Keira Knightley | Page 650 | the Fashion Spot

Keira Knightley

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the other way tumblr
 
I love almost every picture from The Edge Of Love.
Especially those behind the scene pictures, it looks like Keira and Sienna had soooo much fun making that movie.
TEOL is so underrated....
 
wish those would be better quality but yet again, she looks flawless and her outfit looks comfy and so warm.
i cannot believe the still isn´t hq pictures from her candid pics few weeks ago.
it makes me angry
:angry::lol:
 
I think TEOL got panned off as Atonement part 2 and so not many paid attention which is a shame because the performances were phenominal. Very interesting subject matter as well.
 
She's said before that she's a social smoker. She'll do it occasionally, at parties, etc. Of course that's how we all start out. Muwahahahaha!
 
"The edge of love" was nothing but a pile of beautiful pictures with some meaningless dialogue thrown within. They could have done so much with this but in the end it was nothing more than the making of a beautiful vintage Vogue spread. I felt so empty and kind of violated after watching it.
 
^I felt the same way diesanni, it was so hollow :ninja: Keira looked great in it and she worked well with what she was given, but it was a thoroughly bad movie
 
Silk was one of the most deadly boring movies I've ever seen in my life. I love Keira but I certainly didn't in Silk.
 
Screw all the Great Gatsby hype, please let THIS movie remake happen! :buzz:
Keira Knightley & Joe Wright May Reteam On New Tom Stoppard-Penned Version Of ‘Anna Karenina’

For such an incontestably great piece of literature, it’s strange that Leo Tolstoy‘s novel “Anna Karenina” hasn’t been treated better. The 1935 Greta Garbo version is great, and there was a decent British TV version a decade ago with Helen McCrory, Kevin McKidd, Stephen Dillane and Mark Strong, but for the most part, big-screen adaptations have been closer to the most recent film version, Bernard Rose‘s weak 1997 take with Sophie Marceau, Sean Bean and Alfred Molina (Fun Fact: as a 9-year-old, this writer nearly got the part of Anna’s son in Rose’s version. For reals.)

But today brings news that another version is in the work, from a fairly prestigious team. Baz Bamigboye reports that Working Title have been developing a new adaptation, written by the great playwright Sir Tom Stoppard, and that a script’s due before Christmas. The studio’s favorite son, Joe Wright (”Pride & Prejudice,” “Atonement”) is attached to the new version, and in the spring, the director’s likely to make a decision as to whether to direct this, or the dark Abi Morgan-scripted take on “The Little Mermaid” announced earlier in the year.

But according to Working Title head honcho, Tim Bevan, this one’s looking like the front-runner, telling Bamigboye that “I’m not saying I’ve made up my mind, but there’s something about Anna Karenina, Tom Stoppard and Joe Wright that sounds right.” Furthermore, and it shouldn’t come as a huge surprise to anyone, considering their working history, but it appears that Keira Knightley is ‘top of the list’ to play Anna in Wright’s version.

While she still engenders an enormous amount of hate from some quarters, Knightley’s going from strength-to-strength as an actor, and much of her best work has been done with Wright, particularly in her Oscar-nominated turn in “Pride & Prejudice,” so it’s a natural fit. Unless Knightley signs on to her rumored role in “The Dark Knight Rises,” or Noah Baumbach‘s “The Emperor’s Children” gets moving (and that was meant to shoot this summer so may be dead now), she’s also got a clear slate in 2011, should Wright’s version move forward.

For those unfamiliar with the source material, it’s the tragic Moscow-set love story of the titular, married Russian aristocrat, who falls for an army officer (obviously, with the book weighing in at nearly 900 pages, this is a fairly reductive take, but we’ll be here all day otherwise). It’s a tricky job to try and capture the book in a reasonable running time, but with Stoppard, one of the greatest living writers, behind the adaptation, we’re fairly excited about this. In the meantime, Joe Wright’s latest collaboration with Working Title, the child-assassin picture “Hanna,” with Saoirse Ronan, Eric Bana and Cate Blanchett, hits theaters on April 8th, 2011. Hopefully it’ll lead to a crossover picture down the line, “Hanna Karenina,” about a child-assassin who falls in love with an army officer.

via indiewire
 

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