The King's Daughter

What on Earth can hold more power than a king?

7.1
20221h 34m

Production

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Logo for Brookwell-McNamara Entertainment
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King Louis XIV's quest for immortality leads him to capture and steal a mermaid's life force, a move that is further complicated by his illegitimate daughter's discovery of the creature.

Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The King's Daughter - Official Trailer - Exclusively in Theaters Jan 21st

The King's Daughter - Official Trailer - Exclusively in Theaters Jan 21st

Thumbnail for video: THE KING'S DAUGHTER Trailer (2022) Kaya Scodelario, Fantasy Movie

THE KING'S DAUGHTER Trailer (2022) Kaya Scodelario, Fantasy Movie

Cast

Photo of Pierce Brosnan

Pierce Brosnan

King Louis XIV

Photo of Kaya Scodelario

Kaya Scodelario

Marie-Josephe D'Alember

Photo of Benjamin Walker

Benjamin Walker

Yves De La Croix

Photo of William Hurt

William Hurt

Pere La Chaise

Photo of Pablo Schreiber

Pablo Schreiber

Dr. Labarthe

Photo of Ben Lloyd-Hughes

Ben Lloyd-Hughes

Jean-Michel Lintillac

Photo of Kaya Blocksage

Kaya Blocksage

Duchesse de Fontages

Photo of Kasia Kaczmarek

Kasia Kaczmarek

Sister Constance

Photo of Tom Morton

Tom Morton

First Musketeer

Photo of Jessica Clarke

Jessica Clarke

Madam Devereaux

Photo of Marc de Panda

Marc de Panda

Intendant of the King

Photo of Crispin Freeman

Crispin Freeman

Musketeer #6

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Reviews

M

Manuel São Bento

2/10

MORE REVIEWS @ https://www.msbreviews.com/

"The King's Daughter is everything viewers expected: a formulaic, uninteresting story filled with old-fashioned cliches and spine-chilling visual effects - not in a good way.

Not a single filmmaker and respective creative team deserve to have their work stuck in a seven-year limbo until it's released, let alone due to scheduling and budget issues. However, while the horrible VFX can be forgiven, the disappointing narrative can't be saved, not even by the also underwhelming performances.

Pierce Brosnan (False Positive) seems to represent a caricature, while Kaya Scodelario (Crawl) benefits from the release delay, which fortunately didn't negatively impact her early career. The only positive point is that, in fact, it reached the big screen.

Too bad it's not worth it."

Rating: D-

M

Manuel São Bento

2/10

MORE REVIEWS @ https://www.msbreviews.com/

"The King's Daughter is everything viewers expected: a formulaic, uninteresting story filled with old-fashioned cliches and spine-chilling visual effects - not in a good way.

Not a single filmmaker and respective creative team deserve to have their work stuck in a seven-year limbo until it's released, let alone due to scheduling and budget issues. However, while the horrible VFX can be forgiven, the disappointing narrative can't be saved, not even by the also underwhelming performances.

Pierce Brosnan (False Positive) seems to represent a caricature, while Kaya Scodelario (Crawl) benefits from the release delay, which fortunately didn't negatively impact her early career. The only positive point is that, in fact, it reached the big screen.

Too bad it's not worth it."

Rating: D-

G

CinemaSerf

4/10

Must have been tax return time for Pierce Brosnan as he "stars" in this daft historical fantasy about Louis XIV of France and his aspirations for immortality. Egged on by the ambitious "Labarthe" (Pablo Schreiber) he believes that he can live forever if her manages to get hold of a mermaid and - well, he pinches her life force. Snag is, though, his own daughter "Mary-Josephe" (Kaya Scodelerio) is not so supportive of this scheme when she discovers this distressed sea creature and so, of course, off we head into the turbulent waters of familial discord before a whopping great power ballad at the end. William Hurt crops up here, too, and Benjamin Walker provides some eye candy - but the story is Disney-lite, there is way too much verbiage and although Brosnan tries to ham it all up, he just looks like he couldn't care less about any of it - a feeling with which I could pretty readily associate. It does look good, the costumes and Versailles look lovely but the rest of it is straight to video.

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