Pubdate: Fri, 29 Dec 2000 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2000 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: 401 N. Wabash, Chicago IL 60611 Feedback: http://www.suntimes.com/geninfo/feedback.html Website: http://www.suntimes.com/ Author: Marcus Warren FROM CLASSIC TO RACY COMIC MOSCOW--The story of the most romantic fallen woman in literature has undergone a modern make-over in Russia's first comic-book treatment of a classic novel. Convertible cars, cocaine and sushi bars provide the backdrop for the reworking of Anna Karenina, set in the present day and casting its characters as members of Russia's idle rich. The novel's heroine is depicted as a femme fatale with a mobile phone, a taste for luxury lingerie and, by the end of the comic, a drug habit that drives her to suicide. Bart Simpson, Bruce Willis and the film "Pulp Fiction" all make fleeting appearances in the book, further distancing the cartoon version from its origins in Count Leo Tolstoy's novel set in 19th century czarist Russia. "You couldn't ask for anything more contemporary," said Grigory Baltser, the publisher. "It has a classic love triangle, and a wealthy woman who becomes a drug addict. "It is not a profanation of the original work. This is not blasphemy." The comic may be an abridged version of Tolstoy's 900-plus pages, but the speech bubbles nearly all contain quotations from the book. And its "authors" did not have to change much to bring the novel up to date. Tolstoy himself put his most celebrated character on morphine and sent her lover, Count Vronsky, to the Balkans after her death to fight alongside Serbs. Turning one of the world's greatest novels into a comic, especially in a country so proud of its literary heritage, was bound to be controversial. "This is an outrage," said Stanislav Govorukhin, a film director and Duma deputy. "Is nothing sacrosanct nowadays? Tolstoy and Chekhov, for example, must remain holy." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake