Dark River
- 2017
- Tous publics
- 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
Following the death of her father, Alice (Ruth Wilson) returns to her home village for the first time in 15 years, to claim the tenancy to the family farm she believes is rightfully hers.Following the death of her father, Alice (Ruth Wilson) returns to her home village for the first time in 15 years, to claim the tenancy to the family farm she believes is rightfully hers.Following the death of her father, Alice (Ruth Wilson) returns to her home village for the first time in 15 years, to claim the tenancy to the family farm she believes is rightfully hers.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win & 5 nominations total
Una McNulty
- Susan Bell
- (as Úna McNulty)
Esme Creed-Miles
- Young Alice
- (as Esmé Creed-Miles)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This gets right down into the roots of northern farming. A great cast and exceptional performances from Ruth Wilson and Mark Stanley, who play siblings at loggerheads.
The film itself is quite dark. Everyday is pretty much grey and dull to fit the mood for the film. It's filmed beautifully, exactly what you would expect in the lovely northern countryside.
I really enjoyed the story, I felt it got deep down into a family feud that included abuse and regret. Very well written.
The film itself is quite dark. Everyday is pretty much grey and dull to fit the mood for the film. It's filmed beautifully, exactly what you would expect in the lovely northern countryside.
I really enjoyed the story, I felt it got deep down into a family feud that included abuse and regret. Very well written.
Let me start on a positive note, the acting in this movie is very good. Ruth Wilson in particular, as always, played her role spot on. But I'm sad to say that's the only thing this movie has going for it. There is really no real storyline, unless I missed something? It's very vague and suggests that there was trauma in the woman's past, aside from that it's an hour and a half of an unstable man having mental breakdowns and yelling at people. But I blame none of this on the actors, the directors and writers should have added something. At the end of this movie I feel like I'm in the same place as when I watched the trailer prior, and I really wanted to like this one, it was supposed to be fantastic and Ruth Wilson is perfect in all her films and shows.
I give this a 6/10 based solely on Wilson's performance, otherwise I would give it a 3/10
I give this a 6/10 based solely on Wilson's performance, otherwise I would give it a 3/10
Ruth Wilson puts in a strong performance in 'Dark River', playing a young farmer who inherits her family's troubled legacy. She's good, but the film never completely escapes its "grim up north" sensibility, as a story unfolds of unmitigated harshness in a world inhabited only the by the terminally taciturn. One can credit the writers for not tossing in a throwaway romance; but without hope, it's hard to sustain the interest of the audience.
From the united kingdom.. when kate hears her dad has died, she returns to the family tenancy to fix it up and run it properly. Problem is, her brother, who has worked it with dad for years, wants to run it himself. To top it all off, there are dark family secrets that still have to be worked out. Other reviewers have used the word bleak, and some of it is tough to watch. Those who enjoy hallmark films probably won't like how deep and dark this gets. And sometimes when we're seeing flashbacks, it takes a while to realize we're in the flashback, which is annoying. But the acting and the story are topnotch. There is another scene where we watch kate gut a rabbit she has caught for dinner... that might be hard for some to watch. Can brother and sister get past their own family history and run the farm togther? It's a great film, but there are some very dark moments in this one. Directed by clio barnard, who has been nominated for two Baftas. Film based on the novel by rose tremain. This one has been remade several times, so it must be a good story!
It is COVID-19 "stay at home" time, I found this movie on the Kanopy streaming site through my public library. Very English, I had to turn on the captions to be able to understand much of the dialog.
Although I haven't seen a lot of her work I am a big Ruth Wilson fan. About 34-ish here she plays Alice Bell, working for someone on their sheep farm. Then she gets word that her father had died so she travels there to stake her claim for the tenancy for her family's sheep farm but immediately meets resistance from her brother who hasn't been taking very good care of the place.
Alice had left home some 15 years earlier, and in flashbacks we are shown that she suffered from abuse by her father. She still had visions that he was there at times. Most of the story is about Alice and her brother locking horns and struggling to find the best course of action through this difficult situation. She wants to revive the farm, he wants to liquidate and take off with the profits.
Its rating is about right, it is a well made and well acted drama but without much joy.
Although I haven't seen a lot of her work I am a big Ruth Wilson fan. About 34-ish here she plays Alice Bell, working for someone on their sheep farm. Then she gets word that her father had died so she travels there to stake her claim for the tenancy for her family's sheep farm but immediately meets resistance from her brother who hasn't been taking very good care of the place.
Alice had left home some 15 years earlier, and in flashbacks we are shown that she suffered from abuse by her father. She still had visions that he was there at times. Most of the story is about Alice and her brother locking horns and struggling to find the best course of action through this difficult situation. She wants to revive the farm, he wants to liquidate and take off with the profits.
Its rating is about right, it is a well made and well acted drama but without much joy.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film is very loosely based on Rose Tremain's novel Trespass. Writer/director Clio Barnard wrote an initial screenplay that was much closer to the book, which focuses on two sets of of siblings in their sixties who become involved in a property dispute in France. After the initial draft, her producers encouraged her to make the story her own so that the final film, which focuses on only one set of siblings in their thirties and is set in England is only very loosely related to the book.
- GoofsJoe shows Alice some shepherd's needle growing in a field. But the plant he shows her doesn't look like it (e.g. it's too big and too robust) and it wouldn't grow in that grassy and well-vegetated pasture as it's a weed of arable cultivation. In fact it's extremely rare in Yorkshire so would be exceedingly unlikely to be present in the area at all.
- SoundtracksAn Acre of Land
Traditional
Music by Harry Escott
Arranged by Harry Escott and PJ Harvey
Published by Faber Music and by Hot Head Music Ltd
Administered by Kobalt Music Group Ltd
Performed by Harry Escott and PJ Harvey
Recorded at Westpoint Studios, London
Mixed at Air Studios, London
Under exclusive license from Faber Music and Hot Head Music Ltd (P) and (C) 2017
- How long is Dark River?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $7,714
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $4,246
- Jul 1, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $239,182
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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