
Sarah (Samantha Morton) is a British settler during the time of the New Zealand land wars, where she...
Sarah (Samantha Morton) is a British settler during the  time of the New Zealand  land wars, where she falls pregnant to a Maori lad and bears a half cast son. The  child is captured by his Maori grandfather seven years later and her life becomes dedicated  to their re-unification. Her son is soon used as bait to draw her to the  village of the rebel Maori. They want to  use her knowledge of western  medicine to cure their dying chief (Temuera Morrison). While  there, she  falls in love with her son's uncle (Cliff Curtis) and the native way of life,  but the war continues to escalate. Sarah must make a decision - side with the  Maori who include her son and the man she loves, or the settlers she grew up  with, including Doyle (Kiefer Sutherland) a soldier who remained her friend  while so many others shunned her. 
Invoking Joseph Conrad's seminal book Heart  of Darkness, River Queen was Vincent Ward's dream project - and his first film since What Dreams May Come seven years earlier.  It opened at #1 at the New Zealand box office, but garnered the worst critical reviews of Ward's career. It became famous for it's troubled shoot, where Vincent Ward was said to have clashed with lead actress Morton. Ward was eventually removed from the film by producers (cinematographer Alun Bollinger finished up), but returned for post production.
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River Queen | Details
Award winner
- Best Cinematography and Costume Design at the NZ Film Awards 2006.
 - Rating
 - M, contains violence
 - Runtime
 - 114
 - Genre
 - Drama
 - Country of origin
 - New Zealand, UK
 

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