St. Petersburg aristocrat Anna Karenina enters into a life-changing affair with the dashing Count Alexei Vronsky.

  6. Synopsis. In Imperial Russia, Anna, the wife of the officer Karenin, goes to Moscow to visit her brother. On the way, she meets the charming cavalry officer Vronsky to whom she is immediately attracted. But in St. Petersburg’s high society, a relationship like this could destroy a woman’s reputation.

    • 129 min
  7. Anna Karenina (1935) -- (Movie Clip) An Evil Omen Hollywood Tolstoy, as Vronsky (Fredric March) meets his mother (May Robson) and Greta Garbo (title character) makes her first appearance, at the train station, her brother Stiva (Reginald Owen) attending and much foreboding, in producer David O. Selznick and MGM's Anna Karenina, 1935.

  1. People also search for