T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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844.1 | | WMOIS::HORNE_C | HORNET-THE FALL GUY | Tue May 30 1995 10:22 | 6 |
| Mel was asked by a fellow what he wore under his kilt....his reply was
........YOUR WIFE'S LIPSTICK!!!
HORnet
|
844.2 | **** | MDNITE::RIVERS | No comment | Tue May 30 1995 11:08 | 37 |
|
Kevin Costner had this three hours or so epic "Dances with Wolves".
Mel Gibson, not quite taking up a cause, has done his own epic "Dances
with Kilts"-- er, "Braveheart".
Now, I really, really liked "Rob Roy", but I really, really, *really*
liked "Braveheart". Great story, great acting, great characters,
sweeping scenery, romantic love, fantastic battle scenes, you name it.
Can't find one fault in the movie (well, the dummy horse that went off
the cliff floated in the water, kinda proving it was a dummy, and Mel's
accent could have been better, but hey....)
I've really missed the "billions of extras and horses" sort of costume
dramas that used to be popular but somewhere got too expensive and
unprofitable to make. So those "billions of extras and horses" scenes
were just icing on the cake.
Everybody in the audience seemed to enjoy themselves, too. At 2:55 or
so, nobody got restless, which is a good sign. I didn't notice the
length of the movie till I got out and saw what time it was.
A word of warning: The aforementioned battle scenes are, while not
over the top, realistic in their violence. I wasn't grossed out, and
much of what you see is half-suggested/half-shown, but it is "grit your
teeth and wince" violence. Billions of people and horses charging each
other with swords and lances and spears and clubs does not make an
especially pretty sight once they meet somewhere in the middle and
"Braveheart" doesn't gloss over this. On the other hand, it didn't
seem gratutiously bloody to me, and I consider myself the "average"
movie-goer.
I'd see this again any number of times.
**** out of ****
kim
|
844.3 | Marvelous | RNDHSE::WALL | Show me, don't tell me | Tue May 30 1995 12:13 | 55 |
|
Well, I thought this was terrific, too. Despite the comparisons that
might be drawn with Rob Roy, this is really a different kind of movie.
Rob Roy was at least in part a love story. Braveheart is much closer
to straight historical drama. This is not to place one over the other
-- it's to point out that people who saw Rob Roy and went to Braveheart
expecting much the same are in for a surprise.
I believe I read somewhere that this movie was scripted by the last
living direct descendant of William Wallace, and it shows, because it's
certainly a different take on this segment of Anglo-Scottish history
than I've encountered before. Before this, I hadn't run across an
account that left Robert the Bruce looking so bad.
Quite often, the presence of a single figure so completely dominating a
movie is not a good sign. Gibson directed and starred and Wallace is a
heavy-duty role: he must be on screen for at least eighty percent of
the movie and there isn't a minute where he's not completely engaging.
Everything that happens to him is interesting.
There was one point in the first part of the film where I couldn't
decide if the editor was asleep at the switch or if it was just the
first manifestation of an effect that occurs later in the movie --
where Wallace's legend grows to far outstrip the man, which is doing
something, if Wallace did half of what the film has him doing. And the
credit for this has to go to Gibson as an actor. Some time before the
filming of Lethal Weapon he acquired this aw shucks smile and he puts
it to excellent use here, as well as a number of other moods.
Gibson would have looked too isloated without a strong supporting cast,
and here the script and the actors deliver. There's no one who looks
plastic. One reviewer accused Braveheart of being homophobic because
of the so flagrantly homosexual and so negative picture of Edward II.
I didn't think so, but of course, I'm a straight white guy of
Anglo-Saxon descent. Let's be glad the story chose not to describe how
Edward II purportedly met his end. Kudos, too, to the woman who
portrayed the Princess of Wales. It would have been easy to look
strong next to Edward II, but she looks strong compared to Patrick
McGoohan's forceful Edward I, and Gibson's Wallace. I thought all
Wallace's companions were great, and all the villians villianous
without being cardboard.
As for the violence, I didn't find it gratuitous, because war is a
messy business and the further back you go in history the messier it
tends to be. Anyone who found what went on in The Last of the Mohicans
or Rob Roy hard to take will be squirming at this one, too. And
there's no denying the movie is sad. There's no attempt to dress up
Wallace's fate, though thankfully, they don't dwell on the mechanics of
it.
I was also very impressed with James Horner's score -- one of his best
and most original efforts. I'll be going to see this again before it
leaves theatres, and it's defintiely on my video acquisition list.
DFW
|
844.4 | .. | LALDIE::D_FORRESTER | Donald Forrester @AYO 823-3247 | Tue May 30 1995 12:53 | 10 |
|
Although I haven't seen the film, I understand that the only 'flaw' was
Mel Gibsons height ... he is 5'10 while Wallace was actually 6'6
... apparently MG had to stand on boxes in some scenes to make him
look taller.
So, for the sequel, Mel will need to grow another 8" :-)
Donald
|
844.5 | even the horses died | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Tue May 30 1995 12:56 | 13 |
|
Fantastic movie.
I looked up the history of William Wallace. Some things were changed
for the movie and dramatic effect, but overall it's appears to
generally follow what happened. But who cares right?
If anybody ever wondered what they wore under those kilts, this
movie will answer that question.
Dave
|
844.6 | An interesting tidbit | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Tue May 30 1995 13:51 | 5 |
| Re some notes back. I understand from some friends that the scenery was
actually that of Ireland, not Scotland (maybe they were filming Rob Roy
there), and the extras were of the Irish Army.
Marilyn
|
844.7 | Putting the big star/director in his place. | PENUTS::CGILLIS | Gee, now that you mention it... | Tue May 30 1995 14:26 | 8 |
| re .1 "You wife's lipstick"
Actually it was the other way around, Mel asked one of the extra's
and that was the answer he got. (I'm a night-owl and saw the interview,
Letterman I believe, just after they cut the legs off of MG's pants to
make them shorts).
Chuck
|
844.8 | Both locations | SHRCTR::SCHILTON | Does fuzzy logic tickle? | Tue May 30 1995 14:27 | 8 |
| The credits at the end of the film reference both places. And
if you see it, it would make sense that the battles, using the
Irish extras, were filmed in Ireland. I don't know that Ireland
has the peaks that are shown in some shots...I figured those
were the Scottish bits.
Sue
|
844.9 | | EPS::RODERICK | The Amazing Colossal Job | Tue May 30 1995 14:54 | 7 |
| According to Entertainment Tonight, Mel had 1700 Irish Army volunteers
as extras for the battle scenes.
His epic at 2:59 comes in three minutes under Kevin Costner's Dances
with Wolves.
Lisa
|
844.10 | | RANGER::LINDT::bence | Photoperiodic | Tue May 30 1995 16:35 | 19 |
|
hummm, I didn't like this at all. I found the most scenes to be
overlong - whether they be battle, torture, or romantic interludes.
I spent a lot of time checking my watch during this. I came away
genuinely confused by the hype for this movie.
I also question the portrait presented of Robert the Bruce. He
may have been a pragmatist, but I doubt he was the wimp portrayed here.
*** POSSIBLE SPOILERS ***
The bit of fiction between Wallace and the Princess of Wales was
thoroughly off-putting after the supposed realism of earlier scenes.
Wallace's final scene seemed to go on so long it became more laughable
than horrific.
|
844.11 | Proud tobee Scottish | BHAJI::RBERNARD | King snoke | Tue May 30 1995 21:43 | 10 |
| I haven't seen this Movie yet but I am so glad that Hollywood have
started to realise that there is a huge audience wanting to see this
type of History.It seems as though 99% of the movies made in the last
decade have all been about America and lets face it America's History
dates back only a couple of centuries.This type of Movie shows to
americans that other countries have most to offer about History/Ancient
Living and Hollywood should try it's best to produce movies of this
nature, Also it is a good history lesson for all.
Scottish Punter.
|
844.12 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Wed May 31 1995 10:17 | 6 |
| >>This type of Movie shows to
>>americans that other countries have most to offer about History/Ancient
>>Living
gee, there's a revelation, eh? ;>
|
844.13 | can't wait! | DECWET::MCCLAIN | | Wed May 31 1995 13:12 | 6 |
| I haven't seen this yet, but have heard a lot of good things about it,
and am interested in its accuracy, being of direct scottish background
myself.
Joe McClain
|
844.14 | If you only see 1 movie this year, see this | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Mon Jun 05 1995 12:49 | 12 |
| I can't attest to its historical accuracy, but this is one terrific
movie! We saw it yesterday, and I can honestly say I was disappointed
it ended. This after a running time of app. 2:55. There is not one
moment of this movie I would have cut.
By far, the best movie I've seen this year.
**** out of ****
Marilyn
|
844.15 | opposite reaction | ONOFRE::SKELLY_JO | | Mon Jun 05 1995 15:53 | 12 |
| I think there's a possibility there was a great movie somewhere in all that
footage, but Mel needs to acquire better skills in the cutting room. I
found myself bored enough in some of the overlong scenes to begin mentally
editing the film myself. The result was that I didn't really get caught up
in the story. I wish that I could have.
The excessive insistence on realism in the battle scenes, mixed with all
the make-believe elsewhere, also betrayed Mel's amateur standing as a
director. It's what I classify as "uneven" direction.
John
|
844.16 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon Jun 05 1995 17:23 | 9 |
| I thought it was a little slow in starting out, and lost focus toward
the end (I was convinced the diving horse bit was part of a fantasy
sequence, at first), but for the most part, it's a rousing good movie.
Oddly enough, the best parts are the gory battle scenes and the warmth
that develops amongst the good guys -- you usually don't get good
action _and_ good emotion. I liked the Princess of Wales (Sophie
Marceau), but her attendant is someone to keep an eye on, too.
I wouldn't mind paying full price to see it.
|
844.17 | | ONOFRE::SKELLY_JO | | Mon Jun 05 1995 22:13 | 15 |
| > I liked the Princess of Wales
The movie got me interested in these historical figures, so I spent some
time looking them up in an on-line encyclopedia. If its dates are accurate,
and I have no reason to suppose they aren't, it reveals some anachronisms.
At the time she is first addressed as Princess of Wales, she couldn't have
been. Her husband was the first English prince to have the title, but he
didn't acquire it until 1301. In the movie, she is called the Princess of
Wales before the battle of Falkirk, which took place in 1298. Of course,
that's a minor matter compared to the fact that she didn't marry her
husband until 1308, when he was already King Edward II and Wallace had
spent three years in his grave!
John
|
844.18 | .... | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Tue Jun 06 1995 13:10 | 5 |
|
It appears many viewers have become history buffs after seeing this
film.
Only film out right now, that I would gladly go see again.
|
844.19 | ..and whos' ever made a perfectly edited movie?.... | DAGWUD::FLATTERY | | Tue Jun 06 1995 13:39 | 14 |
| .. Gibson himself says that they changed several things just for the
sake of making a good movie...most of it is very true but he doesn't
claim that every reference is historically correct...in fact the battle
of Stirling was fought on a a bridge.....gibson decided to film it on
flat ground cuz he couldnt' fit something like 1500 hundred people on a
bridge and have it look right...you want historically correct...then go
see a good documentary....you want a movie that evokes passionate emotions
AND makes you think...(as is obvious by everyone running out to check out
the real history)...then go see this one......>>possible spoiler>>
FWIW : the princess of wales and wallace possibly never even met
much less had an intimate liaison.........repeat after me....."its a
movie not a history lesson".........................................../k
|
844.20 | | RANGER::LINDT::bence | Photoperiodic | Tue Jun 06 1995 14:38 | 5 |
|
I like a good fantasy, historical or otherwise, as much as the
next person. I think if I hadn't heard this film being touted for
its "realism" I would have been less disappointed (equally bored,
but less disappointed).
|
844.21 | | ONOFRE::SKELLY_JO | | Tue Jun 06 1995 14:49 | 7 |
| Don't get me wrong. I didn't judge the movie on its historical
accuracy, nor am I suggesting that anyone should. I didn't like the
movie when I saw it and I was completely ignorant of the history at
that time. It just provoked me to explore some of the history and I was
merely sharing what I discovered because I thought it was interesting.
John
|
844.22 | | DAGWUD::FLATTERY | | Wed Jun 07 1995 11:30 | 4 |
| re: .20 ....do you think possibly that the word 'realism' was used in
reviews to describe the battle scenes and not necessarily the historical
accuracy of every piece of the plot?...that would be my
guess..../k
|
844.23 | | DAGWUD::FLATTERY | | Wed Jun 07 1995 11:34 | 5 |
| re: 21...even if you didn't like the movie....it provoked you to go do
some historical investigation....how many movies have that kind of
affect on most people?...i'd say whether you liked it or not, it's
interesting that it moved you to go seek more information,that in
itself is a win for the production..../k
|
844.24 | More on this | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Wed Jun 07 1995 12:36 | 28 |
| Re the last 2,
Ditto! I was going to say the same things, but you beat me to it. The
last time a movie prompted me to find out about a character was
"Schindler's List ". That's pretty good company.
More about the "real" characters after the ff
It seems that Robert the Bruce, or Robert de Brus or Robert I, however
you may want to say/spell it, was the one who actually had leprosy. The
encyclopedia I didn't mention this about his father.
Also it seems Edward I (Longshanks) died before the Prince's lover did.
He had been exiled by Ed I and returned to court after he died. He was
then left as regent when Ed II went to France to marry Isabelle.
I was actually disappointed that Wallace and the Princess of Wales
could not have met and had a child together, that would have been poetic
justice.
Does anyone know if Steven (?) the Irish cohort of Wallace's has a
historical basis, or is he an invention of the authjor of Braveheart?
|
844.25 | | ONOFRE::SKELLY_JO | | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:42 | 15 |
| Re: .23
I agree. I'd even go so far as to say that the movie has a wealth of
interesting characters and some pretty good performances.
Of course, I don't assign points to the various parts of a production,
add them up and if the number is big enough, declare the film a winner.
A movie can be almost perfect, but if its one flaw really bothers me,
then I won't like the movie. I wouldn't even call this an almost
perfect movie, but the pacing of it really bothered me. It prevented
me from getting caught up in the action when it should have been
helping me. In my little amateur critic's book, that's a major flaw.
John
|
844.26 | "Braveheart" Web page | TAMARA::TAMARA::EPPES | Nina Eppes | Sun Jun 11 1995 20:39 | 5 |
| In the SCOTLAND conference, someone posted a URL for "Braveheart":
http://voyager.paramount.com/Braveheart.html
-- Nina
|
844.27 | experience it...... | ASDG::MCNAMARA | strange visitor...... | Mon Jun 12 1995 07:55 | 9 |
| "Braveheart" did for my wife and I what no other motion picture has
done it quite a while: enthrall, possess, move to tears...in my very
humble opinion, it is THE movie to see...all else pales in comparison.
A unique piece of art will effect you for countless days on end...
this motion picture is no exception...
short_and_sweet_mac
|
844.28 | There was a Stephen | TROOA::MCRAM | Marshall Cram DTN 631-7162 | Thu Jun 15 1995 16:54 | 15 |
|
Re. 24
Stephen did indeed have a "historical" basis in the Wallace legend as his
companion. The quotes are because little of the Wallace story can be
confirmed, and much is known to be exaggerated.
The Irish joining with Scots in the Battle of Falkirk is not true,
though. There were Welsh, and after a nasty, apparently drunken fight
with the English horse in their camp the night before (that took about
100 lives) were reluctantly convinced to fight by Edward. Some French
troops were there, but Irish conscripts would have very difficult to
transport, and even more difficult to train and control.
Marshall
|
844.29 | | SHRMSG::KRISHNASWAMY | Sivaram Krishnaswamy @AKO | Tue Jun 20 1995 14:10 | 36 |
| This was a really good film, much better than "Rob Roy", which tended
to really drag in parts. Possible *** out of ****.
A couple of points on the battle scenes .. although very realistic in
terms of the bloody gore and the sickening thuds , it gives the
impression that William Wallace is the main force or thrust behind
every battle, where he personally engages the enemy and forces them to
give ground. Nothing can be farther from the truth. This is Mel Gibson
showing off his macho instincts, a la "Mad Max". He does it well and
I like him better than Sly in the same role, the difference being that
Mel can act, can really act. Witness his performance in "Hamlet".
A few more comments on the battle scenes ....
Leaders and nobles rarely, if ever, engaged in personal combat and even
if they did, there was a kind of unwritten code at that time of who he
would fight. No foot soldier would dare attack a noble and the
encounters, where they did occur, would be more like a test of skill or
strength rather than actual bloody combat. Nobles from the opposite
camp were friends before and after battle and actually entertained one
another prior to meeting in the field. This aspect, a rather chivalrous
one , seems to have been completely forgotten and everyone appears too
bloodthirsty and eager to slash and kill at the slightest opportunity.
The harsh reality was that the poor soldiers, most of them actually
farm laborers and not professional fighting men like say, the Roman
legions, would go back to their former state irrespective of who had
won and only the nobles had the last laugh. Time and again, this theme
has been repeated in history and while this has been a common theme as
far as historians are concerned, this seems to have been completely
ignored by Hollywood. Much of the cinematic excitement of the character
would have been lost by a truer portrayal, rather than a medieval
Rambo, which is what the film has portrayed. Hurray for cinema! Who
wants history anyway ? The film would have been incredibly dull
otherwise.
|
844.30 | Brave Man! | KIRKTN::AIMRIE | | Tue Jun 20 1995 14:37 | 8 |
|
RE:29
As a Scotsman raised in Stirling I can't believe anyone thinking
Wallace was not always in the thick of battle!
A Imrie.
|
844.31 | A Brave Man - but not a Nobleman | LJSRV2::KNIPSTEIN | | Tue Jun 20 1995 16:34 | 6 |
| Also RE: 29
I may be wrong, and I haven't done any research, but from what I
understood watching the movie - Wallace wasn't a nobleman.
Steve
|
844.32 | | STRWRS::KOCH_P | It never hurts to ask... | Tue Jun 20 1995 17:48 | 10 |
|
If you have a Web Browser, connect to the Paramount site. They have a
short biography. Indeed, Wallace was not a nobleman, but was a man of
principle (something we need a little more of today). He accepted a
title from the nobles, but was always a Scotsman before he was a noble.
They took some liberties with the time lines to make it more dramatic,
but the fact that these people wailed at each other with swords and
arrows and didn't have MASH unit. The people bled to death and those
that didn't died of mass infections (since the relationship between
dirt and infection wasn't understood). It was a brutal life.
|
844.33 | They did indeed fight | TROOA::MCRAM | Marshall Cram DTN 631-7162 | Wed Jun 21 1995 18:13 | 24 |
|
Wallace was the son of a knight, and his mother was a daughter of a
knight. He was the 'middleclass' of the time. He was definitely
not a peasant (or the son of a farmer as depicted.)
The myth of Wallace grew out of his ferocious personal fighting ability.
Similiarly Robert Bruce often fought personally. In the real battle
of Bannockburn, unlike the movie he rode in between the two armies
alone, to survey the field. His own knights were alarmed, this was not
a wise or common thing for a king to do without his bodyguard.
An English knight rode out with a full lance directly at him.
At the last moment he wheeled his horse, dodged the lance,
and rearranged the knight's hair style with an axe. This happened in
front of several thousand soldiers. Not exactly the wimp depicted in
the movie.
By this time English Kings would never fight, but Bruce and Wallace
did. And this is probably the core reason why they were able to beat the
professional English armies where so many other Irish, Scots and
Welsh failed.
Marshall
|
844.34 | Real Scotsmen.. | SHRCTR::SCHILTON | Press any key..no,no,not that one! | Thu Jun 22 1995 13:53 | 10 |
| I know Braveheart isn't out in the UK yet, but I had the
opportunity to go see it Tuesday night with a "real"
Scotsman (one without the obligatory chip_on_his_
shoulder...that's right, he's *not* from SQF) who's
here on business.
He thought it was terrific, and has promised to rave about
it to all his friends when he returns home.
Sue
|
844.35 | ....more raves..... | CHIPS::FLATTERY | | Thu Jun 22 1995 14:37 | 4 |
| Sue...my husband...born and raised in Stirling Scotland ...only been in
the U.S. for a year, thought it was superb as well..his two friends,
also from Stirling ('remember bannockburn')..;")....also thought it
was very very good......./k
|
844.36 | hairy chappie | KIRKTN::DWALLACE | RePlIcAnT sOcIEtY | Fri Jun 23 1995 03:51 | 4 |
| He was my Grandfather's uncle - a nasty big fella wi a hauf in him &
bolloks like turnips.
Davie.
|
844.37 | Finally... | SHRCTR::SCHILTON | Press any key..no,no,not that one! | Mon Sep 11 1995 13:15 | 8 |
| Braveheart opened to much fanfare last Friday, Sept 8 in the UK.
The premiere was held the previous Sunday, Sept 3 in Stirling,
and Gibson got the red-carpet treatment everywhere.
It was neat to see first-hand the fuss over the film in Scotland.
I think it will do very well, indeed.
Sue
|
844.38 | Cool | RNDHSE::WALL | Show me, don't tell me | Tue Sep 12 1995 11:30 | 7 |
|
It appears to be re-opening in this country very soon as well.
Paramount buoyed by the reception in the U.K. Paramount taking a page
out of Disney's marketing strategy for The Lion King? Who cares. I'll
probably see it again.
DFW
|
844.39 | ex | SHRCTR::SCHILTON | Press any key..no,no,not that one! | Tue Sep 12 1995 12:08 | 1 |
| Me too. I think Sept 15 is the date.
|
844.40 | | LEMAN::BUGNON | Hello it's me again ! | Wed Oct 18 1995 12:49 | 14 |
| Finally, Braveheart came in Switzerland last friday. We saw it last
monday. No words to say that this movie is GREAT. The whole movie is
perfect. Everything seems to be so real.
Probably the best movie I saw since a long time. (Humour et action) I
think I will go to see it one more time as in french we say "on s'en est
pris plein la vue !!!" it means that we saw a lot of things too much at
the same time.
Anyway I really like Mel Gibson's movies because they always have
humour even if the subject is not so funny .
10/10+ Flo
|
844.41 | .... | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Tue Feb 13 1996 12:33 | 5 |
|
Heard this morning that Braveheart garnered the most oscar nominations,
including best picture.
|
844.42 | | KERNEL::PLANTC | Make it so! | Wed Feb 14 1996 02:27 | 6 |
|
Well deserved nomination!! ;))
Chris
:)
|
844.43 | If it's not Scottish, it's CRAP!!! | POLAR::TYSICK | | Sat Mar 23 1996 10:29 | 17 |
|
Eh All,
Well I finally got to see this great flick on March 7, and on
the big screen. It was the third time the theaters in my area (Ottawa)
released it. I think this flick deserves to win every catagory it's
been nominated for...It's also definately made it somewhere into my top
three fav's of all time.
For those of you who thought it dragged on...maybe it's because the
action packed scenes were so action packed, in comparison the rest of
the movie seemed slow?
H.A.G.O.,
J
|
844.44 | | POLAR::LARABIE | Slinky's kinked | Mon Jun 24 1996 01:36 | 13 |
|
Been awhile since the last reply but I finally managed to see this one
and I gotta agree with pretty much everyone in here.......GREAT freakin
flick. I ended up watching it twice in two days and I'm considering
telling the in-laws that the VCR ate it so I can continue watching it.
Definately one of my all time fave's.
re:-1 J, had I known it was this good I woulda got around to seeing it
alot sooner. Tanx for the recommendation.
Cya,
Rick
|
844.45 | | NQOS01::s_coghill.dyo.dec.com::S_Coghill | Luke 14:28 | Mon Jul 08 1996 11:12 | 11 |
| My 13 yr-old son just returned from 22 days in England, Ireland, Wales
and Scotland. He saw where they filmed Braveheart in Ireland. He
loved it. Thought it was the most beautiful countryside he's ever
seen. Made me drool just listening to him describe it.
He said it was a good thing they visited Scotland last. He went in one
shop and they had a replica of William Wallace's sword (from the movie)
on sale for �200. He said he would have bought it on the spot. I'm
glad he didn't since he only had $500 (US) on him.
I bet that would have been fun coming back through customs.
|
844.46 | Excellent!!!! | HOTLNE::SHIELDS | | Wed Jan 29 1997 02:28 | 19 |
| Better late than never:) I *LOVE* this movie! Mel Gibson created a near
masterpiece with this epic! I have seen it many times and just can't
find anything wrong with it technically. Yes, it has some flaws in
terms of history but Gibson was at least honest enough to admit to
making changes, for moviemaking purposes. After seeing the end result,
I can forgive Mel for some "poetic license".
"Braveheart" is beautifully filmed, well-acted, moving and has some of
the best battle scenes ever put on film.
Simply put, "Braveheart" is one of the best movies I've seen in a long
time and every award it got was well deserved! A definite must-see!
**** out of ****
Gary S
|