In the late 13th century, William Wallace returns to Scotland after living away from his homeland for many years. The king of Scotland has died without an heir and the king of England, a ruthless pagan known as Edward the Longshanks, has seized the throne. Wallace becomes the leader of a ramshackle yet courageous army .. Read more
| Starring | Mel Gibson, Sophie Marceau, Patrick McGoohan, Catherine McCormack |
|---|---|
| Director | Mel Gibson |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Drama, Thriller |
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In the late 13th century, William Wallace returns to Scotland after living away from his homeland for many years. The king of Scotland has died without an heir and the king of England, a ruthless pagan known as Edward the Longshanks, has seized the throne. Wallace becomes the leader of a ramshackle yet courageous army determined to vanquish the greater English forces. At the historic battle of Stirling, Wallace leads his army to a stunning victory against the English. Knighted by the grateful Scottish nobles, Sir William Wallace extends the conflict south of the border and storms the city of York. King Edward I is astonished by the unexpected turn of events. Unable to rely on his ineffectual son Prince Edward, Longshanks sends his daughter-in-law Princess Isabelle to discuss a truce with Wallace.
| Starring | Mel Gibson, Sophie Marceau, Patrick McGoohan, Catherine McCormack, Angus Macfadyen |
|---|---|
| Director | Mel Gibson |
| Studio | 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 3 hrs Blu-ray: 2 hrs 50 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Collections | 100 must-see movies, McCain's Classic Movies |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Drama, Thriller |
| Language | DVD: English Blu-ray: English |
| Released | DVD: 04 Nov 2002 Blu-ray: 02 Nov 2009 Production year: 1995 |
| Format | DVD |
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Mel Gibson directs this 13th-century saga of Scottish revolt against English tyranny with a claymore-like flourish, defying the criticism that there are moments as bogus as plastic haggis. He also stars, portraying William Wallace as a medieval, woad-smeared Mad Max-like hero, a rebel leader and rabble rouser, an intrepid champion from the mould of Hollywood heroes, made believable by the grace of the star. However, if he's a wartime resistance leader in the style of Robin Hood with a comely Maid Marion in the shape of Sophie Marceau then Patrick McGoohan as the villainous King Edward Longshanks is a jeering, sneering cliché too far — the Sheriff of Nottingham with his own portable torture chamber. As director, Gibson's control over thousands of extras, in the swift succession of gruesome hand-to-hand battles, is as effective as anything in Laurence Olivier's Henry V. But when the action moves in for the emotional kill, the film loses credibility — Wallace's disdain at his own disembowelment being a prime example. Yet, for all its stereotypes and disparities, there is a nicely judged air of political cynicism, as noblemen switch allegiances as easily as horses. It succeeds in bringing to life the reality of Scottish patriotism and brilliantly captures the spirit of a revolution 700 years before its deliverance. Little wonder it won an Oscar for best picture.
A stirring nationalistic epic, acted and directed with great verve; some of the history may be suspect, but the film creates a sense of myth with its sweep and passion.
It's too easy to bash the English, especally when it's inaccurate.
If it were the other way around, the noise would still be heard.
If this movie was made with any other of our island nations portrayed as black as the English are in this the din would still not have died down...wait a minute, sorry, I'm being really stupid - this film would NEVER have been made with the Welsh, the Scots or the Irish receiving the same treatment as the English have here because although in our politically 'correct' world where bigotry and stereotyping is a dreadful, shameful thing it seems to be okay if its about the English - as that open-minded and magnanimous American-Australian Mel Gibson demonstrates here in 'The Patriot'...oh sorry, of course - we were talking about 'Braveheart' werent we? Got confused there for a moment... Anyway, William Wallace, yes...is it entertaining? Yes, absolutely, totally - in that 'you can leave your brain at home' kind of way - which is not to be knocked, afterall you watch a film to be entertained dont you? But to say 'this is the story of William Wallace' or 'this is a true story' would be HIGHLY inaccurate, this is NOT the story of William Wallace - and in that lies it's danger...what Gibson has done is feed us a big slice of, quite vicious, anti-English, propaganda disguised as a harmless nice little popcorn movie...so not a bit like 'The Patriot' at all then...
By the way, for the record - Im not English - Im Irish...I just believe in fair play...
Hollywood actor Mel Gibson is convinced his hit 1995 movie Braveheart paved the way for devolution in Scotland - insisting the movie helped bring about political change. The U.K. government handed autonomy to the country in 1998, forming the Scottish Parliament and allowing the Scots to handle their own affairs on matters including education, environment and healthcare. Gibson is adamant Braveheart, which was released two years before a referendum in the country on the subject of devolution,... Read more