
Braveheart
Mel
Gibson's Oscar-winning 1995 Braveheart is an impassioned epic
about William Wallace, the 13th-century Scottish leader of a
popular revolt against England's tyrannical Edward I (Patrick
McGoohan). Gibson cannily plays Wallace as a man trying to stay
out of history's way until events force his hand, an attribute
that instantly resonates with several of the actor's best-known
roles, especially Mad Max. The subsequent camaraderie and courage
Wallace shares in the field with fellow warriors is pure enough
and inspiring enough to bring envy to a viewer, and even as
things go wrong for Wallace in the second half, the film does
not easily cave in to a somber tone. One of the most impressive
elements is the originality with which Gibson films battle scenes,
featuring hundreds of extras wielding medieval weapons. After
Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky, Orson Welles's Chimes at Midnight,
and even Kenneth Branagh's Henry V, you might think there is
little new that could be done in creating scenes of ancient
combat; yet Gibson does it. --Tom Keogh