
ANNA KARENINA
Moving Images The theatricality of Anna
Karenina further emboldened Joe Wright to use music and choreography
more imaginatively - and more frequently - than they are traditionally used in
movies that aren't also
musicals. Non-dance sequences were blocked out with choreographer Sidi Larbi
Cherkaoui, who
worked closely with not only the director but also composer Dario Marianelli.
The latter, as part of his process with Wright, is involved even before
filming starts rather than solely
in the post-production phase. Wright remarks, "In this movie, music was planned
as clearly visible,
be it dance scenes, musicians playing, or singers. Music needed to be prepared
beforehand to allow
the actors to learn the choreography, to mime instruments, and for singers to
learn the lines. But on
any and every movie, Dario's composing before and during production helps with
the pacing and
mood for the actors, and certainly for the movement of the camera.
"In working with [Sidi] Larbi [Cherkaoui], I was interested in not only
stylizing the environments and
the locations but also the performances as well - though not to the extent of
alienating the audience.
I'm always interested in human physicality, how we behave towards each other. I
feel we do move a
lot, so I like actors to be fully engaged. So we concentrated on blocking, how
to refine it, and how to
be more playful with it as well. That then establishes a rhythm, which comes
through in the voices
that are delivering the dialogue. Film is basically time and movement, so why
not really think about
that movement?"
Paul Webster remembers, "When we did Pride & Prejudice, with its village hall
dances and the scenes
of the two leads alone, Joe proved that he could orchestrate figures moving in
space. In Anna
Karenina, the choreographic element is an even bigger part of a more stylized
work.
"This element was in Joe's mind from the outset; it preceded his
theatricalized re-conception, but
retaining that sensibility was able to heighten and permeate the film that much
more, even in
sequences that do not overtly involve dance."
With Marianelli and Cherkaoui, Wright discussed making Anna and Vronsky's
interactions more
dreamlike. The composer listened to Russian folk songs before working on
arrangements and the
accompanying vocals. "Yet, on this particular movie, Joe gave me a lot of room
to experiment," notes
Marianelli. "So those folk songs were really just starting points."
Webster observes, "In keeping with the general feel of the film, there is a
contemporary edge to
Dario's work here."
So it was that Marianelli wrote his "quite surreal takes" on a waltz and a
mazurka for those sequences
in advance of filming, allowing Cherkaoui time to plan out the attendant dances.
The choreographer's
unique style is theatrical and dynamic, making him a perfect fit for Anna
Karenina. In a series of
workshops with him, the main cast explored body language and developed the
movement of their
characters in relation to those around them, implementing a balletic approach to
the drama from
scene to scene; additionally, the cadre of trained dancers rehearsed their timed
movements.
Marianelli reveals, "The music that you see musicians playing in a scene is
at the same time part of
the score, adding to its drama and emotion within the scene. Anna
Karenina was a wonderful
collaboration; I met with Larbi in Belgium to see what he was working out with
the music. Larbi
asked me to make a few changes, and then with Joe we identified where we could
have some pauses
and how we could restructure things around what Larbi was doing. It was a very
much a three-way
collaboration; Larbi would ring me up and say, 'Can you put eight more bars
here?' or 'Could you
take out four bars here?'"
Cherkaoui adds, "It was ideal working with Dario, because his having written
music beforehand
helped me to create an atmosphere. His work overall inspired me; sequences such
as the French cancan
and the Cleopatra dance came to life thanks to the music."
Marianelli comments, "It was fun for us to put these Russian characters into
a French theatre, where
the run-down Folies Bergère plays out as if it's a German expressionist
painter's nightmare."
On a more subtle note, for non-dance scenes, there was an overlay of
choreography to achieve
discreet but definitive movements; in depicting the master and servant
relationships, the latter were
conceived as appearing in a consistent but silent presence. They materialize
almost magically when
required, gliding into frame to dress members of the aristocracy who do not
appear to even be aware
of them.
Tom Stoppard clarifies, "The emancipation of the serfs has already occurred,
in 1861, but a decree
doesn't change society overnight; the habit dies very hard - and in a certain
sense, never did, if you
go to some remote villages in Russia now."
Domhnall Gleeson remarks, "Rehearsing the choreography, and standing there
while other people
brought our characters chairs and so forth created a guilt in my mind - which
was so useful for
playing my part, since Levin has money but wants to be on the side of the real
people."
Wright notes, "Larbi's work with the actors was not only based on facial
expressions of
acknowledgement or lack of same, it was also about the connection and the
distances between people,
from how they touched to how they moved to how they held themselves."
Gleeson adds, "Alicia Vikander and I did a lot of work with Joe and Larbi;
she would play with my
beard which I grew for the role, we would touch fingertips and create the
physical connection that
exists between Kitty and Levin. She was so graceful, because she trained as a
dancer, and I did not. So
what we did during this process came back to us in spades during filming, which
helped."
Cherkaoui clarifies, "For some characters it was less about movement than for
others. With Karenin
everything is internalized, so Jude Law does less."
Law offers, "The workshops with Larbi were splendid, but I had to restrict my
character to rigidity
when everyone else was going along like flowing liquid."
By contrast, says Cherkaoui, "Vronsky is invasive in Anna's life, so Aaron
Taylor-Johnson steps up
and approaches her to get her to go over into another reality."
Taylor-Johnson took to the concept of applying choreography to his
performance. The actor confides,
"I prefer using physical movement to express emotions and feelings. That's where
I feel most
comfortable, so I was thrilled that we were being asked to convey so much in
that way - and with
dance, which is part of a lot of my favorite films.
"We had a lot of training with Sidi Larbi, and then he had a performance on
at Sadler's Wells that we
went to. It blew me away. There is an intimacy in his dance that's so delicate.
Working with him was
phenomenal, and the dances that he choreographed for Keira Knightley and I were
beautiful."
For the ballroom sequence, all members of the main cast participated in
intensive dance rehearsals
alongside the company of professional dancers - so that their moves would look
effortless and
natural on-screen, as their own characters would have ensured.
Matthew Macfadyen laughs, "The dance moves were very beautiful but fiendishly
difficult to learn;
even the professional dancers were saying, 'This is hard!'"
Cherkaoui admits, "It took a lot of rehearsals for the actors to get
comfortable so it felt easy for them,
and felt like what their characters would do in their society."
Olivia Williams says, "One of the main differences between film and stage is
that on stage you have
to communicate with your whole body. Joe bridged this, so that we would be
communicating gesture
and movement of the whole body on film."
Tim Bevan feels that "there is a symmetry to the actors' movements that
audiences will sense, without
it being obtrusive. It fits right into the theatrical world that was being
created."
Law notes, "We felt we were putting on this production. There was a sense of
being a company before
we had even started filming. It was a rewarding energy with which to begin a
project; I've never felt
stronger than I did on Anna
Karenina about actors coming into their own with their roles, getting at
what the director wanted them to fulfil."
Taylor-Johnson says, "It was not so different than blocking out scenes. But
those weeks of preparation
relaxed everyone, and we could move through scenes without speaking. Later, when
we were
shooting, Joe or Larbi would say, 'I can remember what you did weeks ago; let's
try and get that back
into this scene.'"
Wright did request that some of the movement shade into the unexpected, so
that the music could
gradually become more intense; camera movements and character movements would
interweave as
Anna and Count Vronksy's dance becomes more feverish and intense, and the
surrounding dancers
become suspended in time as Anna and Vronsky move into a spotlight alone,
dancing in their own
private world.
Webster remarks, "The visual scheme in this moment becomes more delirious,
reflecting what's
happening to our characters."
Wright states, "It's a pivotal scene. From this point on in the story,
nothing will ever be the same
again for Anna. Larbi had choreographed it all, and Dario had composed all the
music prior so that it
all came down to shooting - three days of madness and beauty.
"The ball sequence was always going to be one of the great challenges for me
on Anna
Karenina
because it's pure cinema. The physicality tells the story; there is practically
no dialogue at all."
Melanie Ann Oliver, who had recently edited the Marianelli-scored Jane Eyre,
notes, "I love to edit to
music, especially when it's as strong as Dario's. But one day, Joe said to me,
'I want you to cut the
mazurka where Anna and Vronsky come together to a breathing track.' Editing is
not just about the
pictures; it's about how everything is cohering - and, sometimes, the power of
silence."
Cherkaoui remarks, "It's been a new experience for me to see how you can lead
the eye of the
audience into things and out of things. I've never had that opportunity to such
a degree.
"Joe gave me so much freedom to reinvent the waltz, so I could actually
approach it in my own style,
which was much more about using arms and hands. Knowing that he liked what I'd
come up with, it
was exciting to teach the actors to go into that flow as if they would know this
dance - and it was in
part based on one done at that time."
Knightley marvels, "Doing the ballroom scenes was amazing. Larbi took it to a
whole new level and
we got to work on these dance routines, which took us weeks and weeks and weeks
and were
absolutely exhausting - on both my knees and hips! - but hopefully beautiful.
The sequence is so
much a part of my character, and of Aaron's. He's in his white costume, I am in
black, and it's like Yin
and Yang.
"I'm not a dancer and it's not the way I express myself. But saying 'we
learned to dance' doesn't quite
cover what we did. Whether it was a set piece, a dance piece, or a movement
piece, everything had
been 'Larbi-fied.'"
Webster comments, "These pieces would have daunted established dancers, yet
Keira pulled them off
by sheer force of will and excellent ability."
Readying for Betsy's soirée proved intriguing for Ruth Wilson. The actress
reports, "Creating
something movement-based and not word-based, for a language among women in a
high society
gathering? Fans were used from the very first rehearsal - brilliant! Since we
were not trained dancers,
Larbi took what we could give him as actors and created wonderfully detailed
moves for us."
Marianelli muses, "The choreography of figures in space relates very much to
the way the camera
choreographs a film. With Anna
Karenina, it was exciting to be able to explore aspects of a symbiosis
between dance choreography and cinema. The dance sensibility is front and center
in several scenes,
and it then permeates the rest of the film - in an exhilarating way."
Knightley concludes, "Understanding how to express your emotions through
movement and then
how you could fit that into your character has given me a whole new set of
skills as an actor."
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