TOP “Battle of Stirling” Reactions | Braveheart (1995) | Movie Reaction

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Best Reactions to William Wallace’s Epic Victory at the Battle of Stirling in Braveheart (1995) Movie | Movie Reaction | First Time Watching

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Date: November 6, 2025

29 thoughts on “TOP “Battle of Stirling” Reactions | Braveheart (1995) | Movie Reaction

  1. the blue paint is leftover tradition from the picts and in julius ceasars accounts they would paint themselves with woad which would make different shades of blue depending on the mixture but is was used in religious cerimonies and other cultural practices it also made them look particularly fearsome in battle

  2. This battle is a historic piece because I believe epic battles will not be filmed like this anymore. AndD it was on film so the editing must of been fun. I seen this hundreds of times because I just love it.

  3. Being from Stirling. When this film came out, it literally showed and put a spotlight on Stirling again. I was a young boy and remember "the old man"/ James Cosmo kicking around and my brother met him. From time to time he still pops into the pub Molly Malones too. Anyways even though the film has big inaccuracies it still made Stirling a focus point again and it doesn't ever let people forget that the Scottish are hardy bastards!!!!

  4. The modern day "English" may be a tad disturbed if not dismayed by the historical inaccuracies in this Hollywood film. To them I say relax, it's a fictional movie with a basis in fact. I mean, glory to the heavens the "English" never sunk to the deplorable depths of spewing inglorious trash fiction in their historical movies😂. Fret not modern day English folks, this spat at Stirling Bridge in 1297 was between the Franco Normans and their subjugated Germanic Angles and Saxon (calvary, archers, infantry) subjects warring against Gaelic Scots. For full accuracy in this movie, the primary languages would be Norman French, German, Gaelige with a smattering of Welsh. No "English" were hurt in 1297 at Stirling. A hybrid Norman/Germanic "English" identity hadn't begun to take shape until the late- 14th century, almost 200 years after the Franco Normans invaded, conquered and colonized England's Germanic Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Viking populations. Fun-fact, Shakespeare was still writing in "aulde Anglishe", or middle German, in the late 15th century..

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