The Patriot
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Roland Emmerich
Mel Gibson
Heath Ledger
Joely Richardson
Chris Cooper
Tom Wilkinson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A former hero of the French/Indian War, Benjamin Martin has renounced fighting forever to raise his family in peace. Although once a wily and ferocious soldier, he marries a fine woman who bears him seven children and, under her influence, trades his violent past for a peaceful future on his sprawling plantation. But rebellion is brewing--another conflict with Britain is inevitable. Recently widowed, his goals change. He's the sole caretaker of his brood, and the horrors of past combat haunt him still. Benjamin's eldest son, Gabriel, harbors no doubts about going to war: the radical speeches and newsletters that began in the cities and traverse the Colonies have made an impression on him. War is coming, and Gabriel feels the cause is just. In defiance of his father, he joins the fight. Benjamin is conflicted--as stalwart as he is in his opposition to the war, he believes in the cause. When the British arrive, the reluctant hero discovers that he must join the nation's war to protect his family.
Cast
Mel Gibson
Heath Ledger
Joely Richardson
Chris Cooper
Tom Wilkinson
Leon Rippy
Adam Baldwin
Jason Isaacs
Bill Roberson
Scott Miles
Le Roy Seabrook
Kristian Truelsen
Mark Jeffrey Miller
Logan Lerman
Jamieson Price
Dara Coleman
John Curran
Donal Logue
Braima Moiwai
John Christopher Storey
Mary Jo Deschanel
P Dion Moore
Zach Hanner
Andy Stahl
Kanin J. Howell
Patrick Tatopoulos
Charles Black
Roy Mccrerey
Colt Romberger
Terry Layman
Lillie L Harris
Jay Arlen Jones
Tyler Long
Derrick B Young
Gregory Smith
Joey D. Vieira
Skye Mccole Bartusiak
Tchéky Karyo
Mika Boorem
Hank Stone
Gil Johnson
Bryan Chafin
Trevor Morgan
Kyle Richard Engels
Greg Good
John Bennes
Beatrice Bush
John H Bush
Peter Woodward
Grahame Wood
Randell Haynes
Shan Omar Huey
John F Dzencelowcz
Shannon Eubanks
Kirk Fox
Rene Auberjonois
Samuel Brown
Larry A Cornick
Lisa Brenner
Jack Moore
Mark Twogood
Samuel Brown
Crew
Donald R Abblett
Linda J Abblett
David Accord
Michael Addabbo
Lori Agostino
Christian Ahlers
Robert Albertell
Eddie Alvarado
Taylor Ammons
Kirsten Anderson
Amy Andrews
Amy Arnold
Christopher Assells
James Auger
Axel Bahro
Jeanie Baker
Karen M. Baker
David Baldwin
Gina Baran
Pedro Barquin
Stanton Barrett
Andy Rafael Barrios
Susanna Bauer
Wendy Bell
Brian Bennett
Paul F Bernard
Kim Berner
Jan Bernotat
Rufus Best
Judith H Bickerton
Ivica Bilich
Bryan Birge
Robert A. Blackburn
Susie Blanchard
Christopher Blauvelt
Dustin Blauvelt
Joel Blauvelt
David Bloch
Bobby Blue
Jennifer Bourne
Bob Bowman
Aaron Boyd
Robert Boyd
John Bozzalla
Anita E Brabec
David Brenner
Brian Lee Brown
Troy Brown
Richard Brunton
Clyde E Bryan
Richard Bucher
Tim Burgard
Kim Burke
Erik Burns
Michelle Butler
Brian Callahan
Gary L Camp
Colin Campbell
Debbie Carlson
Jon Carpenter
Leo C Castellano
Oscar G Castillo
Clete Cetrone
Fabrice Ceugniet
James Churchman
Barry Chusid
Joe Coble
David A. Cohen
Harry Cohen
Barry W Coleman
Keith Collea
Scott Edward Collins
Scott Collins
Ron Colucci
Jacqui Compton-jensen
Brent Conley
Andrew Cooper
Matt Cordner
Sebastian Cramer
Doug Creel
Corky Cronin
Diane Crooke
Shirley Fulton Crumley
James M Crumpley
Tim T. Cunningham
Brad Curry
John T. Cypert
George Da Silva
Thomas Dadras
Michael Dahan
Brigitte Daloin
Chris Dawson
Yves De Bono
Sandy De Crescent
Dicky Deats
Jerry C Deats
Jeff Debell
Guillaume Delouche
Aaron Dem
Caleb Deschanel
Caleb Deschanel
Matthew Dettmann
Sean Devine
Dean Devlin
Lisa Di Santo
Bill Diaz
Alianne Diehl
Dino Dimuro
Gina Disanto
Alan Disler
Paul Doble
William Dotter
Peter J Dowd
Jon Doyle
Scott Drion
Richard Duarte
Robert Dudley
Brian Duffy
John Dulno
James R. Dyer
Susan Ehrhart
Katrina Elder
Melissa Elliott
Roland Emmerich
Ute Emmerich
Jeremy Engleman
Mitch Enzmann
Robert E Erickson
John W Ervin
Cecilia Escobar
Kelly Everett
Michael J. Fahey
Mark Farris
Conny Fauser
Julie Fay
Patricia Fay
William Fay
Alexandra Fernandez
Billy W Fields
Derek Fields
Andreas Fischer
Christian Fletcher
Gladys Flournoy
J R Flournoy
Riley Flynn
David Fogg
Nickson Fong
Douglas Ford
Michelle Ford
Mark Franco
Laura Frank
Phil Fravel
Adam Frazier
Chad Frey
Alex Friedrich
Gordon E Frye
Yvonne Gabrielli
Suzette Gaconnier
Stefan Galleithner
Cynthia Garcia
Antonio Garrido
Harry Garvin
Jonathan S Gaynor
Joshua Geller
Kay Georgiou
Scott Getzinger
Hannah Gibson
Lance Gilbert
Tim Gilbert
Troy Gilbert
Jack Gilchrist
Patricia M Glasser
Marquetta L Goodwine
Marquetta L Goodwine
Jacquelin Gordon
Mark R. Gordon
Ken Gorrell
Timothy Grady
Laura Graham
Jason Gray
Joseph Gray
Jim Grce
Shane Greedy
Bill Greenberg
Elizabeth Greenberg
Mark Griffin
Tad Griffith
Lee Grubin
Joachim Gruninger
Abra Grupp
Gregory G. Hale
Per Hallberg
David Halsey
James Halty
Michael Hansen
Clifford Happy
Douglas Harlocker
Thomas Robinson Harper
Silke Hartung
Todd Alan Harvey
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Cinematography
Best Score
Best Sound
Articles
The Patriot
The filmmakers' original intent was to present a straight-up biography of Francis Marion (1732-1795), the South Carolina militiaman whose utilization of guerrilla tactics earned him the sobriquet of "The Swamp Fox" from the flustered British military brain trust. (Marion was, in fact, portrayed by Leslie Nielsen in a Disney "Swamp Fox" TV series in the late '50s-early '60s). When research brought more controversial aspects of Marion's life and career to light, however, the screenplay by Robert Rodat (Saving Private Ryan, 1998) opted to make the central character an amalgam of Marion and other period figures.
The Patriot opens in 1776 on the South Carolina plantation spread of Benjamin Martin (Gibson), a young widower whose battle exploits in the French and Indian Wars have become a local legend. However, Martin has had his fill of conflict, and his all-encompassing focus is now the family of seven children that he's raising alone. While his eldest, Gabriel (Heath Ledger), is very much caught up in the Colonials' cause, Benjamin is avowedly neutral regarding the skirmishes erupting around him, offering succor to wounded soldiers on both sides.
Of course, fate will pull Martin off the fence, and it comes in the form of the irretrievably heinous Colonel William Tavington (Jason Isaacs), a callous exponent of might-makes-right who views Benjamin's granting relief to the revolutionaries as treason. Beyond burning the Martin homestead to the ground, he drags Gabriel away for hanging because of his political sentiments, and murders another of Benjamin's sons for sheer sport.
Tavington's actions only cause the British forces to reap the whirlwind, as the vengeance-maddened Martin arms two of his younger sons to assist in Gabriel's rescue, an act accomplished by the tomahawk-wielding former gentleman farmer with stunning brutality. Wholly devoted to the revolutionary cause, Benjamin's cut-and-run assaults on the Brits have them deeming him "The Ghost." While General Cornwallis (Tom Wilkinson) holds personal disdain for Tavington's cold-bloodedness, the mounting embarrassments at Martin's hands leave him no choice but to grant him carte blanche in dealing with the rebel, and the path to a final confrontation is assured.
The Patriot certainly had enough resonance with audiences to be a significant career step for two of its principals. Ledger showed a confident and credible on-screen rapport with Gibson, and the role was great exposure for the rising young Australian actor. Isaacs' high villainy landed him on the "Love to Hate" A-list, notably as the imperious Lucius Malfoy in the latter entries in the Harry Potter series. Several moments in the script that would have served to humanize Tavington somewhat wound up on the cutting room floor, for the purpose of ensuring that he would be swiftly established as the heavy. Tavington would be the flashpoint for the largely negative response The Patriot received in the British media, with the sequence in which the officer orders the torching of a church with its parishioners locked inside drawing particular ire.
The filmmakers did strive for historical detail, and Devlin confessed to Smithsonian magazine that the period project offered different demands than the sci-fi stories with which he and Emmerich had been associated. "It was a different discipline, a different level. Thanks to the Smithsonian, we were able to get a lot of things into the picture that weren't in the script when we first read it. I wasn't aware that the American Revolution was fought with a racially integrated army, and that it was the last time we had one until the Korean War." At Oscar® time, The Patriot received a total of three nominations, including Best Cinematography (Caleb Deschanel), Best Original Music Score (John Williams) and Best Sound (Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell and Lee Orloff.)
Producer: Dean Devlin, Mark Gordon, Gary Levinsohn, Roland Emmerich, Ute Emmerich, William Fay
Director: Roland Emmerich
Screenplay: Robert Rodat
Cinematography: Caleb Deschanel
Film Editing: David Brenner, Julie Monroe
Art Direction: Barry Chusid
Music: John Williams
Cast: Mel Gibson (Benjamin Martin), Heath Ledger (Gabriel Martin), Joely Richardson (Charlotte Selton), Jason Isaacs (Col. William Tavington), Chris Cooper (Col. Harry Burwell), Tcheky Karyo (Jean Villeneuve).
C-165m. Letterboxed.
by Jay S. Steinberg
The Patriot
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Nominated for the 2000 Award for Best Production Design in a Feature Film - Period/Fantasy from the Society of Motion Picture & Television Art Directors/ Art Directors Guild (ADG).
Winner of the 2000 Award for Best Cinematography from the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC).
Released in United States July 2000
Released in United States on Video October 24, 2000
Released in United States Summer June 28, 2000
Shown at Taormina International Film Festival July 2-9, 2000.
Mel Gibson (CST) reportedly received $25,000,000 to star in this project.
Mel Gibson (CST) reportedly received $25,000,000 to star in this project.
Broadcast in USA on History Channel on June 29, 2000.
Began shooting September 4, 1999.
Completed shooting January 20, 2000.
Released in United States Summer June 28, 2000
Released in United States July 2000 (Shown at Taormina International Film Festival July 2-9, 2000.)
Released in United States on Video October 24, 2000