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The New World 2005 123movies

The New World 2005 123movies

Once discovered, it was changed forever.Dec. 25, 2005151 Min.
Your rating: 0
5 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: The New World 2005 123movies, Full Movie Online – Captain Smith is spared his mutinous hanging sentence after captain Newport’s ship arrives in 1607 to found Jamestown, an English colony in Virginia. The initially friendly natives, who have no personal property concept, turn hostile after a ‘theft’ is ‘punished’ violently on the spot. During an armed exploration, Smith is captured, but spared when the chief’s favorite daughter Pocahontas pleads for the stranger who soon becomes her lover and learns to love their naive ‘savage’ way of harmonious life. Ultimately he returns to the grim fort, which would starve hadn’t she arranged for Indian generosity. Alas, each side soon brands their own lover a traitor, so she is banished and he flogged as introduction to slavish toiling. Changes turn again, leading Smith to accept a northern-more mission and anglicized Pocahontas, believing him dead, becoming the mother of aristocratic new lover John Rolfe’s son. They’ll meet again for a finale in England..
Plot: A drama about explorer John Smith and the clash between Native Americans and English settlers in the 17th century.
Smart Tags: #fort #interracial_romance #native_american #cult_favorite #native_american_culture #foreigner #chopping_down_a_tree #17th_century #period_drama #american_history #cult_film #captain_john_smith_character #pocahontas_character #male_female_relationship #historic_figure #based_on_real_person #year_1607 #king_james_i_character #timeframe_17th_century #1600s #1610s


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Ratings:

6.7/10 Votes: 86,858
63% | RottenTomatoes
69/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 967 Popularity: 11.544 | TMDB

Reviews:

a deep artistic pleasure
The New World

reviewed by Sam Osborn rating: 3.5 out of 4

Filing out of The New World, completely speechless and without notes, I could fathom only single adjectives to describe the experience. Looking at these listed words on my memo-pad now, they read “Thunderous, True, Beautiful, Solemn, Forceful, Gripping, Honest, and Slow.” And for those who watch The New World with a calm countenance, an open mind and a ready cache of patience, Terrence Malick’s long-awaited picture will have a similar effect. The film is a masterpiece thirty years in the making.

His goal is plain enough: to affectively and honestly portray the love Pocahontas experienced in those first years that Europeans cut their first, fresh swath from the New World. But Malick goes far beyond a simplistic love story. I was at the screening for Casanova a few days earlier, where the film’s objective was essentially the same: to portray the love between Casanova and Francesca in the days of Inquisition Venice. But where Casanova approaches love at a bubbly, comedic perspective, The New World throws itself into a headlong narration of love’s sorrow. Every frame of The New World reflects this painful, aching emotion, utilizing the sounds and images of environment to incredible, innovative effect. The first shot of the film–an extended shot several minutes in length–finds the camera staring into a river. It’s clear and pristine, carefree and surrounded by the blissful sounds of an unperturbed forest. Soon ripples begin forming, and we notice the quiet droplets of rain pit-pattering around us, causing the water to flow a little, bringing about a contented onslaught of lily pedals. The scene continues on, drawing us farther and farther into Malick’s deafening reality with only the sounds and images of nature. He creates a calm within us with these images, a kind of serene canvas for him to later paint the vivid brush-strokes of human love later in the film. In this entire first act, little is even said. But these scenes rarely grow tiring. He finds rich beauty with every situation. His forest is lush and his settlements picturesquely Dickensian. Malick shows great and rare confidence with this picture. Few filmmakers would have the cool audacity to create a film so primarily reliant on nothing being said.

The first and most important of Pocahontas’ (Q’Orianka Kilcher) romances is with the infamous John Smith (Colin Farrell). He’s brought to the New World bound in a cage, punished for earlier mutiny. But because he’s the only soldier of the expedition, Captain Newport (Christopher Plummer) opts to let him free on a strict probation. Their first encounters with the Naturals, as they’re called, go coolly enough, with curious interest from the Naturals and tense hesitation from the settlers. And even here Malick plays with flights of romantic whimsy. These scenes of first encounter are shot in windswept, overgrown grassy fields, with Pocahontas dancing and twirling about them with her brother, catching the spry interest of Smith.

Soon the settlers hear of a great city of Naturals down the river, and Smith is sent to investigate. Things have been going badly for the settlers and Captain Newport has left back for London and a new store of food and supplies. Smith’s expedition is cut short, however, when he runs into a narrow, maze-like complex of swamps and is ambushed by warrior Naturals. He’s taken prisoner by the Naturals, but granted life because of Pocahontas’ curious interest and her favoritism with Chief Powhatan (August Schellenberg). This catalyzes our entrance into The New World’s most prominent territory. The scenes of Smith’s time with the Naturals are Malick’s best. They’re those first strokes of paint on his canvas and the seeds of that palpable, historical romance.

But admittedly, even with The New World’s supreme sense of confidence and slow-moving progression, it sometimes wanders into the realm of self-indulgence. It especially grows tiresome in the final act, when we’re brought from Virginia to London, our beloved Smith left behind to be replaced by John Rolfe (Christian Bale) and his stonewall courting of Pocahontas. I’d even venture to say that Malick could have left 30 minutes of these segments on the editing room floor, re-attaching them later to the Extended Cut DVD release that’s sure to come. But movie-going patience is the mantra of the Awards season, and so some bottom-dragging in films is what’s to be expected.

What was not to be expected, however, was Q’Orianka Kilcher, the debuting actress playing Pocahontas. Few words she says, but dialogue is not always what makes a forceful performance. Her body language and expressions are allowed to do the speaking for her. She’s advantaged also by her strong, muscular features that often betray hints of divine femininity. Farrell also does well, particularly in his somber narration. He reads it as though he speaks the words to himself, whispering them almost, for only his imagination to hear. But his physicality is manipulated nicely as well, exuding bubbly chemistry for Kilcher. The two mix ideally. Their sorrow and love and deeply resonated emotions are echoed about with their strong performances and Malick’s supreme direction. And although Christian Bale strides into picture in the latter parts of the film, our hearts lie with Smith and Pocahontas, and we find ourselves resentful of Rolfe’s advances. But this is just Malick’s narrative trickery. We find ourselves raggedly torn between these two equally honorable men, and put almost into the same position as Pocahontas. It’s precisely the reason we go to the movies. We’ve let the director take his grip on us and lead us down the path into characters and identities of his own creation. And with Malick leading our way, and with characters as tastefully dimensional as these, movie-going becomes a deep artistic pleasure.

Review By: samseescinema
Beautiful Marriage of Aural and Visual Meditations on Discovery
“The New World” has an opening five minutes where Natives rush to the shore to get a view of the massive British ships that are about to land on what would become Jamestown that are every bit as fantastic as any of the scenes in Kubrick’s “2001: A Space Odyssey”. It’s a perfect marriage of sound effects, music and visuals that literally paints itself onto the celluloid as a jaw dropping work of art. The nature of “discovery” and the power of film is boldly on display in Terrence Malick’s brave “New World.”

Some viewers will undoubtedly get lost in the visual and aural poetry, while others will be annoyed at the lack of a focused narrative and the sometimes sketchy character motives. This is a historical drama, and the amazing sets, costumes, and make-up attest to the wonderful attention to period detail, but there’s also a dreamy surreal nature to the pacing that will lull some to sleep who were expecting a more traditional docudrama. This is more about the myth of Pocahantas and channeling ghosts than it is about the actual history behind the story. The dialog is as evasive and minimal as the visuals are overwhelming and painstaking. Plotting is secondary to the mood and meditations on love, discovery, curiosity, innocence, and the clashing of cultures.

Malick does a great job at showing the civilized and barbaric sides of both the Natives and the British. It’s a wonderful testament to that first realization that there is intelligent life outside of one’s own world. Central to this discovery of the “New World” is the romance between John Smith (a modest Colin Farrel) and Pocahantas (an amazing Q’Orianka Kilcher) which is displayed with just as much wide eyed-wonder and innocence as Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. Christian Bale as John Rolfe and Christopher Plummer as Captain Newport are also very good when they are allowed to act amongst the lush scenery. Composer James Horner, who is probably second only to John Williams in creating unforgettable movie music, outdoes himself as his rousing symphony (coupled with divine music from Wagner) perfectly matches the reverence and awe with which Malick uses his visuals to paint the myth on screen.

Some judicious editing may have benefited the middle portion of the film, which amounts to scene after beautiful scene of two people falling in love while worshiping nature, but there are two more series of scenes (one in the middle and one at the end) that are every bit as uplifting as the opening one and serve as a perfect synergy of visual and aural delights that completely transported this patient viewer to another realm. I’m not so sure that this is what it was really like to live in 1607, but I have no doubt this is what the people of that time dreamed about.

Review By: WriterDave

Other Information:

Original Title The New World
Release Date 2005-12-25
Release Year 2005

Original Language en
Runtime 2 hr 15 min (135 min), 2 hr 52 min (172 min) (extended cut) (USA), 2 hr 30 min (150 min) (original cut) (USA), 2 hr 52 min (172 min) (extended cut)
Budget 30000000
Revenue 30536013
Status Released
Rated PG-13
Genre Biography, Drama, History
Director Terrence Malick
Writer Terrence Malick
Actors Colin Farrell, Q’orianka Kilcher, Christopher Plummer
Country United States, United Kingdom
Awards Nominated for 1 Oscar. 6 wins & 34 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix DTS, Dolby Digital, SDDS
Aspect Ratio 2.35 : 1
Camera Aaton 35-III, Panavision C- and E-Series Lenses, Panavision 65 HR Camera, Panavision System 65 Lenses, Panavision Panaflex Millennium XL, Panavision C- and E-Series Lenses, Panavision Panaflex Platinum, Panavision C- and E-Series Lenses
Laboratory DeLuxe, Hollywood (CA), USA (prints), EFILM Digital Laboratories, Hollywood (CA), USA (digital intermediate), Technicolor, Hollywood (CA), USA (color)
Film Length 3,720 m (Sweden), 3,741 m (Portugal, 35 mm)
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision2 200T 5217, Vision2 500T 5218), 65 mm (Kodak Vision2 200T 5217, Vision2 500T 5218)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (some scenes), Panavision Super 70 (some scenes), Panavision (anamorphic)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (Fuji Eterna-CP 3513DI)

The New World 2005 123movies
The New World 2005 123movies
The New World 2005 123movies
The New World 2005 123movies
Original title The New World
TMDb Rating 6.5 967 votes

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