River Queen is a 2005 New Zealand war drama film directed by Vincent Ward and starring Samantha Morton, Kiefer Sutherland, Cliff Curtis and Temuera Morrison. The film opened to mixed reviews but performed well at the box office in New Zealand.
The film takes place in New Zealand in 1868 during Titokowaru's War between the Māori and New Zealand colonial forces. Sarah O'Brien (Samantha Morton)
has grown up among soldiers in a frontier garrison on Te Awa Nui, the
Great River. Pregnant at 16 by a young Maori boy, she gives birth to a
son. When, 7 years later, her son, Boy, is kidnapped by his Maori
grandfather, Sarah is distraught. Abandoned by her soldier father,
Sarah's life becomes a search for her son. Her only friend, Doyle (Kiefer Sutherland)
is a broken-down soldier without the means to help her. Lured to the
ill rebel chief Te Kai Po's village by the chance to see her child,
Sarah finds herself falling in love with Boy's uncle, Wiremu (Cliff Curtis) and increasingly drawn to the village way of life. Using medical skills she learned from her father, Sarah heals Te Kai Po (Temuera Morrison)
and begins to reconcile with her son (Rawiri Pene). But her idyllic
time at the village is shattered when she realises that she has healed
the chief only to hear him declare war on the Colonials, men she feels
are her friends, her only family. Her desperation deepens when she
realises that Boy intends to prove himself in war, refusing to go back
down river with her. As the conflict escalates Sarah finds herself at
the centre of the storm, torn by the love she feels for Boy and Wiremu,
anguished over the attachments she still has to the white man's world,
and sickened by the brutality she witnesses on either side. And when the
moment comes, Sarah must choose where she belongs; will she be forced
back into the white man's way of life, or will she have the courage to
follow the instincts that are telling her where she truly belongs?

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