CA
  
You are currently viewing the Canada version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
75 MIN READ TIME

As Ithers See Us: Robert the Bruce in Cinema

Scotland ‘s history has been a fixture of cinema since the very birth of the medium. One of the very first motion pictures depicts the death of Mary, Queen of Scots, in Thomas Edison’s 1895 film The Execution of Mary Stuart – also one of the earliest examples of special effects. Mary and other Scottish historical figures like Macbeth, James VI, & Bonnie Prince Charlie went on to feature in dozens of films. Yet curiously, Scotland’s two most famous sons – William Wallace and King Robert I – are sparsely represented. The upcoming films Outlaw King and Robert the Bruce seek to redress that poor representation of two figures central to Scottish history.

Scots loved the pictures as much as anyone who was introduced to the new marvel, yet that enthusiasm was not reciprocated by way of representation: there was a distinct dearth of Scottish cinema, and what little was present tended towards the Kailyard school of cosy sentiment and reassuring nostalgia. Warm and fuzzy tales of seemple fowk in humble villages amidst the bonny hills were the order of the day – gentle fare like Brigadoon, Greyfriar’s Bobby, The Bridal Path, The Three Lives of Tomasina, Whisky Galore, punctuated by more sombre narratives like adaptations of Rob Roy and Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Yet the pool of Scotland’s story from which such films were drawn was shallow indeed: where were the resistances against Viking and Norman and English invasion, the stories of great scientists and explorers, the tales of reformers and heroes – even that most foundational strata of historical records, the annals of our kings and queens outside infamous defeated failures?

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of iScot Magazine
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue November/December 2018
 
FREE
BUY NOW
This special issue is not included in a new iScot Magazine subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription.
Annual Digital Subscription $39.99 billed annually
Save
52%
$3.33 / issue
Monthly Digital Subscription $5.49 billed monthly
Save
21%
$5.49 / issue

This article is from...


View Issues
iScot Magazine
November/December 2018
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


iSCOT
Voice from Europe
Alyn Smith is one of Scotland’s six Members of the European Parliament. He is a member of the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee.
The Dinwoodie Interview
SUSAN Aitken has come a long way in the 30 years since
As Welcome as a Fart in a Spacesuit
“As an Anglophile,” said Billy Connolly when asked
The road to independence runs through Holyrood
Here’s something that actually happened, but that may
Body language
Sometimes you just know. Sometimes you can just tell.
St Andrews Fair Day Saturday
Bringing you the alternative new in Orkney
Talking Tech
This month’s featured bit of tech which gives audible
Arabian Knights
By dint of great courage in mid-1965 a young Scots
Foodbanks are not normal
Foodbanks? 10 years or so ago, how many of us had heard
MEASLES And The Risks of Rash Decisions
Measles has been described by one author as “an inevitable
As old as the hills
James Hutton, the Scottish Enlightenment and the North West Highlands Geopark
A Welcome Tae Edinburgh!
As the Festival crowded Edinburgh, on the 24th August
From Glorious Broth To Gracious Haggis
I will never forget my first trip to Scotland. It was
The thistle and the shamrock
This month we take a look at Billy Kay’s contribution
London’s big, but Biggar’s Biggar!
HOW far do you have to travel to have a proper stay
The Language of Economics
I wo uld like to start this article with an apology.
Better the Devil you Know
….and so, once again, on a Friday, we made our way
Football Round-Up Late Extra!
Back in the August issue, iScot Magazine brought you
The Unseen Horrors of Gaza
A shocking report published in the BMJ this summer
Scotland leads the way a personal view from Australia
The Scottish Government doesn’t get everything right
Wee Ginger Dug
Coming soon in early 2019 a new book about my time
A Vigil Sky
Paul Colvin was invited to craft a poem to be read out on a night vigil held on the 17th September at Culloden Moor battlefield.
The Kitchen
The winter of discontent was the catalyst for a change
Arachne
Well, ye kin imagine that it didny take long for young
ALLAN MARTIN AN ISCOT MAGAZINE STORY
It took me most of the day to get to Wenbury Junction
Inside the Raj: Crime and Politics in British India
Alex J. Craig reviews Smoke and Ashes by Abir Mukherjee
MajorBloodnok, Agony Aunt
Heed my wisdom or the backstop gets it
Letters & Pics
Got a picture with a special memory for you? It might
The Big Yin
Find the clues in the ‘black squares’. The arrows tell