|
Mel Gibson | William Wallace | |
Catherine McCormack | Murron | |
Sophie Marceau | Princess Isabelle | |
Patrick McGoohan | Edward I Longshanks | |
Ian Bannen | Robert the Bruce's leprous father | |
James Cosmo | Campbell | |
Brendan Gleeson | Hamish | |
Sean Lawlor | Malcolm Wallace | |
Sean McGinley | MacClannough | |
Sandy Nelson | John Wallace | |
James Robinson | Young William Wallace | |
Alan Tall | Elder Stewart | |
Andrew Weir | Young Hamish Campbell | |
Gerda Stevenson | Mother MacClannough | |
Ralph Riach | Priest #1 | |
Alun Armstrong | ||
Stephen Billington | ||
Mhairi Calvey | ||
Brian Cox |
Director |
|
||
Producer | Mel Gibson
Bruce Davey |
||
Writer | Randall Wallace
|
||
Cinematography | John Toll
|
||
Musician | James Horner
|
|
Every man dies, not every man really lives. Mel Gibson stars on both sides of the camera, playing the lead role plus directing and producing this brawling, richly-detailed saga of fierce combat, tender love and the will to risk all that's precious for something more precious: freedom. In an emotionally charged performance, Gibson is William Wallace, a bold Scotsman who used the steel of his blade and the fire of his intellect to rally his countrymen to liberation. Filled with sword-clanging spectacle, Braveheart is a tumultuous tapestry of history come alive, "the most sumptuous and involving historical epic since Lawrence Of Arabia" (Rod Lurie, Los Angeles Magazine). |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||