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The New World

Once discovered, it was changed forever.
2005 | 151m | English

(92693 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 4 (history)

Director: Terrence Malick
Writer: Terrence Malick
Staring:
Details

A drama about explorer John Smith and the clash between Native Americans and English settlers in the 17th century.
Release Date: Dec 25, 2005
Director: Terrence Malick
Writer: Terrence Malick
Genres: Drama, Romance, History
Keywords virginia, interracial romance, 17th century, native american attack, new world, native american, british colonial, colonialism
Production Companies New Line Cinema, Sarah Green Film
Box Office Revenue: $30,500,000
Budget: $30,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 10, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Colin Farrell Captain Smith
Q'orianka Kilcher Pocahontas
Christopher Plummer Captain Newport
Christian Bale John Rolfe
August Schellenberg Powhatan
Wes Studi Opechancanough
David Thewlis Wingfield
Yorick van Wageningen Captain Argall
Raoul Max Trujillo Tomocomo
Michael Greyeyes Rupwew
Kalani Queypo Parahunt
Ben Mendelsohn Ben
Noah Taylor Selway
Brían F. O'Byrne Lewes
Ben Chaplin Robinson
Jamie Harris Emery
Janine Duvitski Mary
Eddie Marsan Eddie
Joe Inscoe Ackley
Jake Curran James
John Savage Savage
Thomas Clair Patawomeck
Alex Rice Patowomeck's Wife
Irene Bedard Pocahontas' Mother
Ford Flannagan Winthrop
Bev Appleton Small
Billy Merasty Kiskiak
Jonathan Pryce King James
Alexandra W.B. Malick Queen Anne
Jasper Britton Laureate
Myrton Running Wolf Tockwhogh
E. Danny Murphy Bosun
Jonathan Gonitel Thomas - 4 Yrs
Brian Merrick Assailant
Chris Nelson Chris
Colin Cox Cox
Will Wallace William Sentry
Steven Dawn Goldsmith
Rulan Tangen Two Moons
Jesse Borrego Pepaschicher
Todd Wallace Sailor
Kirk Acevedo Sentry
Nive Nielsen Inuit Woman
Tayla Kean Cabin Boy 1
Thomas Steven McDonagh Cabin Boy 2
James McDonagh Cabin Boy 3
Gary Sundown Messenger
Michael Goodwin Helmsman
Sam Stevenson Young Lady
Maria Pastel Rosalind
Raynor Scheine Raynor
Jeremy Radin Jeremy
Matthew Yeung Shaman
Gregory Labenz Sentry 2
Name Job
Tony Hinnigan Musician
Michael Clark Painter
Jennifer Henderson Animal Wrangler
Dick Bernstein Supervising Music Editor
Mary Duque Post Production Coordinator
Catherine Charlton Dialogue Coach
Lance Brown Additional Sound Re-Recording Mixer
David Satterfield Art Department Production Assistant
Marko Costanzo Foley Artist
Richard Fiddaman Assistant Accountant
Lucy Egerton Third Assistant Director
George A. Lara Foley Mixer
Trish Stanard Key Production Assistant
Kathy B. Washington Tailor
Jack Garwood Dressing Prop
Jamie Bishop Assistant Property Master
Eric Weiss Travel Coordinator
Donald Freeman Colorist
Steve Lucas Special Effects Supervisor
Derek Vanderhorst Sound Editor
Ed Callahan Sound Editor
David Atherton Key Makeup Artist
John Joseph Thomas Foley Editor
Gina Baran Hairstylist
Peter Germansen Sound Recordist
Nina Sagemoen Production Manager
Jim McConkey Steadicam Operator
Ross Balfour Construction Manager
Emily Morris Editorial Production Assistant
Richard Chew Editor
Jeremy Peirson Sound Editor
Jim Erickson Set Decoration
Jonathan Short Assistant Art Director
Charlie Bowman Electrician
Thomas J. Smith Visual Effects Supervisor
Dominique Leroutier Location Scout
Jon Marson Props
Suzi Turnbull Assistant Costume Designer
Lisa Maher Visual Effects Producer
Ryan Delk Post Production Assistant
Dayton Nietert Gaffer
Kathy Driscoll-Mohler Casting
David Crank Art Direction
Gordon McVay Set Dressing Artist
Jim Passon Color Timer
Duncan McDevitt Propmaker
Susan H. Bodine Legal Services
Bob Foster Transportation Coordinator
Jay Kemp Rigging Gaffer
Christa Vausbinder Production Supervisor
Heidi Vogel Post Production Supervisor
Beth Morris Art Department Coordinator
Eric Bautista Cableman
Cherie Bowers Greensman
Remy Aqui Grip
Joani Yarbrough Hair Designer
Wendy Lanning Executive Visual Effects Producer
Paul Prokop Executive in Charge of Finance
Bunt Young Additional Photography
Liv Torgerson First Assistant Director
Robert Binnall First Assistant Camera
Thomas M. Cornelius Craft Service
Bob Shelley Special Effects Coordinator
Vern Crofoot Armorer
Austin Cross Best Boy Electric
Carol Doleski Production Intern
Paul Engelen Makeup Designer
Gary Duncan Transportation Captain, Marine Coordinator
Laura Johnson Costume Assistant
Russell Kennedy Assistant Camera
Matthew Richard Harris Graphic Designer
Michael Haight ADR Editor
John R. Bayless Makeup Department Head
Heather Neeld Production Coordinator
Richard Blankenship Construction Coordinator
Philip Ivey Key Hair Stylist
Kenneth Bryant Leadman
Merie Weismiller Wallace Still Photographer
Julie Callihan Makeup Artist
Michael Singer Unit Publicist
Cheralyn Lambeth Ager/Dyer
Elyse Sams Production Office Assistant
Simon Jones Driver
Trish Hofmann Unit Production Manager
Pete Romano Underwater Director of Photography
Jody Levin Executive In Charge Of Post Production
Jeff Ham Casting Associate
Louise Taylor Set Production Assistant
Jonathan Fuh Boom Operator
Carol S. Federman Assistant Makeup Artist
Rudy Persico Second Second Assistant Director
Jonathan Tubb Camera Trainee
Susan Dudeck Dialogue Editor
Eva Z. Cabrera Script Supervisor
Sheila Allen Production Accountant
Richard Hewitt First Assistant Director
David Balfour Property Master
Catharine Fletcher Incaprera Costume Supervisor
Philip Tallman Music Editor
Erik Holmberg Executive In Charge Of Production
Alexandra Krost Set Costumer
Bryan Pennington Dolby Consultant
Charles Thomas Baxter Location Manager
Peter Marziale Set Medic
Blair Rudes Translator
Richard Guinness Jr. Key Grip
Susan Antonelli Key Set Costumer
Janet Melody Textile Artist
Krista Allain Visual Effects Production Manager
Mirjam Bohnet-Brew Second Assistant Accountant
Barbara Branch First Assistant Accountant
Michael Clark Special Effects Technician
Brian Beckstoffer Location Assistant
Dana Kroeger Second Assistant Camera
Jason Acimovic Assistant Location Manager
Edward Button Camera Production Assistant
Wayne Lemmer Second Assistant Sound
Courtney Hale Assistant Production Coordinator
Todd Avery Camera Loader
Alyson Latz Second Assistant Director
Kelly Stultz Payroll Accountant
Eric Thompson ADR Mixer
Jerry Bertolami Dolly Grip
Susan Maye Construction Buyer
Charles A. Harris Key Rigging Grip
Andrew Hart Production Secretary
Glen Engels Best Boy Grip
Patrick Thornhill Assistant Editor
Kevin Black Production Assistant
Patrick Tendai Pfupajena Production Assistant
Danny Eckler Rigging Grip
Richard Kroll Researcher
Michael Boone Carpenter
Rhonda Bareford Assistant Makeup Artist
Terrence Malick Screenplay, Director
James Horner Original Music Composer, Conductor
Emmanuel Lubezki Director of Photography
Hank Corwin Editor
Saar Klein Editor
Mark Yoshikawa Editor
Francine Maisler Casting
Jacqueline West Costume Design
Erik Aadahl Sound Effects Editor
Craig Berkey Sound Designer, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Skip Lievsay Supervising Sound Editor
Jack Fisk Production Design
Joel Dougherty Assistant Sound Editor
José Antonio García Production Sound Mixer
Andy Cheng Stunt Coordinator, Second Unit Director
Kyle Cooper Title Designer
Chris Navarro ADR Recordist
Caitlin McKenna ADR Voice Casting
Sunday Boling Casting Assistant
Loveleen Tandan Casting Consultant
Raoul Max Trujillo Choreographer
Dana Belcastro Production Executive
Garrett Warren Stunts
Celestia Fox Casting
Rene Haynes Casting
Marton Csokas Thanks
Name Title
Trish Hofmann Executive Producer
Rolf Mittweg Executive Producer
Billy Weber Associate Producer
Sandhya Shardanand Associate Producer
Ivan Bess Associate Producer
Peter La Terriere Co-Producer
Sarah Green Producer
Bill Mechanic Executive Producer
Mark Ordesky Executive Producer
Toby Emmerich Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 20 31 14
2024 5 25 42 15
2024 6 22 38 12
2024 7 25 44 15
2024 8 21 33 13
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2024 12 14 27 9
2025 1 17 27 10
2025 2 13 20 3
2025 3 6 18 1
2025 4 2 2 1
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2025 6 1 2 1
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2025 9 3 4 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 4 963 963
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 373 585

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Reviews

Wuchak
5.0

**_Arty, draggy historical romance_** I've seen four of Terrence Malick's movies -- "The New World" (2005) and his three previous efforts, "Badlands" (1973), "Days of Heaven" (1978) and "The Thin Red Line" (1998). He's an arty filmmaker who isn't interested in making conventional "blockbusters." ... His three earlier efforts are all well-done and in some ways great. For instance, his pictures are always beautiful and imaginative, but there's also an airy, leisurely quality that will turn off some viewers. My favorite, by far, is "The Thin Red Line," a flawed masterpiece about the taking of a hill during the Guadalcanal Campaign in WWII. It successfully transcended it's storyline to seek answers to life's most profound questions. I guess Malick does this in all his films to some degree, but he was particularly effective with "The Thin Red Line." I mention this to stress that I'm familiar with Malick's films and understand his approach. I was really looking forward to "The New World," a historical drama detailing the establishment of the 1607 Jamestown, Virginia, colony with Captain John Smith (Colin Farrell), Pocahontas (Q'orianka Kilcher), John Rolfe (Christian Bale) and others (Christopher Plummer, Wes Studi, etc.). Shot near the actual locations on the Chickahominy River, Virginia, the film -- to be expected -- is beautiful to look at and the costumes, casting, etc. are all top-of-the-line. Unfortunately, for me, the pace is tedious and the themes aren't compelling enough to keep me spellbound. It's more than a tale of discovering a new world or new culture (for both sides); it's mostly a romance, which doesn't do much for me. Why? I'm not sure. Maybe because the pace was too draggy or possibly because I don't find Kilcher as Pocahontas all that captivating. Don't get me wrong, she's excellent in the role; I just don't find her anything to go ga-ga over, as Smith and Rolfe do in the story. One problem I have with the movie is the ridiculous romanticizing of the Natives as super-virtuous. Exhibit A is when Smith reflects in a voice-over: "They are gentle, loving, faithful, lacking in all guile and trickery. The words denoting lying, deceit, greed, envy, slander, and forgiveness have never been heard. They have no jealousy, no sense of possession." _Why sure!_ If the Indians had no sense of possession why did they attack the settlement when the Englanders failed to leave the next Spring? Why were tribes in regular warfare all over the Americas? Are we to believe not one of the Natives knew what a lie was? Or jealousy, envy, greed and slander? I get that the naturals weren't yet defiled by European-styled urbanization, but to suggest the above is pretty absurd. You can't tell me there wasn't a brave or two who had his eyes on young Pocahontas and felt a "smidgen" of jealousy when Smith stirred her romantic interests. The only way I can get past such nonsense and enjoy the movie is the fact that the voice-over in question was SMITH's idealized, romanticized perspective of a people with which he was enamored. In other words, it wasn't reality; it was his temporarily clouded opinion. BOTTOM LINE: "The New World" will be more appreciated by those who enjoy arty romantic films. For me, I'm in the middle: I see the good of the film -- even the greatness -- and value it, but I can't deny the film's shortcomings as far as a viewing experience goes. Regardless, it's great to be able to go back in time and visualize how it was when the Jamestown colony was established, highly romanticized as it is portrayed here. The film runs 136 minutes (long enough) and the extended cut 172 minutes. GRADE: C+

Oct 15, 2022
RalphRahal
7.0

So, The New World… where do I start? It’s visually great. The way Malick captures the connection between the tribes, nature, and the land makes it easy to get lost in the world he’s building. But the story? Yeah, it could’ve used some serious work. The first act kicks things off strong. You get t ... his detailed look at the tribes and their initial encounters with the English colonists. There’s this whole adventurous vibe, like you’re about to watch an epic exploration story unfold. But then the movie pivots hard into the second act and starts focusing on Captain John Smith and Pocahontas. Okay, I get it, their relationship is important, but it feels like the broader story gets pushed to the side. And then halfway through that act, Captain Smith is out, and suddenly it’s all about Pocahontas and her new romance with John Rolfe. By the time we hit the final act, it’s entirely about Pocahontas, her life in England, and her trying to find her place in this new world. The whole movie feels like it keeps changing its mind about what it wants to be. That’s where it lost me a bit. What started as this epic about cultures clashing and survival turns into a love story, and then into a drama about identity and loss. Don’t get me wrong, the individual pieces are interesting, but together? It’s messy. It feels like Malick didn’t know what direction to take the story, so he just went with all of them. The plot kind of fizzles out—like, what’s the point of it all? The English colonize the land, force the indigenous people to adapt, and then it ends with Pocahontas raising a kid with an Englishman in England. Now, to be fair, the production is stunning. The costumes, the set design, the overall atmosphere... Even though I’m no expert on the tribes or their customs, the emotional connection is there. You can tell a lot of care went into making this world feel real. The cinematography is next-level. Malick knows how to make every shot look like a painting, and that’s something I appreciated even when the story wasn’t holding my attention. But ultimately, while the movie’s storytelling style works, it’s dreamy and poetic, the overall plot just needed more focus. It starts as one thing, shifts to another, and ends as something else entirely. It’s like it can’t decide what it wants to say, and that’s frustrating because it had so much potential.

Dec 17, 2024