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Synopsis for

Braveheart (1995) More at IMDbPro


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In the 13th Century England, after several years of political unrest in Scotland, the land is open to
an invasion from the south. King Edward I of England (Patrick McGoohan) has decided to conquer
Scotland. After invading Scotland and winning the war by 1280 A.D., Edward (known as
'Longshanks') grants areas of land in Scotland to his nobility which they are to rule, along with the
traditional privileges. One of the privileges granted to English lords ruling Scotland was Primae
Noctis, the right for the lord to take a newly married Scottish woman into his bed and spend the
wedding night with the bride. Longshanks' plan is to breed out the population of Scotland.

In the northern Scottish town of Lanark, a young boy named William Wallace, follows his father and
brother to a meeting of Scottish nobles, arranged by Longshanks himself. When Wallace Senior
and his older son arrive at the meeting place, they see that the Scots have all been hanged, along
with their servants. William also sees the hanging corpses and panics when his father finds him.

Wallace Senior attends another meeting where it's decided that they will go to war with the English.
William wishes to accompany his father and brother, however, his father tells him to stay home and
mind the farm. A few days later, Campbell Senior, William's best friend's (Hamish) father arrives at
the farm. William's father is killed in battle, as was his brother. Following the funeral, William is
given a thistle by a young girl. William's uncle, Argyle, arrives on horseback and tells William that
he'll be leaving home with him. That night William and Argyle listen to bagpipers play a tribute for
William's dead family. Argyle tells William that the pipes are outlawed. He also sees William's
interest in his sword and tells William that he'll give him a traditional education and teach him how to
fight later.

Ten years later, the adult William Wallace (Mel Gibson) returns home to his father's farm. He
reconnects with his old friend Hamish. At a community wedding, Wallace sees the local magistrate
take the bride for himself according to "primae noctis." Wallace also falls in love with his childhood
sweetheart Murron MacClannough (Catherine McCormack), the young girl who gave him the thistle
at his father's funeral, and they marry in secret so that she does not have to spend a night in the
bed of the English lord.

The Scots continue to live under the iron fist of Longshanks' cruel laws. Wallace intends on living as
a farmer and avoiding involvement in the ongoing "troubles" in Scotland. When an English soldier
tries to rape Murron, Wallace fights off several soldiers and the two attempt to flee, but the village
sheriff captures Murron and publicly executes her by slitting her throat, proclaiming "an assault on
one of the King's soldiers is the same as an assault on the King himself." In retribution, Wallace
returns to the village, seemingly ready to surrender. He attacks his captors and joins several
villagers as they slaughter the English garrison. Wallace himself brutally executes the sheriff in the
same manner that he executed Murron.

Following their triumph, Wallace is compelled to fight against the English who have taken over his
homeland and enslaved himself and his countrymen and women. In response to Wallace's exploits,
the commoners of Scotland rise in revolt against England. As his legend spreads, hundreds of
Scots from the surrounding clans volunteer to join Wallace's militia. Wallace leads his army through
a series of successful battles against the English, including the Battle of Stirling Bridge (September
11, 1297) where Wallace's Scots are outnumbered by the English army.

Afterwords, the victourious Scots invade northern England and sack of the city of York and kill its
lord, the nephew of Longshanks himself. During his campaign, Wallace seeks the assistance of
young Robert the Bruce (Angus MacFadyen), son of the leper noble Robert the Elder (Ian Bannen)
and the chief contender for the Scottish crown. However, Robert is dominated by his scheming
father (who suffers from leprosy and lives in seclusion, seen only by his son), who wishes to secure
the throne of Scotland to his son by bowing down to the English, despite his son's growing
admiration for Wallace and his cause.

King Edward Longshanks, worried enough by the threat of the rebellion, poses to send the French
princess Isabelle (Sophie Marceau) to try and negotiate peace with Wallace. Princess Isabelle is the
wife of Prince Edward (Peter Hanly) the Prince of Wales and Longshanks' oldest son. The King
sends her because his son is a weak-willed man and would not be imposing enough to negotiate,
but she is a strong leader.

Longshanks also knows that if Wallace kills her, the French king will declare war on Wallace in
revenge. Wallace rejects the offer of a title, an estate and a chest of gold that Longshanks has told
Isabelle to offer and continues with the fighting. However, during their conversation, Isabelle tells
Wallace that she understands his suffering and that she has heard about the death of his wife. They
share a moment of understanding and she becomes charmed by him.

For Wallace to continue fighting, he needs the Scottish nobility on his side, contributing troops and
food. But Wallace has problems convincing the nobility that they have a real chance to take back
the country from the English. The nobles think that the Scots will lose and the English will treat them
even worse than they are treated now. Also, the nobles are getting money from England and live
quite well. Some of them are more concerned that this money continues to come and that their
standard of living continues to be the best instead of looking after their people.

Robert the Bruce is particularly torn over what he sees as his duty to the people to free them and
what his father tells him to do to keep in good with the English and earn his crown.

Two Scottish nobles, Lochlan and Mornay, planning to submit to Longshanks, betray Wallace at the
bloody Battle of Falkirk the following year on July 22, 1298 as a new and larger English army, led by
King Edward Longshanks himself, invades Scotland to crush the Scots rebellion once and for all.
The Scots lose the battle due to Longshanks clever use of his long-bowmen and his massive
reserves which outnumber the Scots. Wallace nearly loses his life when, in a last desperate act, he
furiously breaks ranks and charges toward Longshanks to kill him personally. He is intercepted by
one of the king's hooded lancers and knocked from his horse, but gains the upper hand when the
lancer dismounts to examine the fallen Wallace. Wallace is set to kill the lancer, but upon taking the
lancer's helmet off, discovered his opponent is Robert the Bruce. Bruce is able to get Wallace to
safety just before the English can capture him, but laments his actions for some time to come
because of what Wallace has stood for, which he betrayed.

Over the next seven years, Wallace goes into hiding and wages a protracted guerrilla war against
the English. In order to repay Mornay and Lochlan for their betrayals, Wallace brutally murders both
men: Mornay by crushing his skull with a flail in his bed chamber and Lochlan by slitting his throat
during a meeting of the nobles at Edinburgh and dumping his body on their banquet table.

In 1305, as Wallace's guerrilla war continues, Princess Isabelle of France meets with Wallace as
the English king's emissary. Having heard of him beforehand and after meeting him in person, she
becomes enamored with him and secretly assists him in his fight. Eventually, she and Wallace
make love, after which she becomes pregnant.

Robert the Bruce contacts Wallace to set up a meeting, where the Bruce intends to declare his
intent to join Wallace and commit troops to the war. Still believing there is some good in the nobility
of his country, Wallace eventually agrees to meet with Robert the Bruce in Edinburgh. However,
Robert's father has conspired with the other nobles to set a trap and Wallace is captured. He is
beaten until he is unconscious and then handed over to the English. Learning of his father's
treachery, the younger Bruce disowns his father.

In London, Wallace is brought before the English magistrates and tried for high treason. He denies
the charges, declaring that he had never accepted Edward as his King. The court responds by
sentencing him to be "purified by pain." After the sentencing, a shaken Wallace prays for strength
during the upcoming torture and rejects a painkiller brought to him by Isabelle. Afterward, the
princess goes to her husband and father-in-law, begging them to show mercy. Prince Edward,
speaking for the now terminally ill and mute King Edward Longshanks, tells his wife that the king will
take pleasure in Wallace's death. Isabelle verbally lambastes her husband and father-in-law, then
informs the weakened Longshanks of her pregnancy with Wallace's child and swears that Edward
will not last very much longer as king. The mute Longshanks is shaken and unable to tell his son of
her plans.

Wallace is taken to a square at the Tower of London for his torture and execution by beheading. He
refuses to submit to the king and beg for mercy despite being half hanged, racked, castrated, and
disemboweled publicly. Awed by Wallace's courage, the Londoners watching the execution begin to
yell for mercy, and the magistrate offers him one final chance for mercy. Using the last strength in
his body, the defiant William instead shouts, "Freedom!" Just as he is about to be beheaded,
Wallace sees an image of Murron in the crowd smiling at him, before the blow is struck.

Epilogue. On June 24, 1314, nearly nine years after Wallace's death, Robert the Bruce, now a
Scottish king and still guilt-ridden over his involvement Wallace's betrayal, leads a strong Scottish
army and faces a ceremonial line of English troops at the fields of Bannockburn where the English
under their new king, Edward II (who had ascended the English throne upon the death of his father
Edward Longshanks in 1307), are to accept him as the rightful ruler of Scotland. Just as he is about
to cross the field to accept the English endorsement, the Bruce turns back to his troops. Invoking
Wallace's memory, he urges his charges to fight with him as they did with Wallace. Robert then
turns toward the English troop line and leads a charge toward the English, who were not expecting
to fight.

The film ends with Mel Gibson's voice intoning that the Scottish won their freedom in this battle.

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