it is known that this is one of the least historically accurate films ever. also who cares, it's essentially fiction with some vague vague tie-ins with real events.
Hey guys I’m aware this movie wasn’t entirely or at all accurate, I don’t think I stated that it was once in my original comment 😂 just talking about a cool scene from a movie 👌
Mel Gibson's expression when he finally kills the commander is so good. He got revenge, but he feels nothing, just emptiness. The character doesn't glorify or relish in it.
he cognizant enough 2 realize it wont bring his wife back, but it still had to b done, cuz ery man has to have a line which others aint allowed to cross witout suffering tha consequences
@@imaramblins Watch the movie. That's not the reason he cut his throat. That guy cut his wife's throat and he got revenge for that. She was one of the women that didn't get kidnapped.
How he just doesn’t say anything still gets me. Doesn’t waste a breath on the man who killed his wife. No remorse, no second thoughts. Made him go through all the fear she had to. He kills him. Just to stand there and realize it’s not gunna bring her back. How he looks to the sky, wondering what will fill the void.
@@TrueBuddhaCat as it happens, the "elder" was 47 at the time and and the "son" was 40. That's some extremely convincing acting on the parts of both men.
Those dudes had the best, 1-2 punch chemistry in the entire movie. And that's saying something because Gibson versus McGowan was damned good. The French ladies had some serious chemistry just with the wife's homegirl's overall messiness. But Hamish and Campbell were the shit, hands down.
In case anyone is wondering, "MacAulish" means "Son of Wallace." Them shouting it and then switching to just "Wallace" is them no longer seeing William as just the son of someone they knew, but as a man of his own worth.
I figured "Michaelek" or "MaCaulish" sounds a lot like "Wallace" at the end of the name. That scans. For decades, I never considered that this was when he stepped out from his old man's shadow
Actually I believe they're saying "McCauligh" which meant something like leader or master in Gaelic.. I believe they were electing him to lead a charge against the English.
@@sammi388 Where are you getting this? The movie scripts for Braveheart describe them as yelling either MacClannough (Murron's name) or MacAulish (William's name), likely depending on the edit versions of the script. In the movie they seem to have gone with MacAulish.
This scene is a perfect demonstration of what oppressors have failed to understand for centuries: the more you persecute those who are already suffering, the more passionate they become.
@@Tondaloona03Nope, Robert the Bruce, who was king of Scotland from 1306 to 1329, freed Scotland from English rule by winning the decisive Battle of Bannockburn and achieving English agreement to full Scottish independence in the 1328 Treaty of Northampton
The old dude with the arrow in him going super saiyan and chucking a spear into an English soldier who wasn't even looking cracks me up every time. Feels completely Monty Python.
people are ALWAYS saying that. it's never true. just as it wasn' true in the 70s when they were saying it about films in the 60s, or the 90s when they were saying it about the o.g. star wars films, nor now.
This scene showed that after he killed the man that killed his wife it really didn’t make him feel anything…He could’ve killed him 1000 times but it wasn’t going to bring his wife back.
I can remember watching this movie on pay-per-view TV with my dad when it was new. I was 13 at the time. It’s an unforgettable movie. Mel really knocked it out of the park with this one. He’s an incredible actor and director. My favorite part is the look on his face right before he hits the first soldier. Amazing stuff.
Almost forgot, I remember watching this in the theater, no one got up to go to the bathroom or get snacks, captivated our attention, still does for me.
Love how he still looks shocked when he puts the knife to his throat. Like he really still didn’t expect to die. Such great acting in a timeless movie. A work of art
Gibson, or whoever works for him as the casting director, will hire only the best actors for these scenes. This movie holds up as a classic, and put more millions in Gibson's pocket to boot!
I was 13 and thank heavens for the black box that scrambled all the cable channels so we got everything free haha!! This movie was one of them and it was intense! Good stuff!
My history teacher showed our class this movie. Told us to keep it on the down-low. I was about 11 years old. I had to hold in my tears at certain scenes. This movie completely blew me away.
@@daveystayn9284 it's real history. They based this movie on Mel gibsons great grand father. It's pretty amazing they actually had cameras back then to record all these historical moments in time.
Absolute magnificent acting here on display: when the Sheriff looks Wallace in the eye he nervously glances at the forces surrounding him left and right for a brief moment before returning Wallace's gaze. While Wallace's eyes run him up and down, as if he's sizing him up to gauge the kind of man he really is. It's the mark of the hunted vs the hunter. To see the essence of human nature displayed is a brilliant flair in cinematography. It earned its Oscars, all of them.
Before slitting his throat, Wallace looks him over from head to toe, taking his time to study the king's insignia on his chest and what looks like a flag over his shoulders . He is killing the man who killed his wife but also beginning an assault on the king himself, echoing what the magistrate said earlier "An assault on the king's soldiers is the same as an assault on the king himself."
@Peter L Take another look - Wallace is disgusted that a pathetic runt stood before him. Despite what he did to his wife, Wallace showed total composure and control in dealing with his 'ending'. You tend to find that those who 'win' do so, in larger part, because of a high level of self-control. Take that control away and you leave yourself open to inevitable manipulation.
@Peter L This is the lamest comment ever written in the all UA-cam comment section. What did you expect?!?! The sheriff to scream??!?! Or to cry?!?!?! And what's the point??? He knew that Wallace is coming to kill him, and once the English soldiers were defeated, the sheriff knew what was his fate. Everybody around him knew it. No screaming or crying would change a thing. The sheriff knew that he was a dead man walking. He just didn't know how he'll get killed.
@@raynoraynov5651 he should be glad, it was pretty fast all things considered, a lot of revenge killings when the person is captured as not so fast, unless they are worried about rescue.
The English attempted ambushing him while he was fishing. He slew 10 of them and escaped into the freezing river. If this be true, no man of mean lungs, brawn, nor spirit was he.
@@betrthnu3413 Nein. But I do believe in the hardihood of a Breton knight, and the dour or desperate martial endurance of the Scots. Both of which have no lean historical attestation.
That reminds me of the movie the patriot near the end of the ambush revenge scene where Benjamin Martin and his two youngest sons rescue his oldest son, Benjamin Martin chases after a fleeing british soldier and kill him with the tomahawk.
saw this film 26 years ago.............seen it atleat 1ooo times since,,,,because of this film i became obsessed with scotland,,,ended up living there many years, best years of my life...born in england, raised in wales reborn in scotland,,,thats why i call home GREAT BRITAIN
@@RobertLeather Superman isn't real either.... but we all have a hero to adore, real or imagined. If the history is a little romanticised and smattered with artistic license... who cares? It's a movie not a documentary :)...... an fur aw that..... it pit this wee country oan the map ;)
@@tomsaywer9883 True. But what Wallace had was true love. He found a wife and took her as his own flesh and blood mate. Not some random ho whose been rawed by 30 other sweaty dudes.
İ met with Braveheart in the year 1996, it was my first year in uni and my father placed me in a religious group s student acco. Which was ruled with absolute autocracy that represented English in the movie for me. For the next 3 years i watched Braveheart more than 27 times in cimema, didnt have no money so i saved it all for the movie. I cried every single time i watched it, to me still remains the greatest movie every made to this day. I remember every single line and scenery in the movie and live it every single day so for me this movie is immortal
Seeing this passionate post in 2024 and can’t help feeling how old it is already. Scotland desperate to “fight the auld foe”, while welcoming more violent and much more organised oppression via a virile army of young men? Young men who from aged about 7 yrs could strip down a weapon in the dark … after prayers of course? Not looking good Scotland, the Braveheart days are long gone 😂
This movie remained in many people's heads for a long time, I remember forging a falchion from an old industrial saw mill, it a was a guy in a wheelchair who helped me make it, not joking Since then HEMA and medieval combat remained forever a hobby of mine
@@CooManTunes why? It’s Hollywood simplified nonsense aimed at lowest common denominator people who think this is somehow a true message. Fact is, the idea of “freedom” was utter nonsense given the feudal notion of society and the majority of people living in Scotland were peasants with very few rights at all. They were all fighting and killing each other and Edward I was not a particularly cruel or difficult king. That said, as drama it’s not bad.
The look in Gibson’s eyes right at the beginning of this clip, and you can see this leading up to it if I remember correctly, really sets the tone for who this character is about to become due to this choice. He is not joyful to be delivering vengeance, and he doesn’t even look angry. He almost looks defeated, even though he’s only starting the war, because he knows as a Christian that retaliating in bloodshed is not ideal for his soul even if he feels forced to it, and he knows it won’t bring Marion back, and he probably doesn’t even think the soldier he’s about to kill is personally evil. And because he probably doesn’t expect to survive this very first fight.
The whole facial expression and posture, especially after he slit his throat... was colder than ice. Like it was far from enough to do that. topnotch acting.
Being a man born and raised in Ireland with a Scottish grandfather on my mother's side i can tell you movies like this really get the hairs on my neck standing up and my blood boiling I get a bit too into it 😂
@You know this face the statement he made is saying that today’s films overuse it as opposed to filming on real locations. It’s ok, words are tough sometimes!
@@salguodrolyat2594 I think at some level Wallace understood the Sheriff had been doing his duty executing Marion to preserve the corrupt system put in place by the King. It wasn't personal on the part of the Sheriff when he killed Marion. And Wallace's revenge was as impersonal as he could make it because the real enemy was the system. That's why he spared the surviving garrison members in the town square and at the fort. Notice when the wronged husband got his revenge on the lord who had claimed his bride on their wedding day. That guy made his revenge very personal.
@@okllo At least there is one and a very famous one at that. There is no movie about Owain Glyndwr, Prince of Wales. He led a 15 year long Welsh revolt against Henry IV and England. He was never killed or captured although his son died in battle and his wife and remaining children were taken hostage by the king and carted off into captivity. I wish the Welsh would get as much as if not more recognition for fighting against English oppression, than the Scots and Irish. Most Scots and Irish prefer to speak the language of their former oppressors, while Welsh is widely used in Wales and indeed there are people there who don't speak English or only speak it very poorly.
@@simonh6371 The Welsh are almost totally subsumed into English culture in a way the Scots and, especially, the Irish never were. The Scots have maintained all of their cultural institutions within the United Kingdom. Separate institutions like Scots Law, Judiciary, Scottish Education, Church, banking and finance. Scotland's retained far more of its identity. Can Wales say the same?
@@trebleking1641 Institutionally yes because they were annexed by England early on which is logical as they were the closest. But culturally definitely not. Welsh is used far more in Wales than Gaelic in Scotland or Ireland.
You guys are aware this is all bullshit and the reason the English occupied Scotland is cause for their entire history they've been raiding over our border. Same with the Irish. They weren't noble barbarians unjustly oppressed they were savages that brought their fate on themselves. Also the idea of Scotland somehow being culturally separate is hilarious all the Scottish institutions and protocols were handed down from Westminster. The traditions of the clans died centuries ago, now they're just English with an accent.
One of my favorite scenes of all time in any movie. The anger he processed is the type of anger I would have knowing they killed ones wife. The brutality is right on.
I remember the first time I saw this scene. I was just wandering through the television channels one day and this scene came on in full view, and I was in absolute awe of what I saw. No remorse, no morality, no witty one liner. Just a straight up slash to the neck to the man who killed Wallace's wife, but the pain of her loss still remained.
There's many layers to this act of revenge, it probably shows how he doesnt want to do it, but feels that he needs to, like its depressing that things got this bad in the first place
I think it showed that Wallace couldn't draw any satisfaction from killing the Sheriff because when he killed Marion, it was just to make a point about how nobody could defy the King's authority. It was the King's system that was really responsible for Marion's death.Killing the Sheriff in the same cold impersonal public manner Marion was killed,was Wallace making his own point to his real enemy. Longshanks.
Daaamn , to me the fact Mel Gibson/Brakeheart says nothing in this scene makes it even more powerful. I find it especially chilling when he calm pushes him again the pole and swiftly slices his throat. Mel Gibson did a great job with this.
FILMES COMO ESSE FAZEM PENSAR, OQUE ACONTECEU COM O CINENA MUNDIAL DEPOIS DOS ANOS 80 E 90? TIRANDO RARAS EXCESSOES, ULTIMAMENTE NÃO COMPENSA IR A UMA SALA DE CINEMA. SENSACIONAL ESSE FILME.
Bu dünyadaki en büyük eksiklik gerçek adalet.. Suçlular burdaki gibi cezasını çekseydi... Yeryüzü bu kadar çekilmez olmazdı.... Hayat ve mülk her canlı için kutsaldır,dokunulmazdır.. .!! Bunu her millet ve ülke bir yerlere yazmalı ve adalet buna göre işlemeli... Kısasa kısas uygulanmalı... Teşekkürler 🇹🇷
Wallace is not a maniac killer, he's learnt the ways of war, so I'm guessing that after stripping the guy of his armor and weapon he told him to fuck off and that if he shows his ugly mug anywhere near the village again he's dead.
It's also realistic that as a Sheriff appointed by the King to maintain order,he showed in his eyes that he felt justified in executing Marion,while also being astonished, that his position of authority wasn't going to save him from Wallace.
One of the best films ever made. I had such a vast range of emotions throughout the 3 hours of this brilliantly told story. Went back to the theater 6 more times before it went to VHS. That's right....VHS. 📼
Ur lucky to have seen it the theaters back when it was a treat to watch movies bcuz it was so rare - not saying I don't like internet hi lights , but it was special back then u would have imagine/ dream of the movies you saw
@@notoriousLSGshow I'm definitely grateful. I saw it with an old friend and her mother, who's passed on since then. It's a nice memory, especially since it's sometimes difficult to think of nice memories from childhood.
From my long list of unforgettable movie scenes, this one is still my favorite. Everyone talks about the cold-blooded throat slitting at the end. But what I like the most about this scene is the moment when Wallace approaches on his horse pretending to surrender, and then he surprises the guards by pulling his weapon from his back. Mel Gibson's facial expression in slow motion, along with the music score, always gives me goosebumps.
my opinion: the best part was after the fight at 4:13 when the old man catches his breath and the thunder rumbles in the distance. He nods his head in agreement and begins to chant
Мен узбекистондан ман , Вилям Уволисни шатландия ва ирландия озодлиги учун курашган кахрамон биз бу буюк халкларни кутлаймиз , кахрамонларини бутун дунё унутмайди.
This was my FAV scene in the film, when I first saw it I was grinning and shouting "JUSTICE!!!". This was justice for unjustified and evil acts and the injustice of criminal oppression. 'An eye for an eye', I loved the battle of Stirling, but this was my fav scene in the film, his wife's soul could rest easy after this. Mel Gibson played this role PERFECTLY.
@@jakemason100 Oh okay thanks dude I always heard it as urry up boy! I'm gonna watch it tonight so I'll have a 'oh yeah' moment when I get to this part lol
I constantly been rewatching this scene again and again because it's just so damn EPIC to see William Wallace and the Scottish people to RISE UP And FIGHT BACK against those who slave them!! ✊🏻✊🏻
3:40 - when I saw this in the cinema when it came out, the entire cinema erupted cheering and clapping at this moment... How apt it was that Wallace avenged Murron's death in exactly the same way she was killed off
Every moment in this was awesome. One favorite scene of mine that stuck with me was the antler jabbed into the dude's neck. Brutal. I've never looked at deer the same way again lmao
Subscribe if you like it for more 🌹
Post a video about the insecure American male and female and I'll watch it. lol
Lddldldllddñldldldñdñdldldldñdñdldldñdpdldldldldldodldldldldldldldldldldldldñdldl
Done
All british "royalty" should have the same.
❤
❤
ج❤ج
❤
❤@@guitarttimman❤❤
What a powerful scene. The absolute anger and zero remorse in his eyes when he comes back knowing they killed his wife
Love the way he eyes him from head to feet in depressed disgust then boots him down the hill.
@@billythefish1727 stfu
I bet loved his wife like a rose
it is known that this is one of the least historically accurate films ever. also who cares, it's essentially fiction with some vague vague tie-ins with real events.
Hey guys I’m aware this movie wasn’t entirely or at all accurate, I don’t think I stated that it was once in my original comment 😂 just talking about a cool scene from a movie 👌
Mel Gibson's expression when he finally kills the commander is so good. He got revenge, but he feels nothing, just emptiness. The character doesn't glorify or relish in it.
he cognizant enough 2 realize it wont bring his wife back, but it still had to b done, cuz ery man has to have a line which others aint allowed to cross witout suffering tha consequences
I'd trim pieces off of the sucker and put relish on him. lol
Exactly. You killed my wife. I'll leave you just as empty as I felt, with my blade across your neck.
You piece of garbage!
😒😑
@@imaramblins go see a psychiatrist
@@imaramblins Watch the movie. That's not the reason he cut his throat. That guy cut his wife's throat and he got revenge for that. She was one of the women that didn't get kidnapped.
No cheesy last line, no dramatic music, just cutting his throat with 0 remorse or hesitation. Love it.
A rare trait indeed in today's big films, where they generally pander to the dumbest in society.
Got it over with but made sure that guy knew exactly what he had put Murron through
Exactly. No pandering, no “And THAT..is why you don’t f*ck with the Scotts!” *slices throat* cheesy ass line. Just great acting.
You need a psychiatrist. Why would you love it when people cut other people's throat? Weirdo!
@@guitarttimman Have you seen this movie?? that fella deserves it
How he just doesn’t say anything still gets me. Doesn’t waste a breath on the man who killed his wife. No remorse, no second thoughts. Made him go through all the fear she had to.
He kills him. Just to stand there and realize it’s not gunna bring her back. How he looks to the sky, wondering what will fill the void.
When you have to cut a throat, you cut a throat, you don't talk.
Yup, Mel really knows how to act. There’s a similar scene in the movie the patriot when one of his sons dies and his acting is just unreal
Thank you for that analysis.
Oh well, certainly won't bring that old fart back either, so win-win.
And made sure that the magistrate would remember that his final moments in life were spent being knocked around in retaliation for what he did.
Can we all agree that Campbell the Elder is an absolute gem, especially when he smacks Hamish on the head for trying to pull the arrow out 🤣
A true warrior even at an old age telling both his son and the grim reaper to piss off
@@TrueBuddhaCat as it happens, the "elder" was 47 at the time and and the "son" was 40.
That's some extremely convincing acting on the parts of both men.
Those dudes had the best, 1-2 punch chemistry in the entire movie. And that's saying something because Gibson versus McGowan was damned good. The French ladies had some serious chemistry just with the wife's homegirl's overall messiness. But Hamish and Campbell were the shit, hands down.
That dude is awesome ..love all his scenes
And he went on, years later, to be Jeor Mormont, Lord Commander of the Nights Watch, and STILL a complete badass
In case anyone is wondering, "MacAulish" means "Son of Wallace." Them shouting it and then switching to just "Wallace" is them no longer seeing William as just the son of someone they knew, but as a man of his own worth.
I figured "Michaelek" or "MaCaulish" sounds a lot like "Wallace" at the end of the name. That scans. For decades, I never considered that this was when he stepped out from his old man's shadow
I love the comments area. If I ever have a question, I usually find the answer from someone’s comment.
Thank you !!!
Actually I believe they're saying "McCauligh" which meant something like leader or master in Gaelic.. I believe they were electing him to lead a charge against the English.
@@sammi388 Where are you getting this? The movie scripts for Braveheart describe them as yelling either MacClannough (Murron's name) or MacAulish (William's name), likely depending on the edit versions of the script. In the movie they seem to have gone with MacAulish.
This film will never get old.
It’s ancient
It really is a great fantasy film.
@@RocKnight11it’s not fantasy lol
This scene is a perfect demonstration of what oppressors have failed to understand for centuries: the more you persecute those who are already suffering, the more passionate they become.
When you leave a people with nothing left to lose. Then they will do the unthinkable to you.
Well never fight a peasant army. They have nothing to lose and everything to gain.
@@Tondaloona03Nope, Robert the Bruce, who was king of Scotland from 1306 to 1329, freed Scotland from English rule by winning the decisive Battle of Bannockburn and achieving English agreement to full Scottish independence in the 1328 Treaty of Northampton
@@Tondaloona03 Yeaaah sure buddy.
@@Tondaloona03 Other generations fucked up, not this one, this one did good.
Also, later on England became UK, so that was different.
The old dude with the arrow in him going super saiyan and chucking a spear into an English soldier who wasn't even looking cracks me up every time. Feels completely Monty Python.
For real I was like ughhh dude your under attack by Scottish rebels pay attention !
That's the Cosmo not the plan dude 😂
‘Tis but a scratch
If it wasn't very deep, it isn't that unrealistic 😂. Adrenaline is a hell of a drug
Never underestimate the power of a man's love.
They sure don't make films like they used to. Absolutely epic scene.
They really don't
people are ALWAYS saying that. it's never true. just as it wasn' true in the 70s when they were saying it about films in the 60s, or the 90s when they were saying it about the o.g. star wars films, nor now.
@@highstimulation2497 oh it is true......
@@highstimulation2497 idc about the hd and bs, that's the only thing that's better. The movies themselves are dog shit compared to older ones.
@@highstimulation2497 Yeah, it's about looking in the right places.
This scene showed that after he killed the man that killed his wife it really didn’t make him feel anything…He could’ve killed him 1000 times but it wasn’t going to bring his wife back.
Exactly
Yes. You notice he’s so angry he can’t speak .
But i assure you if he can kill him 1000 times he will even that will not bring his wife again
Yeah well letting him live ain't going to bring her back either. He did the right thing. 👍🏻💪
@@everything90s94 haha I got you but you’re missing the point
I can remember watching this movie on pay-per-view TV with my dad when it was new.
I was 13 at the time. It’s an unforgettable movie. Mel really knocked it out of the park with this one. He’s an incredible actor and director. My favorite part is the look on his face right before he hits the first soldier. Amazing stuff.
Almost forgot, I remember watching this in the theater, no one got up to go to the bathroom or get snacks, captivated our attention, still does for me.
Love how he still looks shocked when he puts the knife to his throat. Like he really still didn’t expect to die. Such great acting in a timeless movie. A work of art
Gibson, or whoever works for him as the casting director, will hire only the best actors for these scenes. This movie holds up as a classic, and put more millions in Gibson's pocket to boot!
Back in 95 this type of onscreen realism was unseen and shocking. Absolutely revolutionary film.
Absolutely. I remember seeing this in the theaters when I was 15. We all looked at each other like “Did he just shove a bone in that guys neck???” 😂
@@fellowdanbarber3323yes, yes he did ❤️🔥🥰
I was 13 and thank heavens for the black box that scrambled all the cable channels so we got everything free haha!! This movie was one of them and it was intense! Good stuff!
To bad it's completely devoid of historical accuracy.
100%, it may not be the most historically accurate but damn the direction/filming in this movie is legendary.
My history teacher showed our class this movie. Told us to keep it on the down-low. I was about 11 years old. I had to hold in my tears at certain scenes. This movie completely blew me away.
Great movie but not very historically accurate.
@prometheusrex1 Really, this film isn't for 11 year old students.
Fake history
@@daveystayn9284 it's real history. They based this movie on Mel gibsons great grand father. It's pretty amazing they actually had cameras back then to record all these historical moments in time.
@@DanielPlainsight utter fake bllsht
Hamishs' father Campbell is such a badass.
"I won't let myself die in bed in 5 yrs, when braver men may yet die today. FVCK YER OPTICS I'M GOING IN!!"
Yeah the guy literally takes a goddamn arrow to the chest but hes still walking around like it’s nothing.
his son is ok too)
Dude is testosterone incarnate
@@LeSpaghet not to mention getting his hand chopped off. Then proceeds for the gut shot straight away
Revenge is a dish best served cold. Wallace, Gibson, served it as about as cold as it gets.
And it's very cold in space. Oh wrong movie.
I really love how background music exquisitely matches the scene...
Absolute magnificent acting here on display: when the Sheriff looks Wallace in the eye he nervously glances at the forces surrounding him left and right for a brief moment before returning Wallace's gaze. While Wallace's eyes run him up and down, as if he's sizing him up to gauge the kind of man he really is.
It's the mark of the hunted vs the hunter. To see the essence of human nature displayed is a brilliant flair in cinematography. It earned its Oscars, all of them.
Before slitting his throat, Wallace looks him over from head to toe, taking his time to study the king's insignia on his chest and what looks like a flag over his shoulders . He is killing the man who killed his wife but also beginning an assault on the king himself, echoing what the magistrate said earlier "An assault on the king's soldiers is the same as an assault on the king himself."
@Peter L Take another look - Wallace is disgusted that a pathetic runt stood before him. Despite what he did to his wife, Wallace showed total composure and control in dealing with his 'ending'. You tend to find that those who 'win' do so, in larger part, because of a high level of self-control. Take that control away and you leave yourself open to inevitable manipulation.
@Peter L This is the lamest comment ever written in the all UA-cam comment section.
What did you expect?!?! The sheriff to scream??!?! Or to cry?!?!?!
And what's the point??? He knew that Wallace is coming to kill him, and once the English soldiers were defeated, the sheriff knew what was his fate. Everybody around him knew it.
No screaming or crying would change a thing. The sheriff knew that he was a dead man walking. He just didn't know how he'll get killed.
@@raynoraynov5651 he should be glad, it was pretty fast all things considered, a lot of revenge killings when the person is captured as not so fast, unless they are worried about rescue.
Agreed!
It’s not revenge, William Wallace got justice.
The English attempted ambushing him while he was fishing. He slew 10 of them and escaped into the freezing river. If this be true, no man of mean lungs, brawn, nor spirit was he.
Psalm 58:10
Justice by that era's standards, maybe.
Vengeance.
@@betrthnu3413 Nein. But I do believe in the hardihood of a Breton knight, and the dour or desperate martial endurance of the Scots. Both of which have no lean historical attestation.
The english soldier turning around and trying to flee after seeing the giant wooden hammer kills me every day time! 😎
His groans of anguish sure sounded real!
Kills him every time too😁
YEEEEAH!
*sees hammer*
MUUUUM!
That reminds me of the movie the patriot near the end of the ambush revenge scene where Benjamin Martin and his two youngest sons rescue his oldest son, Benjamin Martin chases after a fleeing british soldier and kill him with the tomahawk.
Must run faster ya bastard !!!!!!
A great scene that reminds us that there are times when men must fight.
Warriors who fought, resisted and rebelled for their loved ones and dignity
saw this film 26 years ago.............seen it atleat 1ooo times since,,,,because of this film i became obsessed with scotland,,,ended up living there many years, best years of my life...born in england, raised in wales reborn in scotland,,,thats why i call home GREAT BRITAIN
Don't read history. It might upset you.
@@RobertLeather Superman isn't real either.... but we all have a hero to adore, real or imagined. If the history is a little romanticised and smattered with artistic license... who cares? It's a movie not a documentary :)...... an fur aw that..... it pit this wee country oan the map ;)
I always liked the old guy...what a bad ass!
Good old Lord Mormont
Did he play on "Troy" too?
@@detroitlionspistonstigersr6735 yess
Hell yeah. 1:28 is my favorite part. Always puts a smile on my face no matter what. My favorite character in the movie..
He was Renton's (Ewan Mcgregor) dad in Trainspotting I think.
The zero hesitation cutting his throat always brings a smile to my face
I think there are many western nations (America and England included) that need to start playing these roles.
what would you do? I would do the same,if they murdered my love. I dont give a fck about the consequences.
@Deathstroke The Terminator The common people should be
I think he even used the Sheriff’s own knife too when he did it. Makes it even better.
I personally think that he should have tortured him and broke his legs and left him in a wheelchair and gave him a proper punishment
Anyone who’s ever loved a woman... the voice inside says, You killed my wife, and now this is my fury.
sirADRO- yes I agree with you
Hello, my name is William Wallace. You killed my wife, prepare to die.
I’m not killin another man over a women, my daughter perhaps...
@@tomsaywer9883 True. But what Wallace had was true love. He found a wife and took her as his own flesh and blood mate. Not some random ho whose been rawed by 30 other sweaty dudes.
@@richardgladstone8975 wow... I agree with you
İ met with Braveheart in the year 1996, it was my first year in uni and my father placed me in a religious group s student acco. Which was ruled with absolute autocracy that represented English in the movie for me. For the next 3 years i watched Braveheart more than 27 times in cimema, didnt have no money so i saved it all for the movie. I cried every single time i watched it, to me still remains the greatest movie every made to this day. I remember every single line and scenery in the movie and live it every single day so for me this movie is immortal
Seeing this passionate post in 2024 and can’t help feeling how old it is already.
Scotland desperate to “fight the auld foe”, while welcoming more violent and much more organised oppression via a virile army of young men?
Young men who from aged about 7 yrs could strip down a weapon in the dark … after prayers of course?
Not looking good Scotland, the Braveheart days are long gone 😂
That was for you “StormFalcon61 😂
This movie remained in many people's heads for a long time, I remember forging a falchion from an old industrial saw mill, it a was a guy in a wheelchair who helped me make it, not joking
Since then HEMA and medieval combat remained forever a hobby of mine
This was my favorite movie of all time growing up in the 90s. 🤯 "Where are you goin?...I'm goin' to a pick a fight" ⚔
The strongest message in the history of film making. I adore William Wallace and Mel Gibson.
I'll thank you both on my death bed.
:'D
@aileen wournos Whereas I agree with what you are saying this film has a HUGE amount of artistic license, lol.
And what would that message be?
. . .what message?
@@CooManTunes why? It’s Hollywood simplified nonsense aimed at lowest common denominator people who think this is somehow a true message. Fact is, the idea of “freedom” was utter nonsense given the feudal notion of society and the majority of people living in Scotland were peasants with very few rights at all. They were all fighting and killing each other and Edward I was not a particularly cruel or difficult king. That said, as drama it’s not bad.
I loved this movie as a kid in the 90s, after losing my own childhood sweetheart and wife this scene has a whole new feeling
Damn Right it does
The fact that He has nothing to say. It's brilliant.
When the guy calls for archers in the tower you know he's shitting a brick.
Epic ownage. I vividly recall watching this with my dad when it came out at the cinemas. I was 14. What a blast.
The look in Gibson’s eyes right at the beginning of this clip, and you can see this leading up to it if I remember correctly, really sets the tone for who this character is about to become due to this choice.
He is not joyful to be delivering vengeance, and he doesn’t even look angry. He almost looks defeated, even though he’s only starting the war, because he knows as a Christian that retaliating in bloodshed is not ideal for his soul even if he feels forced to it, and he knows it won’t bring Marion back, and he probably doesn’t even think the soldier he’s about to kill is personally evil. And because he probably doesn’t expect to survive this very first fight.
Yeah. Still, I wonder what goes through his mind
This scene made lindybeige cry, he was heard screaming "this isn't fair, the british gentlemen weren't ready"
lol
2:35 when you have to protect your last villager to rebuild your empire in AOE ll
Hahahahaha
When your palisade cant halt the militia spam
Lol no joke 🤣
No cine scene never ever replace this ferocious scene. Cutting throat with no expression on his face. Mel , one of the Legend of Hollywood Cinema.
The whole facial expression and posture, especially after he slit his throat... was colder than ice.
Like it was far from enough to do that. topnotch acting.
Being a man born and raised in Ireland with a Scottish grandfather on my mother's side i can tell you movies like this really get the hairs on my neck standing up and my blood boiling I get a bit too into it 😂
This scene alone put “Braveheart” over the top into my top ten all time.
That is some acting absolutely brilliant
0:04 The look on his face just showed how much he wanted them to feel how severely heartbroken he was
Meet u in the middle
@@DanBunyanmore like 0:08
What a scene. No nonsense green screen etc
@You know this face the statement he made is saying that today’s films overuse it as opposed to filming on real locations. It’s ok, words are tough sometimes!
I love when Wallace pulls out the giant hammer and the knight charging at him is like “oh hell no”
Always liked how Wallace just casually grabs the magistrate -- after he kicks him off the platform -- and drags him to the stake.
Should have Joan of Arc'd him. But he was a better man than I would ever be.🤔
@@salguodrolyat2594
I think at some level Wallace understood the Sheriff had been doing his duty executing Marion to preserve the corrupt system
put in place by the King. It wasn't personal on the part of the Sheriff when he killed Marion. And Wallace's revenge was as impersonal
as he could make it because the real enemy was the system. That's why he spared the surviving garrison members in the town
square and at the fort. Notice when the wronged husband got his revenge on the lord who had claimed his bride on their wedding day.
That guy made his revenge very personal.
@@TheLAGopher a good analysis. I did not realise that there were these degrees of variation in personal feelings in Wallace and his men.
I love how he has the decency when ultra focused with revenge, to gently press his friend to assist his injured father, brilliant.
Kudos to Mel for resurrecting the story of William Wallace after thousands of years and highlighting the brutality the Scots faced under British rule.
really wish there would be more movies with this thematic
@@okllo At least there is one and a very famous one at that. There is no movie about Owain Glyndwr, Prince of Wales. He led a 15 year long Welsh revolt against Henry IV and England. He was never killed or captured although his son died in battle and his wife and remaining children were taken hostage by the king and carted off into captivity. I wish the Welsh would get as much as if not more recognition for fighting against English oppression, than the Scots and Irish. Most Scots and Irish prefer to speak the language of their former oppressors, while Welsh is widely used in Wales and indeed there are people there who don't speak English or only speak it very poorly.
@@simonh6371 The Welsh are almost totally subsumed into English culture in a way the Scots and, especially, the Irish never were. The Scots have maintained all of their cultural institutions within the United Kingdom. Separate institutions like Scots Law, Judiciary, Scottish Education, Church, banking and finance. Scotland's retained far more of its identity. Can Wales say the same?
@@trebleking1641 Institutionally yes because they were annexed by England early on which is logical as they were the closest. But culturally definitely not. Welsh is used far more in Wales than Gaelic in Scotland or Ireland.
You guys are aware this is all bullshit and the reason the English occupied Scotland is cause for their entire history they've been raiding over our border. Same with the Irish. They weren't noble barbarians unjustly oppressed they were savages that brought their fate on themselves.
Also the idea of Scotland somehow being culturally separate is hilarious all the Scottish institutions and protocols were handed down from Westminster. The traditions of the clans died centuries ago, now they're just English with an accent.
One of my favorite scenes of all time in any movie. The anger he processed is the type of anger I would have knowing they killed ones wife. The brutality is right on.
I remember the first time I saw this scene. I was just wandering through the television channels one day and this scene came on in full view, and I was in absolute awe of what I saw. No remorse, no morality, no witty one liner. Just a straight up slash to the neck to the man who killed Wallace's wife, but the pain of her loss still remained.
As an englishman i absolutely love this scene. Makes me proud be scottish...even though im not 😊
There's many layers to this act of revenge, it probably shows how he doesnt want to do it, but feels that he needs to, like its depressing that things got this bad in the first place
I think it showed that Wallace couldn't draw any satisfaction from killing the Sheriff because when he killed Marion, it was just to make a point
about how nobody could defy the King's authority. It was the King's system that was really responsible for Marion's death.Killing the Sheriff
in the same cold impersonal public manner Marion was killed,was Wallace making his own point to his real enemy. Longshanks.
This is the scene that got me really into medieval battle/fight scenes it really holds
Up
Still.
The true prequel to Trainspotting.
LMAO WHAT
"They may take our lives......but they'll never take our GEAR!!!!"
@@The2984 lmaooooooooo
@@The2984 and bolts of lightning from my arse into the worst toilet in Scotland.
Um dos melhores filmes de todos os tempos👊🏽😎👍🏽🇧🇷!
One of the best movie ever!🎥🎥🎥🎥
This movie and " The Patriot" are damn good movies.
Daaamn , to me the fact Mel Gibson/Brakeheart says nothing in this scene makes it even more powerful. I find it especially chilling when he calm pushes him again the pole and swiftly slices his throat. Mel Gibson did a great job with this.
I really love how he makes sure before he slices his throat that he looks him in the eye.
This is my favorite movie.
FILMES COMO ESSE FAZEM PENSAR, OQUE ACONTECEU COM O CINENA MUNDIAL DEPOIS DOS ANOS 80 E 90? TIRANDO RARAS EXCESSOES, ULTIMAMENTE NÃO COMPENSA IR A UMA SALA DE CINEMA. SENSACIONAL ESSE FILME.
I'm glad you didn't cut it short
Биз ирландия ва шатландияни озодлиги учун дуводамиз. Уволис каби кахрамонлар юрти.❤❤❤
First remove your traitor govt!
@@Thunderdome76 est.
@@Thunderdome76 соткин рахбарлар ким Ирландияни хукуматиними .
Bu dünyadaki en büyük eksiklik gerçek adalet..
Suçlular burdaki gibi cezasını çekseydi...
Yeryüzü bu kadar çekilmez olmazdı....
Hayat ve mülk her canlı için kutsaldır,dokunulmazdır.. .!!
Bunu her millet ve ülke bir yerlere yazmalı ve adalet buna göre işlemeli...
Kısasa kısas uygulanmalı...
Teşekkürler 🇹🇷
I’ve legit watched this movie hundreds of times. Freeeeedoooooom
I loved this movie!
So glad I own it!
Watching this movie on the big screen was amazing. This part of the film took your breath away.
Am I the only one wondering what happened to the dude who surrendered at 2:47 lol
My guess: They didn't bother dragging him down the hill.
พวกเขาปล่อยให้ทหารอังกฤษคนนั้นไปบอกข้อความให้พระราชาว่าชาวสก็อตไม่ยอมก้มหัวให้อังกฤษแล้ว.
Wallace is not a maniac killer, he's learnt the ways of war, so I'm guessing that after stripping the guy of his armor and weapon he told him to fuck off and that if he shows his ugly mug anywhere near the village again he's dead.
He became a lesbian
He was tried in absentia for having too pale a skin color in a European drama.
They need to inject diversity hires into the cast to make it 'modern'.
I love watching the fear grow rapidly in the eyes of the man who killed Wallace's wife. So realistic.
It's also realistic that as a Sheriff appointed by the King to maintain order,he showed in his eyes that he felt justified in executing Marion,while also
being astonished, that his position of authority wasn't going to save him from Wallace.
My life was never the same after this movie.
Film epico, bellissimo……..grande Scozia 🏴 🏴 🏴
просто шедевр одна из лучших ролей мела гибсона
One of the best films ever made. I had such a vast range of emotions throughout the 3 hours of this brilliantly told story. Went back to the theater 6 more times before it went to VHS.
That's right....VHS. 📼
Betamax enter the chat 😂
Ur lucky to have seen it the theaters back when it was a treat to watch movies bcuz it was so rare - not saying I don't like internet hi lights , but it was special back then u would have imagine/ dream of the movies you saw
@@notoriousLSGshow 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Now that's funny!
@@notoriousLSGshow I'm definitely grateful. I saw it with an old friend and her mother, who's passed on since then. It's a nice memory, especially since it's sometimes difficult to think of nice memories from childhood.
1:30
Hamish: Tries to pull the arrow out and worsen the bleeding
Hamish's Dad: "YEH IDIOT BOI!"
The look in the captains eyes when Wallace put a knife to his throat 😂 "Are you serious?!"
Probably wetting his pants too like a dog 🤣🤣🤣
Such a good movie moved me to tears many times god bless William and Scotland ❤
懐かしいな、何回も見た。
The sound of the thunder rumbling in the distance after the massacre is so haunting...hence the term" God wills it"
After being so sad regarding his wife loss, this scene gives me hope and faith.
To lead his home to fight back and take back what is theirs.
First time I watched this I don't think I've ever rooted for a protagonist to get his revenge more....literally was like get all them mf's....
The Magistate's brief wide eyes of disbelief and fear right before his death.... good acting by Malcolm Tierney.
From my long list of unforgettable movie scenes, this one is still my favorite. Everyone talks about the cold-blooded throat slitting at the end. But what I like the most about this scene is the moment when Wallace approaches on his horse pretending to surrender, and then he surprises the guards by pulling his weapon from his back. Mel Gibson's facial expression in slow motion, along with the music score, always gives me goosebumps.
my opinion: the best part was after the fight at 4:13 when the old man catches his breath and the thunder rumbles in the distance. He nods his head in agreement and begins to chant
Супер фільм. Ось як потрібно боротись за свою свободу.
Мен узбекистондан ман , Вилям Уволисни шатландия ва ирландия озодлиги учун курашган кахрамон биз бу буюк халкларни кутлаймиз , кахрамонларини бутун дунё унутмайди.
Damn that old man is tough!
He got wounded in every battle
This was my FAV scene in the film, when I first saw it I was grinning and shouting "JUSTICE!!!". This was justice for unjustified and evil acts and the injustice of criminal oppression. 'An eye for an eye', I loved the battle of Stirling, but this was my fav scene in the film, his wife's soul could rest easy after this. Mel Gibson played this role PERFECTLY.
Mel is a superb actor, one of the best ever.
1:28
AAAAAAAARGH!!!! ARRRRR YA BOY!!!!
best insult ever! Great Film!
“Idiot boy”
I've used this many times since i became a dad, great scene!
I think he says 'urry up boy!
@@danporter8415 Subtitles on both TV and DVD say “idiot boy”
@@jakemason100 Oh okay thanks dude I always heard it as urry up boy! I'm gonna watch it tonight so I'll have a 'oh yeah' moment when I get to this part lol
Сильный момент, каждый раз сердце сжимаеться.
..film straordinario..non mi stancherò mai di rivederlo..❤️👍💪✌️
Wallace is a great warrior from Scotland
I constantly been rewatching this scene again and again because it's just so damn EPIC to see William Wallace and the Scottish people to RISE UP And FIGHT BACK against those who slave them!! ✊🏻✊🏻
All it takes is the will of a single Man and the will spreads like a wild fire
Yes a load of made up sht for a movie
@@daveystayn9284 The Scottish wars of independence actually happened and William Wallace was a real dude though 😂
3:40 - when I saw this in the cinema when it came out, the entire cinema erupted cheering and clapping at this moment... How apt it was that Wallace avenged Murron's death in exactly the same way she was killed off
Every moment in this was awesome.
One favorite scene of mine that stuck with me was the antler jabbed into the dude's neck. Brutal. I've never looked at deer the same way again lmao
Brasil precisa de Wallace urgentemente. .
When the boys joined him that was perfection