Writer Screenwriter Freelance Technical Writer Releases Review of BRAVEHEART (1995)

October 13, 2005 (PRLEAP.COM) Entertainment News
*********** FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ****************

Writer Screenwriter Freelance Technical Writer Releases Review of BRAVEHEART (1995)

Fantastic musical score with irresistible bagpipes, married to equally fantastic scenery and battle scenes jarring in their ferocity and realism, make it a good watch

FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gary Kencey
Writer111@gmail.com
http://writer111.blogspot.com


Los Angeles CA — Writer Screenwriter and Freelance Technical Writer Gary Kencey has released a review of BRAVEHEART (1995), which was nominated for 10 Oscars and ended up winning 5.

This review is immediately available for publication and syndication.

Here is an excerpt:

BRAVEHEART (1995) won 5 Oscars including the Best Film and Best Director awards for Mel Gibson. It was also nominated for 5 more Oscars including the Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen, penned by Randall Wallace.

William Wallace, played by Mel Gibson, is a hero from 13th century Scotland in the classic mythological mold decribed by Joseph Campbell in his Hero With a Thousand Faces. All Wallace wants to do is marry, become a farmer like his father and carry on in peace. He is a reluctant hero. But things change after his wife is slaughtered by the local men of King of England Edward the 1st — Edward the Longshanks.

His fate forces Wallace to take on both the King of England and the Scottish landed nobility who flip sides at the drop of a hat. His desire to take his wife's revenge and set Scotland free sets him on a war path that leads to his eventual capture and public death under torture. (For trivia fans — the COMPASSION OF CHRIST is NOT the first movie in which Gibson is stretched across a crucifix.) Yet Wallace's legacy survives his beheading and sets Scotland free in the 14th century.

Fantastic musical score with irresistible bagpipes, married to equally fantastic scenery and battle scenes jarring in their ferocity and realism, make it a good watch indeed. Wallace's last word under torture is a long scream — "Freeeedom!" Who can remain impartial to that?

The gravel-voiced Patrick MacGoohan who plays Edward 1st is as good as Gibson since he makes a very credible foe to whip the dramatic tension nonstop throughout the film. Without a nemesis as amoral, tricky and dangerous as Edward Longshanks, Wallace's goodness and integrity would not stand out in such high relief.

FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gary Kencey
Writer111@gmail.com
http://writer111.blogspot.com

Writer Screenwriter and Freelance Technical Writer Gary Kencey is the author of feature screenplay AFFORDING MIRACLES, a mystical-thriller about murdered Catholic priests, Virgin Mary and human cloning. He is now writing his second screenplay, a story of an immigrant's struggle to reach the American Dream.

# # #