On the eve of Scotland’s Referendum in 2014 it was alleged
that the then UK Prime Minister David Cameron banned the showing of Mel
Gibson’s movie Braveheart on British TV. The reason was said to be that the
showing of this movie with evoke even greater support for Scottish independence,
something that this proud nation had been trying to win back for over 300
years.
After watching the TV premier of Outlaw King on Netflix I
would think this movie, far more than Gibson’s 1995 inaccurate portrayal of William
Wallace and the Battle of Stirling Bridge, would evoke a far greater feeling of
national pride and would be just the right evenings entertainment on the eve of
the next Independence Referendum which is sure to follow the Brexit debacle by
the English Tory government.
David Mackenzie’s adventurous and well acted movie movie tells how in 1306 Edward
1 of England laid a blanket of persecution across Scotland and its nobility
including the future King of the Scots - Robert the Bruce. That was until the
news that Wallace’s had been hung drawn and quartered in London. This horrific
news again lit the spark of revolution into the minds of the Scottish people.
Following the murder of John Comyn it fell to Robert, after being crowned at
Scone, to lead his people once more into battle against their evil oppressors.
There followed the Battle of Loudoun Hill in May 1307. The battle is depicted on screen with no
regard for the squeamish.
Although not the turning point in the Scottish Wars of
Independence it led on to the landmark victory at Bannockburn in 1314 that in
turn gave Scotland freedom to rule itself following the Declaration of Arbroath
in 1320. That was until 1707 when this basic right was again taken away. The
rebirth of the Scottish nation is now well overdue.
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