Outlaw King by History Adventures

Historical Movies: Best Non-US Patriotic Movies

Christopher Nolan’s Dunkirk relives the suspense rescue of joint British and French forces from the Nazis in the last allied pocket in 1940 Dunkirk, France.

Admit it, watching historical movies gives you a realistic depiction of what could have happened in the past. With a taste of drama, action, adventure, or even satire and comedy, films with historical references are extraordinary. In a world of modern cinematographic themes and storylines, why not discover the wonders of historical movies?

As the CoVID-19 Pandemic continues to lock you down at home, you might be running out of movies to watch with your streaming apps. Luckily, we prepared a list of some of the must-watch historical films you should add to your interests.

1.)   BRAVEHEART

Directed by one of the legendary Hollywood actors and directors, Mel Gibson plays the role of Scottish national hero and warrior William Wallace. Whether you are Scottish or not, historical movies like Braveheart sends a highly inspiring feeling that triggers an uncontainable sense of patriotism. The story is set in 14th Century Great Britain during the reign of King Edward I Longshanks (played by Patrick McGoohan) and his rather insane heir, Edward, The Prince of Wales (Peter Hanly).

The elder Edward’s reign succumbs to several major crises against the Scots of the north due to his radical campaign of expanding England’s reaches to Scotland, Wealas (Wales), and Hibernia (Ireland). William Wallace, son of an executed Scottish noble, resorted to rioting after his newly wedded wife, Murron MacClannough, was killed by English soldiers. Such an act will eventually spark the Scottish War for Independence.

From the title itself, Braveheart sends a triggering feed to the hearts of its watchers. The sad reality of the Medieval Age’s gruesome daily life also tells you more about the Scots’ conditions under the tyrannic rule of Edward Longshanks. The Braveheart of Mel Gibson’s William Wallace will witness love, triumph, loss, and death.

2.)   OUTLAW KING

Directed by David MacKenzie, his 2016 film Hell or High Water was nominated for Best Picture Oscar (Mackenzie himself should also be selected for the director). Starring Chris Pine as the Scottish King Robert the Bruce, which is known for his exemplary performance in Hell or High Water. Outlaw King tells the gripping story of persistent rebellion, betrayal and love in adversity.

Outlaw King is one of those historical movies which revolves around the Post-Wallace period —after the brutal execution of Scotland’s Braveheart, who was hanged, drawn, and quartered. One of Wallace’s accomplices, Robert the Bruce, son of Robert the Bruce, son of Robert the Bruce, son of Robert the Bruce (and it goes on…)  played by Chris Pine, resumes the Scottish War for Independence after dissenting against the old and imbecile King Edward Longshanks. Bruce and his people faces the struggle of trying to topple the world’s greatest military force and most brutal overlord—England.

You can think of Outlaw King as a sequel to Braveheart, with some overlap between the beginning of the new Mackenzie film and the ending of the 23-year-old best picture winner Mel Gibson. Both films take love as the axis, and historical events and actions revolve around it. The protagonists are unwilling to participate in the war. Still, they are driven by a sense of justice and a higher sense of mission, from King Robert de Brus’ multiple epic battle sequences, mud, blood and internal organs deep in the knees.

3.)   DUNKIRK

One of the renowned award-winning director Christopher Nolan’s masterpiece, Dunkirk, sends you back to the height of Germany’s invasion of France and western Europe in 1940. Christopher Nolan’s “Dunkirk” project subtly reversed the family trilogy: land, sea and air. Nolan discussed the week of fighting during World War II from May 26 to June 4, 1940, and the efforts to rescue the British and French forces in these three parts gave the time frame for each piece.

Therefore, the film has leapt in time, and every action clue is advancing irregularly until these three clues form the film’s apparent conclusion. It successfully retreated more than 300,000 soldiers (of which about three-thirds). The second is British, and the other is British soldier). -The third French) from Dunkirk, France, across the English Channel to England. Of course, retaining this fighting force is crucial to preserving Britain and the result of the war; retreat is a failure to help ensure victory.

Nolan’s construction turns a step forward into a mosaic, breaking the sense of unifying the arc of drama in a series of observing anecdotes, isolated events and isolated confrontations. It highlights individual bravery and heroic behaviors, which depend on the infinite details of choices and opportunities, while general historical events depend on these details. By separating the three intermediate lines and the field of action, Nolan hints at the seemingly miraculous synergy of uncertainty, uncertainty, quasi-metaphysical randomness, and the different events that make up the result.

4.)   OPERATION FINALE

In 1960, Mossad agents arrested Adolf Eichmann in Buenos Aires, and Eichmann was extradited to Israel, where he will be tried next year, in the story of Chris Weitz (Chris Weitz) dramatizes the new film “The Finale” in the style of a thriller. The film is cleverly divided into three parts: action, backstory and teaching elements. They are intertwined throughout the film, but each provides a unique emotion and triggers different ideas; they can also be other movies.

The protagonist Peter Malkin (Oscar Isaac), is a young agent who first appeared in Austria in 1954. He was wrong: to hunt down another Nazi, he killed an innocent person. His boss Isser Harel (Lior Raz), did not deny this fault, but he still has confidence in Peter and made him a key figure in the team that went to Argentina to search for and kidnap Eichmann. Eichmann’s (Ben Kingsley) arrest asked him not to scream or try to escape, so Dr Hannah Regoff (Melanie Laurent) also appeared to calm him down. But Hannah also turned out to be Peter’s predecessor, and he wanted to restart their relationship.

The backstory includes scenes from the massacre, depicting the murder of Peter’s sister Fruma (Rita Pauls) and her young son, and shows Eichmann as a commander or at least an overseer A scene from the massacre in which Jews were forced to enter a well, were forced to dig and were then shot dead by a group of Nazi troops. Weitz’s cinematic imagination cannot cope with these unbearable, almost inexpressible horrors. The film’s main plot is to get Eichmann (who lives in Argentina under the pseudonym Ricardo Clement) from incarceration in Israel.

5.)   THE RESISTANCE BANKER

Based on a true story, the Dutch Netflix original Resistance Banker is a slow and suffocating tense movie. Driven by gritty realism and an accurate representation of the Nazi-occupied countries, Resistance Banker is an impressive film worth watching, even if its rhythm makes it no longer a fascinating movie. The background of THE RESISTANCE BANKER is the troubled World War II and the Nazi-occupied Amsterdam.

The story tells the banker Walraven Van Hall (Barry Azma) at a critical moment of World War II who decided to fund the Dutch resistance to the Nazis. With the help of their brother Gis van Hall (Jacob De Wig), the two began to transfer money from the bank to the hands of the resistance movement to stop the German war machine. Of course, things are not inevitably that simple. What follows is an organized game of cat and mouse because the resistance movement tries to frustrate the Nazis because they find out what they are doing while finding out if there are any discoveries. Try not to find spies in the middle.

“Wally” began working in the French resistance long before the Nazis invaded France and secretly formed an alliance with the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts organizations, helping to save the lives of thousands of war orphans. Under the guise of a charitable fund, Walraven van Hall helped Dutch sailors stranded abroad due to the war to launder money for their shadow bank. Like many Dutch historical movies, it tells a story worth knowing about the little-known heroes of WWII.

These are just five (5) of the best nationalistic historical movies. Just in case you have exhausted your movie list after watching these remarkable films, watch out for our next blog! Get ready to know about the five (5) highest-grossing historical series!

American Revolution AP World History AUDubai Campus Big History Big History Education Botany Bay Character Design Conquistador Cultural Heritage Digital Design Digital Learning Digital Learning Innovation Engaging Educational Games Engaging History Content Historical Fiction Historical Narratives Historical Simulation Games History Apps History Books Interactive History Experiences Interactive History Learning Interactive Learning Mobile Learning Narrative Design Rebellion Revolution slavery Spencer Striker US History World History Exam