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The New World
on DVD (2005)
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| Starring: |
Colin Farrell, Q'Orianka Kilcher, Christopher Plummer, August Schellenberg, Wes Studi, Raoul Trujillo, Christian Bale, Michael Greyeyes, David Thewlis |
| Director: |
Terrence Malick |
| Studio: |
ENTERTAINMENT IN VIDEO |
| Run time: |
150 mins |
| Certificate: |
 |
| User collections: |
Some of the best of 2005, Videodrome Inspired, Are these among the most beautiful films ever made?, Turkey Time., Top Fill My Heart With Joy Movies, Notably cra*p previous rentals from Lovefilm |
| Genres: |
Action/Adventure, Thriller |
| Languages: |
English |
| Released: |
22/05/2006
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Brief synopsis of The New World
The New World is an epic adventure set amid the encounter of European and Native American cultures during the founding of the Jamestown settlement in 1607. Inspired by the legend of John Smith and Pocahontas, acclaimed filmmaker Terrence Malick transforms this classic story into a sweeping exploration of love, loss and discovery, both a celebration and elegy of the America that was... and the America that was yet to come. Against the dramatic and historically rich backdrop of a pristine Eden inhabited by a great native civilisation, The New World is a dramatised tale of two strong-willed characters, a passionate and noble young native woman (QORIANKA KILCHER) and an ambitious soldier of fortune (COLIN FARRELL), who find themselves torn between the undeniable requirements of civic duty and the inescapable demands of the heart.
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Related
Critics Reviews
New York Times
Rapturously beautiful... The entire meaning of the film is conveyed in a single sublime edit that joins a shot of the grubby settlement as it looks from outside its walls -- and framed inside an open door -- with its mirror image
Sight and Sound
Shot almost entirely in natural light with a moving camera, the film is at once lively and meditative... It mixes carefully researched ethnographic detail with wildly romantic imagining
Entertainment Weekly
Many have tried, but none can match Malick's touch for shuffling a deck of elegiac images and fanning out the hand to express what speech cannot
See all 4 Critics Reviews »
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