★★★★½ (4.5/5) Recommended for: Fans of classic literature, period dramas, and anyone who has ever felt like an orphan in their own life.
The supporting cast is impeccable. Richard Farnsworth as Matthew Cuthbert brings a gentle, wordless tenderness that breaks your heart, especially in the film’s climactic final hour. Colleen Dewhurst as Marilla is a revelation—she plays the stern spinster not as cold, but as a woman terrified of loving and losing. Their slow, unspoken bond with Anne is the emotional spine of the story. Jonathan Crombie’s Gilbert Blythe is charming and properly smug, and his “carrot” nickname and subsequent penance are handled with perfect restraint. Anne of Green Gables -1985-
The production design and cinematography are quietly stunning. Sullivan and his team chose Prince Edward Island’s real landscapes, and the result is a Green Gables that feels lived-in: white farmhouse, barn-red outbuildings, fields sloping toward the “Lake of Shining Waters” (a real pond, now iconic). The costumes are period-accurate without feeling stuffy, and the score—a lilting, folk-inflected theme by Hagood Hardy—has become inseparable from the mental image of Anne racing through a wildflower meadow. ★★★★½ (4
The film’s greatest strength is its pacing across four hours (originally two two-hour episodes). It allows Montgomery’s episodic narrative room to breathe: the wrong cake, the puffed sleeves, the haunted wood, the amethyst brooch. Each set piece is lovingly staged. The screenwriting wisely keeps much of Montgomery’s dialogue, and when it invents, it invents well (the extended scene of Anne and Diana swearing blood-oaths is a delight). Colleen Dewhurst as Marilla is a revelation—she plays
The 1985 Anne of Green Gables is not just a children’s film or a period drama. It is a story about the radical act of letting yourself belong somewhere. It understands that family is chosen, that imagination is survival, and that a “kindred spirit” is one of the world’s rarest gifts. If you come to it with cynicism, it will gently disarm you. If you come to it with nostalgia, it will hold you like an old friend.
Any review of this film must begin and end with Megan Follows. Casting Anne Shirley is a high-wire act: she must be irritating yet endearing, dramatic yet authentic, a chatterbox with a wounded core. Follows doesn’t just play Anne; she inhabits her. From the moment she delivers the famous line, “I’m in the depths of despair,” with a theatrical sigh that somehow feels utterly sincere, you are hers. She captures the novel’s central tension—Anne’s desperate need for love versus her fierce pride—with astonishing nuance. Watch her face during the raspberry cordial incident or the broken slate scene: you see the flicker from defiance to shame to resilience. It’s a performance of rare, radiant empathy.