Greta Garbo’s silent version of ANNA KARENINA always considered something of a travesty, starting with that title. Plus, no cheering section for Anna without Dolly, Kitty or Levin; no pregnancy; no drug addiction or suicide attempt; no insufferable forgiveness from cuckold husband; no train! No wonder Garbo tried again, now with sound, in 1935. So, why is this infamous iteration, taken on its own terms, so satisfying? That notorious happy ending? Seems just right in Edmund Goulding's well-directed production. Perhaps because even at its most M-G-M idiotic, the film all of a piece. Very well cast, too, with top-billed John Gilbert as love-struck Vronsky. (The orchestral soundtrack on the official DVD release from Warners recorded live, so you hear the audience gasp & laugh at his initial reaction to Garbo.) The real hero here (along with regular Garbo lenser William Daniels) may be Hollywood’s highest paid scripter Frances Marion, here credited only for ‘continuity,’ who chose to make the film as a series of ‘set pieces.’ Snowy meet-cute, ballroom gossip, race track disaster, mother-love reunion, renunciation², etc; and who put them in order. Simplified into an awkward love triangle for Garbo not between Gilbert’s military officer and VIP husband Karenin (a one-note Brandon Hurst), but between Anna’s love for Vronsky vs. her love for her little boy.* Her fourth Hollywood film, but first to take her beyond temptress mode.
ATTENTION MUST BE PAID/LINK: *Advantage 1935 in both these roles with Basil Rathbone’s chilly husband a far more dangerously attractive/formidable obstacle; and, fresh off DAVID COPPERFIELD, the wistful charm of Master Freddie Bartholomew, the other love of Anna's life. https://maksquibs.blogspot.com/2008/05/anna-karenina-1935.html


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