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Braveheart (1995)
In Mel Gibson's own Best Picture-winning warrior epic
about a legendary 13th century historical Scottish figure - a political
rebel:
- the sequence of the secret courtship, marriage,
and consummation of naked love (in the moonlight) between future
Scottish freedom-fighter William Wallace (Mel Gibson) and Murron
MacClannough (Catherine McCormack), originally his childhood sweetheart
- the legendary face-painted Scottish hero's fight
against the English in the awesome battle of Stirling Bridge after
he rallied his men by riding in front of them on horseback: ("Sons
of Scotland! I am William Wallace....Yes, I've heard. Kills men by
the hundreds. And if he were here, he'd consume the English with
fireballs from his eyes, and bolts of lightning from his arse. (Laughter)
I am William Wallace! And I see a whole army of my country men, here,
in defiance of tyranny. You've come to fight as free men, and free
men you are. What will you do with that freedom? Will you fight?
...Aye, fight and you may die, run and you'll live, at least a while.
And dying in your beds many years from now, would you be willing
to trade all the days from this day to that for one chance, just
one chance to come back here and tell our enemies that they may take
our lives, but they'll never take our freedom! Alba gu bra! (Scotland
forever!)")
- the sequence of charging British horsemen coming at
the Scottish hordes, as Wallace held off his fighters for as long
as possible by crying out "Hold!" until the moment when
he yelled:
"Now" - the men crouched down, grabbed pointed wooden spikes
and raised them, and impaled the riders and their horses; brutal hand-to-hand
combat followed, with bloody and lethal swordplay
- after Wallace was defeated at the Battle of Falkirk,
the brutal (heroic) execution scene after he was found guilty of
high treason, and he courageously withstood torture ("I'm not
dead yet") and then died for his cause at the Tower of London;
first, he was stretched (partially hung with a rope by his neck),
racked (or stretched in mid-air by ropes tied to his hands and feet),
and then disemboweled ( "drawn and quartered") in a public
display; showing continual resistance, he defiantly cried out his
last word, not "Mercy" as he was commanded to beg, but: "FREEEEE-DOMMMMMM!";
the executioner was given the nod to kill him; he turned his head
to the side - and had a vision of his already-murdered wife Murron
(Catherine McCormack) - seen walking in the crowd as a ghost and
smiling at him [Note: she had been publicly executed - her throat
was slit - for assaulting an English soldier intent on rape one day
after their marriage]; after he was beheaded with one swinging stroke
of a sharp axe (off-screen), his death reunited him with her; the
bloody rag he held clenched in his fist dropped to the ground
Wallace's Execution Scene
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- the last lines of the film, William Wallace's voice-over
- about the victorious Scots under the leadership of Robert the
Bruce (Angus Macfadyen): ("In the Year of our Lord 1314, patriots
of Scotland - starving and outnumbered - charged the fields of
Bannockburn. They fought like warrior poets; they fought like Scotsmen,
and won their freedom")
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Love Scene: Wallace with Murron
William Wallace: "Sons of Scotland!"
"Hold!"
"Now"
Impalement of Horse Riders with Spikes During Battle
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