Фильмы получившие Премию “Оскар” в 2013 году
Студия: Studio Canal, Working Title Films
Актерский состав: Джуд Лоу, Кира Найтли, Эмили Уотсон,Келли Макдоналд, Мэтью Макфейден, Рут Уилсон, Домналл Глисон, Мишель Докери,Оливия Уильямс, Алисия Викандер
Автор сценария: Том Стоппард, Лев Толстой
Музыкальный продюсер: Дарио Марианелли
Оператор-постановщик: Симус МакГарви
In 1874 Imperial Russia, Prince Stepan "Stiva" Oblonsky's wife, Princess Daria "Dolly" catches him cheating on her with their governess. She banishes him from their home, forbidding him to see her or their five children. Stiva's sister, Anna Karenina, journeys to Moscow to convince Dolly to forgive him. Anna is a wealthy, well-liked socialite who lives in St. Petersburg with her elder statesman husband Alexei Karenin, and their son, Seryozha. Karenin allows her to leave but warns her about fixing the problems of others.
Meanwhile, Stiva meets his old friend Konstatin Dimitrivich Levin, a wealthy land owner in the country, who is looked down on by Moscow's elite because of his disinterest in living in the city. Levin professes his love for Stiva's sister-in-law, Katerina "Kitty" Alexandrovna Shcherbatsky, and Stiva encourages him to propose. However, Kitty declines, as she hopes to marry Count Alexei Vronsky. Later, Levin meets up with his elder brother Nikolai, who has given up his inheritance for a poor life of vice. Nikolai lives with a prostitute named Masha whom he has taken as his wife and suggests to Levin that he should marry one of the peasants on his estate. Levin then returns to his country estate in Pokrovskoe.
On the train to Moscow, Anna meets Count Vronsky's mother, Countess Vronskaya, a well-known adulteress. Once in Moscow, Anna meets up with Vronsky himself, and they have an immediate and mutual attraction. As they leave, a railroad worker is caught beneath the tracks and violently killed. To impress Anna, Vronsky gives money to the man's family.
Anna convinces Dolly to take Stiva back. At a ball that night, Kitty attempts to dance with Vronsky, but he prefers Anna over her. Their love and passion is noticed by everyone, including an upset Kitty; Anna decides to leave the ball, feeling she has upstaged Kitty. Anna boards a train to St. Petersburg, but at a rest stop notices Vronsky, who declares that he must be where she is at every moment. She tells him to go back to Moscow, but he refuses.
In St. Petersburg, Vronsky visits his cousin Princess Betsy Tverskaya, who is friends with the Karenins. He begins to show up at all the places Anna and Betsy visit; Anna is amused, but also ashamed as everyone notices their mutual attraction. During a party, Vronsky starts to flirt openly, which soon catches Karenin's attention; he suggests they go home, but Anna decides to stay. Vronsky threatens to take a promotion in another city but Anna asks him to stay. Later, Anna convinces her husband of her innocence. The following day, however, she and Vronsky meet at a hotel and make love.
Back at Levin's country estate, Stiva visits, where he tells Levin that Kitty and Vronsky are no longer getting married. Still heartbroken, Levin decides to give up on love and instead focuses on living an authentic country life. He plows his fields with his workers and has thoughts of taking one of his workers' daughters as his wife, like his brother had suggested.
Karenin hears word that both his wife and her lover are in the country and decides to surprise her there at his country estate. Anna reveals to Vronsky that she is pregnant and she wishes to be "only his". She later encounters Karenin who suggests he join her for the horse races that evening, where they sit with the elite. Countess Vronskaya, having heard the rumours of her son and Anna, ignores Anna and focuses her attention on the young Princess Sorokina. The races begin, and Anna unintentionally admits her feelings for Vronsky publicly when his horse collapses and injures him. On their way home Anna confesses to Karenin that she is indeed Vronsky's mistress and wishes to divorce him. As divorce would mean public humiliation for all involved, Karinin refuses and instead confines her to their house.
Levin sees Kitty in a passing carriage, and returns to Moscow to ask for her hand once more. Anna, starting to show her pregnancy, receives Vronsky at her house in St. Petersburg, and berates and curses him for not coming to her sooner. Vronsky, shocked at this new temper in Anna, replies only that he was doing his duties as an officer. Soon Karenin comes back home to find out that Vronsky has been visiting Anna though he was forbidden to do so. He searches her desk and finds love letters. With evidence of her infidelity, he intends to divorce her, keep their son, and drive her out into the street. Meanwhile, Levin and Kitty are reunited at the Oblonsky house. Karenin also arrives to give news that he is divorcing Anna, much to the dismay of Stiva and Dolly. Anna begs Karenin to forgive her, but Karenin has made up his mind, even though he still loves Anna. After the dinner, Levin and Kitty confess their love to each other and decide to marry.
Anna goes into premature labour. As she lies dying, she confesses her sins before God. Vronsky is at her side, and she berates him and tells him that he could never be the man Karenin is. Her husband, feeling ashamed at how he has treated Anna, begs for her forgiveness, which she grants him. The next day Vronsky leaves at the request of Karenin, who forms an attachment to Anna's baby, Anya, as if she was his child. Princess Betsy calls on Anna and discusses with her what will happen to Vronsky now that he has gone back to Moscow. Anna tells Betsy to tell Karenin everything as well. Later, Anna complains about having to hear about Vronsky wherever she goes. Karenin assures her that they could be happy again, but she only wants Vronsky. Karenin still does not agree to a divorce but releases Anna from her confinement. She and Vronsky soon leave for a trip to Italy with little Anya.
Levin and Kitty return to the country estate where everyone is enchanted with his new wife. The sick Nikolai and his wife are also nearby, seeking solitude. Having told Kitty about his brother's situation, Levin fears she will be outraged. However, Kitty dutifully asks that the two join them on the estate so she can nurse Nikolai. Levin realises that she has indeed grown up, putting others' needs before her own.
Anna returns to St. Petersburg to see Serozha, but Karenin makes her leave after a short time. Anna also starts to believe that Vronsky is cheating on her. She later attends the opera, proclaiming that she is not ashamed of her actions. The attendees treat her with disgust, and she begins to understand that society will not accept her or Vronsky. She is humiliated, but retains her poise, just to break down once back at her hotel. Vronsky tries to settle her down by giving her laudanum. The next day Anna has lunch at a restaurant where the society women avoid her. Dolly joins her and tells her that Kitty is in Moscow to have her first child. The resigned Dolly comments that Stiva's behaviour has not changed, but she has to come to accept and love him for who he is.
Later, Vronsky informs Anna that he must meet with his mother one last time to settle some accounts, but when Anna sees Princess Sorokina picking him up, she becomes very upset. She drinks more laudanum and goes by train to see if Vronsky is truly with his mother. One the way, she has hallucinations of Vronsky and Princess Sorokina making love, and laughing about her. At the last station, Anna yells out, "God forgive me!" as she jumps into the path of an oncoming train.
Levin, still shocked and amazed at Kitty's kind heart and willingness to help his brother, realises that love, while immature in the beginning, can grow into something more beautiful and earnest. He starts to believe that fate is indeed the work of God, who has blessed him with a good wife and now with a son. He returns home to find Kitty bathing the child. He tells her that he just realised something. Kitty asks him what is, and Levin, cradling his boy, says that someday he will tell her. Oblonsky and his family eat with Levin and Kitty, and Oblonsky, looking weary and sad, goes outside, lights a cigarette and seems to be mourning his sister. Karenin is seen to be happily retired from public duties, with Serozha and young Anya playing nearby.