On this day in 1305, William Wallace was captured by the British.  The following is part of my review of the movie “Braveheart” on my blog The War Movie Buff (https://warmoviebuff.blogspot.com/2011/04/67-braveheart.html ).  As history teachers, movies can be a good supplement to our lessons, provided they are reasonably accurate.  In my Western Civilizations classes I would show “Spartacus” and “The Lion in Winter”.  Both are historical fiction and very entertaining and reasonably accurate.  The closest equivalent to “Spartacus” is “Braveheart” which purports to tell the story of William Wallace.  But I would never show a movie like “Braveheart” because it is egregiously inaccurate.  Spoiler alert:  the review covers the whole plot.

 The movie begins in Scotland in 1280.  The narrator claims that the King of Scotland has died without heir so the “pagan” king of England, Edward I (Patrick McGoohan), has decided to conquer Scotland.  (The Scottish king was still alive and had two sons.  Edward was a Christian.)  Edward invites the Scottish nobles to parley and then treacherously hangs them.  (No such meeting or executions occurred.)  Wallace, a farmer’s son, finds the bodies.  (Wallace was the son of a lower knight.)  His father goes off to war and returns dead.  Wallace is adopted by his uncle.

In London, Edward forces his flamingly gay son to marry a French princess.  (Edward II may have been bisexual, but he had 5 kids by his two wives.)  Edward orders the practice of primo noctae (the right to sleep with the bride first) to encourage British nobles to settle in Scotland.  (Ridiculous, plus there was no such thing in England.) 

                Wallace returns from a pilgrimage and reacquaints himself with his childhood sweetheart Murron.  They secretly marry.  He only wants to live in peace as a farmer.  (If Wallace ever married it was after he was already an outlaw.)  He rescues her from being raped by a loathsome British soldier.  He escapes, but she doesn’t.  The local baron slits her throat to lure him back.  (all bull crap)  Wallace comes riding back in with some nunchucks (I kid you not) hidden behind his back.  The bloodletting commences ending with the throat-cutting of the baron and now Wallace is the leader of a rebellion.

                Robert the Bruce (Angus Macfadyen) is the logical heir to the throne.  His father is a Machiavellian who is made repellant by his leprosy (untrue).  The father convinces the Bruce that compromise with the British is the best route, so Robert does not join Wallace.

                Wallace faces the British at the Battle of Stirling (actually the Battle of Stirling Bridge, but since Gibson did not want a bridge interfering with his battle…)  Wallace’s force waits for the British on a hill (like Spartacus).  He gives a fiery speech (like in Henry V).  Wallace’s men lift their kilts to moon the British.  (The Scots did not wear kilts at this time in history.)  When the British cavalry (wearing scaled armor?!) charges, Wallace’s men produce his secret weapon – pikes (which they had hidden where?) to impale the horses.  The battle becomes a melee (like Spartacus without the graphic violence).   The Scots win when the Scottish nobles flank the British with their cavalry.   Wallace beheads the enemy commander.  90% of the British are killed.  No main characters on Wallace’s side dies.  (Nothing about this battle remotely recalls the Battle of Stirling Bridge which was an ambush of the British army as it crossed a bridge.  The pikes were used at Falkirk, not here.)

                Wallace is knighted (untrue) and leads an invasion of England featuring the siege of York (he did sack some towns, but did not attack York).  Meanwhile, Edward I is so upset he hurls his son’s gay lover out a window (Gibson was justly accused of homophobia for this scene).  (The supposed lover was actually exiled, but not under these circumstances.)  He decides to send the Princess Isabelle (Sophie Marceau) to negotiate with Wallace (I am not kidding) while he sneakily prepares an army.  Wallace turns down the offer of title, lands, and gold (surprise!), but there is some chemistry between him and the Princess (surprise!)  (Do I need to point out all this is bull crap?)  Edward marches with a large army including Irish mercenaries (actually, there were no Irish in his army).  The Princess sends warning to Wallace.

                In the Battle of Falkirk, the Irish open the attack, but when they reach the Scots, they shake hands and switch sides (I am not making this up).  Wallace has fire arrows fired to set the oil spread the night before in the field afire (like Spartacus).  This prevents the British cavalry from charging, but we still get an infantry melee.  At the crucial moment, the bastard Scottish nobles leave the field thus dooming Wallace.  Edward orders his archers to fire into the melee, not caring who gets hit. He then sends in reinforcements (like Spartacus).  (In the actual battle, Wallace’s men were in hollow squares armed with pikes.  Edward bombarded the fixed squares with arrows which won an easy victory.)  Wallace sees Edward leaving (he decides not to stay to the end?) and goes after him like in a Western.  He is dehorsed by a knight if full plate armor.  Guess who is behind the visor?  Robert Bruce!  Bruce saves Wallace from capture.  (Never mind!) The movie should have ended here, but then Mel would not have been able to get tortured (or torture history buffs some more).

                Mel goes Lethal Weapon on the two main treacherous nobles, killing one by riding his horse into the poltroon’s bedroom and smashing his head in with a flail!  He drops the other’s corpse onto the Bruce’s dining table.  (Nope.)  Edward sends the Princes to lure Wallace into a trap, but instead she allows herself to be impregnated in a romantic cottage.  (A neat trick considering they never met and she was not even married to Edward II until two year after Wallace’s death.  Plus she would have been nine years old at the time.)  Wallace:  “Why do you help me?”  Isabelle:  “Because of the way you are looking at me now”.  (Gag, then barf!)

                Wallace goes to meet the Bruce, but he is captured because the leper sold him out so Robert could be king.  (He was actually betrayed by a Scottish noble.)  Robert is guilt-ridden about this and turns against his father. 

The Princess begs Wallace to confess and thus avoid torture.  Wallace agrees.  (Just kidding)  “Every man dies – not every man really lives.”  (A quote from a different William Wallace.)  And finally, the moment Mel has been waiting for – the torture scene!  But not simple torture.  First, lifted with a noose.  Second, stretching.  Third, pain inflicted on a cross shaped table (Christ imagery anyone?).  Finally, because he responds with “Freedom!” instead of “mercy”, they mercifully behead him (wait, what?)  (Actually, Wallace suffered worse in being drawn and quartered.) Meanwhile, Edward lies dying nearby.  (He died two years later.)  The last thing he contemplates is the Princess whispering that she carries Wallace’s child who will be the next king (provided it’s a boy, of course).  (Alas, the fictional child was still-born.)

Did I mention William Wallace was not called Braveheart?  That was the villainous (according to the movie) Robert Bruce.  The guy who actually got Scotland independence.

The Trial of William Wallace – Wikipedia Commons


0 Comments

I would love to hear what you think.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.