
ANNA KARENINA
All The Stage Is A World In the months of pre-production, Joe Wright and his collaborators conducted
extensive research into
Russia and the society of the 1870s to gain an understanding of a period which
was the twilight of an
empire. Hundreds of visual references, as well as imagery tagged for
inspiration, were catalogued as
part of realizing the director's unique vision.
Tom Stoppard remained in close contact, visiting the director in California
for what Wright
remembers as "one final big script meeting before we set off."
The spectacular theatre setting coming together had to be unlike any other
seen on screen before.
Production designer Sarah Greenwood and her team set out to conceive the design
for what would be
highly divergent sets over the course of a three-month shoot.
Although various locations, including the condemned Alexandra Palace theatre
in London, were
visited and considered as filming sites, everyone realized that the way to go
was to build from
scratch. Greenwood explains, "We had to build the theatre on a stage because it
needed to be a built
environment for us to be able to control it. We had a lot of fantastic imagery
to deploy.
"The overriding conceit of the setting of the derelict theatre is that this
society is on its way out,
decaying, heading towards unrest under the rule of the aristocracy. They did
like their gold leaf, so
gilding was important to have. But everything within is fake, paper-thin; Joe
came back from St.
Petersburg noting that what might look like marble was actually plaster."
The overall inspiration was equal parts personal and aesthetic; Wright says,
"I was raised in a
theatrical environment, growing up around my parents' Little Angel [Puppet
Theatre]. I also have a
keen interest in early cinema, which emerged from theatre at the beginning of
the 20th century; the
design of early cinema screens emulated the theatre proscenium arch."
Paul Webster concurs, noting that "this approach of Joe's crosses boundaries,
going back to the
origins of cinema where the distinctions between theatre and film blurred: 'the
theatre of dreams.'"
Wright reflects, "Aesthetically, this film is probably closer to my heritage
than anything I've made
before. The puppet theatre that I grew up with was a beautiful handmade world
and we've tried for
that within this film. The idea of the theatre being the whole world was how the
puppet theatre felt to
me as a kid."
The immense interior of the theatre set was built on C Stage at the U.K.'s
storied Shepperton Studios -
the same stage which had hosted the wartime hospital scenes of Atonement. Of the
set-ups within the
theatre set, three would be on the actual stage while the remainder would be,
variously, within the
auditorium; on an upper level; in corridors; in the foyer; and "backstage."
It wasn't long before C Stage had to stay open round-the-clock, whether for
filming or for building
and then dismantling sets. Supervising art director Niall Moroney and Nick
Gottschalk, the art
director for the theatre set, coordinated efforts so that as soon as scenes were
filmed, construction,
painters, props, and lighting departments were at the ready - literally, waiting
in the wings - to strike
one elaborate set and create the next. "It became an elastic universe," praises
Webster.
Transitions between scenes were abetted by huge painted backdrops on the main
stage. This
spectacular scenery includes St. Petersburg, Moscow, and the starry night sky at
Betsy's soirée; and
elaborate murals such as the clouds and cherubs which surround the beatific
Kitty on stage when
Levin fumbles his marriage proposal.
The various levels of the theatre indicated the social standing of the
respective individuals
frequenting them; the foyer, auditorium, and upper level were for the higher
echelons of society, as
was the corridor where the art exhibition takes place. Backstage became the
salubrious French theatre,
while the wings were where Oblonsky conducts his affair.
Matthew Macfadyen comments, "Given that the settings were in and around
Russia, the whole
theatre reminded me of where the Bolshoi Ballet might have performed."
The biggest set pieces, such as the ice rink, the ball, and the opera lent
themselves well to the theatre
space. For the races sequence, a paddock was placed in the center of the
auditorium while those
playing the upper classes were higher up and those cast as working-class people
were at or below
theatre stage level; even so, as it was impractical to have live horses and
riders racing across the
theatre stage, the racing scenes were filmed separately by the second unit and
would be carefully
worked in later by editor Melanie Ann Oliver and her department.
Oliver reveals, "Although Joe works very much in storyboards and with a
precise shot list, I tend to
try and not to look at them; my initial response to the rushes is an important
hit I will never get again,
and I tend to go by that. It's also one of the reasons I don't visit the set too
much. The raw material of
the rushes comes in and I work very fast, and then I sit back and consider the
edits before getting
Joe's feedback. I love identifying little gems or nuances in the takes, and he
generously takes notice of
my finds.
"What Joe has done is to redesign this story, yet the core the truths of it
are still very much there,
especially with Anna's affair and people's reactions to it, and the emotions and
the primal feelings
throughout. The way he uses sound is one of the layers that heightens the world
of Anna
Karenina. "
Tim Bevan notes, "Joe has the ability to create a world you can believe in
-which is not something
that every movie director can do - and he has the assuredness to know when to
have the editor do a
hard cut or not."
Wright remarks, "What we were going to be able to do away with here was,
shots of carriages pulling
up and exterior shots of palaces. That can become architecture rather than
storytelling. We could hone
in on the emotional beats of the scenes and the drama of the characters as
played out by the actors."
Stoppard recalls, "A few days into shooting, I was shown about ten minutes of
footage and I thought,
'This is working.' I called Joe and Tim to express my relief.
"When I visited the set weeks later and saw what the art department had
achieved, it was mind-blowing.
What months before Joe had described to me that was inside his head had been
made real."
Owing to logistical necessities, the ice rink sequence was the first to be
filmed within the theatre
space. The company behind the U.K.'s Dancing on Ice television series was
brought in to create a
bespoke ice rink within the parameters of the theatre auditorium for a one-day
shoot. The ice was
then allowed to melt away, so that the space could be readied for its next
redressing.
In the visual approach worked out by Wright with cinematographer Seamus
McGarvey, as the story
progresses the trappings of the theatre cease to be visible. Wright explains,
"The concept is, much as
the characters are unaware of their existence within the environment, the
audience is immersed
within the story and disbelief is suspended."
Greenwood remarks, "The only time a character acknowledges that they're in a
theatre is the opening
scene with Oblonsky on the stage, which is the crossover moment."
Webster notes, "Since the stage is in that scene as a French theatre, the
sequence unfolds as a bit of a
French farce."
Greenwood adds, "There's humor, but we're then quickly going to all these
places with the characters
and the narrative and the incredible dialogue."
Keira Knightley felt that "Joe's concept to set it in a theatre was
completely brilliant, because you
instinctively know that as soon as you enter a theatre you are required to use
your imagination.
"Your sense of space changes, and with all the changing sets we would forget it
was a theatre; that
definitely was so when filming the ice rink, or Betsy's soirée - what with all
the chandeliers. But even
that happened because of the nature of what a theatre is and how we perceive a
theatre; we know
reality is going to be suspended, and therefore you accept what it is being
depicted as."
Some of the sets forming part of the theatre did have to be built on other
stages at Shepperton; these
included the prop room (which is the drawing room of the Oblonsky house), the
paint frame (which
is the Oblonskys' dining room), and the fly floor, a platform at the side of the
theatre stage (which
became a train platform). The Karenin home in St. Petersburg was built on B
Stage; the Grand Hotel,
on D Stage. In all, four stages at Shepperton were used.
Greenwood says, "These sets had subtle architectural links echoing the
theatre, such as the same style
of doors, which helped to make the transition as seamless as possible." Once the
characters move
through the theatre, walking up the staircase, along corridors, and through
doors, they have a
seemingly direct link to these other sets, such as the long corridor at the
Karenin home. Most
strikingly, Anna's son Serozha's bedroom is a miniature version of the main
theatre - with footlights
from the main stage softly illuminating it.
However, as Greenwood notes, "As opposed to being dilapidated, these sets are
highly polished."
Katie Spencer, the set decorator whom has worked in tandem with Greenwood on all
of Wright's
films, elaborates, "St. Petersburg is much more classical and looking more to
the West. So the Karenin
home is highly regimented, and much less cluttered, than the Oblonsky house in
Moscow. As such, it
feels more like a conventional film set, though it is still conceived within a
theatrical context; that is
evident in the shape of the set, with receding prosceniums one way and another.
"The Oblonsky household was quite complex to decorate. They are aristocracy,
but the father spends
so much of their money - eating well, drinking well - that they are getting down
on their luck, so
there had to be a more naturalistic environment which worked for them. I was
excited when our
actors embraced the idea and fully inhabited the set."
The formality of the Karenin apartment is conveyed through marble flooring,
hand-painted motifs on
the walls, and darker colors. Heavy doors lead into a marital bedroom of deep
colors and masculine
style, which creates a claustrophobic and oppressive atmosphere that indicates
the state of Anna and
Karenin's marriage. Greenwood muses, "It's interesting; the men who visited the
bedroom set would
say, 'Ah, fantastic, I'd love to sleep in a hotel room like this,' while women
who stopped in would be
slightly unnerved by it."
Jude Law adds, "There was a wonderful description in Tom Stoppard's script of
Karenin being like
clockwork, so clocks became something that Karenin surrounds himself with."
Some scenes in Karenin's study and Anna's boudoir do unfold within the
theatre set; the walls of the
latter fall away as Anna walks away from her life with her husband and son,
leaving destruction in
her wake.
Pointing up the insular nature of the society world, and enhancing the
immersion of the audience, the
theatre settings lack windows.
A scaled-down version of the theatre stage was built at Didcot Railway Centre
in Oxfordshire. It is
here that Count Vronsky and Oblonsky meet their mother and sister, respectively,
as they step down
off the theatre stage onto the train platform; when the huge train pulls in, it
is effectively doing so into
the auditorium.
Outside the theatre entirely is the world of Levin and his country estate in
Pokrovskoe, where he
works in the fields alongside his servants. He steps into the artifice of the
theatre when he is with his
friend Oblonsky and seeking Kitty's hand in marriage, but otherwise prefers to
live a truer existence
outside of Moscow and St. Petersburg. Levin's interior scenes take place within
sets but his exterior
scenes take place in real locales - the countryside in South England and a
landscape in Russia that
were found as part of Adam Richards' location scouting.
Accordingly, to best incarnate Levin, Domhnall Gleeson was tasked with
learning "how to scythe. I
was awful at the beginning; they're dangerous things, scythes, and I was a
menace for a while. By the
end, I was told I was pretty good. Now, that might have been lies, but the two
days we spent [filming
on location] in Salisbury scything were incredible; when you're doing that
digging with the blade you
do forget about thinking who you are, you just are."
In editing these scything scenes - with far less dangerous cutting tools -
Oliver was asked by Wright
to "make it have a musical rhythm, with the people going back and forth. Joe
also had me look at old
Russian propaganda films."
Even subtler themes and motifs were layered in by Greenwood and Spencer
throughout; the pale
blue wallpaper of Anna's small boudoir features snowflakes bringing to mind both
the icy landscape
of Russia and the coolness of her marriage. The gilded horse which appears
within the set design is a
symbol of Russia, as is the double-headed imperial eagle which is a badge of
honor for Karenin.
The bird motif was also picked up by costume designer Jacqueline Durran and her
department, with
birdcage-like undergarments for Knightley to wear indicating that even within
Anna's own private
quarters she is a beautiful, feathered creature trapped on display; this being
the third occasion that
the majority of the filmmakers and crew had worked with Knightley on a feature,
they had an innate
awareness of her physicality and how it could relate to the surroundings. Such
intricate details as the
style and shape of an antique chair were given consideration in conjunction with
Ivana Primorac's
hair and make-up design, to flatter Knightley's shoulders and décolletage.
Wright's childhood in the world of theatre and puppets influenced the
dressing of the Oblonskys'
drawing room, which features many delicate and ornate toys, most notably
handcrafted alphabet
blocks and a beautiful large-scale doll's house in which Anna sits with the
Oblonsky children.
Spencer remarks, "It's beautiful, and it signifies how family-oriented the
Oblonskys are - he is a
philanderer, yet this shows how much his and Dolly's children mean to him."
Kelly Macdonald marvels, "That set was like Aladdin's cave! Every time I went
in, I would notice
something different."
Macfadyen reflects, "It makes sense that we're in the prop room; the
Oblonskys have six children, and
there are bits of the fabric of their lives everywhere."
Greenwood reveals, "The doll's house interior was representative of what the
Oblonsky house would
have looked like had life-sized sets have been built, rather than our working
within the theatre set
parameters."
Reversing the latter conceit, Anna's son Serozha has a toy train which
travels through a wintry
Russian countryside and then morphs into the full-scale train which takes Anna
on her momentous
journey to Moscow.
Gleeson says, "You might think that limitations were set by having everything
in this one space, but
in actuality the possibilities were endless because of everyone's imagination.
You would arrive on set
and constantly be surprised at the richness of the tapestry."
Next Production Note Section
TOP
Home | Theaters | Video | TV
Your Comments and Suggestions are Always Welcome.
Contact
CinemaReview.com
© 2013 34®, All Rights Reserved.
|