Randall Wallace Movies
Randall Wallace planned on becoming a minister or a songwriter, not a filmmaker. After leaving the seminary to write music, he worked as a novelist and television scribe before penning the award-winning script to
Braveheart (1995) and embarking on a directing career. Raised in Tennessee,
Wallace began writing stories at the age of seven. He majored in religion at Duke University before joining a seminary, but took various writing classes all through school. He even opened his own record company to release his original songs, which were played on local radio stations throughout the Carolinas and Virginia. After exiting the seminary,
Wallace moved to Nashville to try his hand at a music career. He ran the animal shows at Opryland while trying to establish himself as a songwriter. Unfortunately, because he did not write country music (the city's primary genre), he experienced very little success. In 1980,
Wallace moved to Los Angeles where he began writing novels, such as Blood of the Lamb and Where Angels Watch. He earned rave reviews for his work -- critics compared him to
Robert Penn Warren and Charles Dickens -- but his sales were disappointing. With the help of producer
Stephen J. Cannell,
Wallace tried his hand at television writing, composing teleplays for Hunter, J.J. Starbuck, Sonny Spoon, and Broken Badges. A Scottish American,
Wallace formulated the idea for
Braveheart -- the true story of medieval Scottish patriot William Wallace -- while visiting Edinburgh Castle in Scotland. After writing the screenplay, he developed the film with his own funds before teaming with its director and star,
Mel Gibson. An extraordinary success,
Braveheart garnered several Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director.
Wallace earned a Writer's Guild of America Award, a Golden Globe nomination, and an Oscar nod for his screenplay. Three years later,
Wallace made his directing debut with
Man in the Iron Mask (1998), an adaptation of Alexandre Dumas' novel about the Three Musketeers' struggle to replace Louis XIV with a more worthy king. Despite its star-studded cast --
Leonardo Di Caprio,
Gabriel Byrne,
Jeremy Irons,
John Malkovich, and
Gerard Depardieu -- the film was not the blockbuster
Wallace had hoped it would be. Shortly afterward,
Wallace met director
Michael Bay, who asked him to write the script for
Pearl Harbor (2001). Though it began well, their collaboration hit a snag when
Bay called in several script doctors to add more action sequences to the film. Disagreeing with
Bay's decision,
Wallace quietly quit the project, though he is still
Pearl Harbor's only credited scriptwriter. He immediately started pre-production on his sophomore directing effort, the Vietnam drama
We Were Soldiers (2002). After discovering its source material -- a memoir written by Lieutenant General Hal Moore and war correspondent Joseph Galloway -- in an airport bookstore, he bought the rights to the film adaptation with his earnings from
Braveheart.
Wallace spent several years writing and developing the project himself before joining forces with star
Mel Gibson's Icon Productions. Released in 2002,
We Were Soldiers also featured
Greg Kinnear,
Chris Klein, and
Marc Blucas and was
Wallace's most favorably reviewed film since
Braveheart. He quickly went to work on polishing his pet combat script, a World War II film based on his father-in-law's experience as a German P.O.W. at the end of the war. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, Rovi

- 2013
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- 2011
- PG13
- Add Atlas Shrugged Part I to Queue
Add Atlas Shrugged Part I to top of Queue
This adaptation of Ayn Rand's 1957 objectivist novel Atlas Shrugged tells the first installment in the story of a dystopian future in which a collectivist society has forced the great thinkers of the world to go on strike, leaving the functioning world without scientists, engineers, philosophers, or artists. Set against this stark backdrop, a railroad heiress named Dagny Taggart tries to bring her failing company back from the brink with the development of a new alloy to repair breaks in the lines, and hopefully calm the business' vital corporate partnership with an oil company. But with the endless bureaucracy of an evil and corrupt government fighting her at every turn, and her own inept brother battling her for control, Dagny soon finds that in order to set things right in her world, things must be set right in the world at large. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Taylor Schilling, Grant Bowler, (more)

- 2011
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Terminator Salvation's McG helms this new take on Jules Verne's Captain Nemo character from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea with this family-friendly origin film. Justin Marks, Bill Marsilli, and Randall Wallace pen the script for Buena Vista. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
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- 2011
- NR
Filmmaker Mark Kitchell takes a cue from environmental journalist Philip Shabecoff's book of the same name in this documentary, which offers a detailed history of environmental activism. Spanning the course of five decades, Kitchell's film reveals this remarkable history in five acts, each centered around a specific struggle, and featuring a strong central character: In the first act, we see how David Brower and the Sierra Club joined forces to prevent the construction of dams in the Grand Canyon; the second story finds Lois Gibbs and her Love Canal neighbors waging a fierce battle against local, state, and federal governments after learning their homes had been built on top of a toxic dumping ground; Paul Watson joins Greenpeace in stopping whalers from plundering the sea in chapter three; Chico Mendes sides with Brazilian rubber tappers in the struggle to halt destruction of the Amazon rainforest in the penultimate episode; and the final tale follows Bill McKibben in his decades-long attempt to raise awareness of climate change. In the aftermath of such environmental catastrophes as Hurricane Katrina and Fukushima, A Fierce Green Fire attempts to awaken us to the dangers that could lie ahead should we continue to go on ignoring the troubling signs all around us. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 2010
- PG
- Add Secretariat to Queue
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A housewife with little knowledge of horse-racing fosters one of the greatest race horses of all time as the story of the 1973 Triple Crown winner comes to the screen in this inspirational underdog drama based on the novel Secretariat: The Making of a Champion by William Nack and starring Diane Lane and John Malkovich. Penny Chenery (Lane) is a devoted mother and housewife whose ailing father is the proprietor of Meadow Stables in Virginia. When her father becomes too ill to tend to his horses, Penny agrees to take over the stables despite her inexperience. Desperate, she turns to veteran horse trainer Lucien Laurin (Malkovich) to help show her the ropes. Up to this point, horse racing has been a decidedly male-dominated sport. But with Lucien's help, Penny prepares to prove that gender has no bearing on one's ability to breed a fast race horse. As Secretariat blasts out of the gates to leave his competition in the dust, the whole world watches in amazement, and a legend is born. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Diane Lane, John Malkovich, (more)

- 2010
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Will Smith stars as Pharaoh Taharqa in this ancient Egyptian drama for Columbia Pictures. Randall Wallace provides the screenplay, which focuses on the leader's battles with the Assyrians during the seventh century. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
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- 2009
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- 2008
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- Add Blind Spot to Queue
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Filmmaker Adolfo Doring highlights the link between the energy we consume, the current state of our economy, and the devastating effect the both have had on our environment in a film that posits whichever path we choose to walk, we'll be facing some seriously profound changes. Whether purposefully or by simple chance, it seems that mankind has come to a crossroads in his time on planet Earth: Either we continue to live our lives in ignorance and allow Mother Nature to correct our errors, or we take drastic, life-altering measures to ensure that the world will be habitable for future generations. Either way, the fact remains that our consumer-oriented society has sewn the seeds of its own demise. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 2002
- R
- Add We Were Soldiers to Queue
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Screenwriter Randall Wallace, a specialist in sweeping historical epics, steps behind the camera for this fact-based Vietnam War drama that reunites him with his Braveheart (1995) star Mel Gibson. Gibson is Lt. Col. Hal Moore, commander of the First Battalion, Seventh Cavalry, the same regiment fatefully led by George Armstrong Custer. As part of the Pleiku Campaign of late 1965, Moore is assigned to an action at Landing Zone X-Ray in the Drang Valley, an area that would come to be known as the "The Valley of Death." Moore soon finds himself and his men contained to an area about the size of a football field, surrounded by more than 2,000 enemy troops and engaged in the first major battle of the war. Heroism becomes the order of the day as men like Moore, chopper pilot Bruce Crandall (Greg Kinnear), and Lt. Henry Herrick (Marc Blucas) refuse to yield, in spite of heavy losses of life. The film co-stars Madeleine Stowe, Chris Klein, Keri Russell, and Sam Elliott. We Were Soldiers is based on the book We Were Soldiers Once...and Young by Lt. Gen. Harold G. Moore (retired) and UPI reporter Joe Galloway (played in the film by Barry Pepper). ~ Karl Williams, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Mel Gibson

- 2001
- PG13
- Add Pearl Harbor to Queue
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At the time of its release, this lavish period war drama from hyperkinetic director Michael Bay became the most expensive motion picture ever green-lighted by a studio. Ben Affleck stars as Rafe McCawley, a military pilot stationed under Jimmy Doolittle (Alec Baldwin) in New Jersey, along with his best friend from childhood, Danny Walker (Josh Hartnett). Rafe is chomping at the bit to get involved in World War II, but America has not entered the conflict, so he is forced to fight on loan to the Royal Air Force in Britain, leaving behind his beautiful girlfriend Evelyn (Kate Beckinsale). After Rafe goes overseas, both Danny and Evelyn are transferred to the naval base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, where word arrives that Rafe has been killed in action. A grief-stricken Evelyn and Danny become romantically attached, a situation that becomes a lit powder keg when Rafe suddenly reappears, having survived his ordeal in the European war. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor puts the romantic triangle on hold, as the best friends are ordered to undertake a top-secret and highly dangerous retaliatory mission to bomb Tokyo, once again under the command of Doolittle. Although the trio of leads are entirely fictional, Cuba Gooding Jr., Tom Sizemore, and Jon Voight (as FDR) co-star in the roles of real-life historical figures. Pearl Harbor is based on a script by Randall Wallace, writer of Braveheart (1995) and The Man in the Iron Mask (1998). Taking a page from the production history of James Cameron's Titanic (1997), many of the actors and filmmakers involved with Pearl Harbor deferred their usual salaries until the film "broke even" at the box office. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett, (more)

- 1998
- PG13
- Add The Man in the Iron Mask to Queue
Add The Man in the Iron Mask to top of Queue
Oscar-nominated Randall Wallace (Braveheart) made his directorial debut with this adaptation of the 1848 classic by Alexandre Dumas (1802-70), featuring Leonardo DiCaprio in a dual role. Years have passed since the Three Musketeers, Aramis (Jeremy Irons), Athos (John Malkovich), and Porthos (Gerard Depardieu) fought together with their friend D'Artagnan (Gabriel Byrne). The arrogant, tyrannical King Louis XIV (Leonardo DiCaprio) desires the beautiful Christine (Judith Godreche), so he orders her suitor Raoul (Peter Sarsgaard), the son of Athos, off to face death at the front. He also sends Aramis to kill the leader of a Jesuit rebellion. Louis is unaware that his loyal protector and informant, D'Artagnan, is the secret lover of his mother, Queen Anne (Anne Parillaud). Louis' younger twin brother, Philippe (also DiCaprio) is the man in the iron mask, imprisoned for the past six years. Arthos and Porthos plan to free Philippe, abduct Louis and replace him by putting Philippe on the throne. French location scenes include the Chateau de Fontainbleau. Previous adaptations: Allan Dwan's The Iron Mask (1929) with Douglas Fairbanks, the 1939 James Whale version with Louis Hayward, Patricia Medina in Lady in the Iron Mask (1952), Henri Decoin's Le Masque de Fer (1962), Mike Newell's 1976 TV movie with Richard Chamberlain, and Ken Annakin's The Fifth Musketeer (1978, aka Behind the Iron Mask) with Beau Bridges, Lloyd Bridges, Sylvia Kristel, Ursula Andress, Cornel Wilde, Jose Ferrer, Rex Harrison, and Olivia de Havilland. A second film titled The Man in the Iron Mask was released in 1998, a low-budget effort from director William Richert. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leonardo DiCaprio, Jeremy Irons, (more)

- 1996
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An unusually well photographed and acted TV movie, Dark Angel is set in New Orleans, home turf of enigmatic Cajun detective Walter D'Arcangelo (Eric Roberts). The detective's present assignment finds him going undercover in the seamier districts of the Big Easy in order to trap a serial killer who preys exclusively on adulterous wives. In time-honored movie tradition, the elusive killer sends out cryptic clues to the relentless D'Arcangelo, who throughout his investigation is wrestling with some rather persistent demons of his own. Things come to a head when D'Arcangelo himself is suspected of being the very murderer he seeks! Dark Angel made its initial Fox network appearance on September 10, 1996. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1995
- R
- Add Braveheart to Queue
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Mel Gibson, long-time heartthrob of the silver screen, came into his own as a director with Braveheart, an account of the life and times of medieval Scottish patriot William Wallace and, to a lesser degree, Robert the Bruce's struggle to unify his nation against its English oppressors. The story begins with young Wallace, whose father and brother have been killed fighting the English, being taken into the custody of his uncle, a nationalist and pre-Renaissance renaissance man. He returns twenty years later, a man educated both in the classics and in the art of war. There he finds his childhood sweetheart Murron (Catherine McCormack), and the two quickly fall in love. There are murmurs of revolt against the English throughout the village, but Wallace remains aloof, wishing simply to tend to his crops and live in peace. However, when his love is killed by English soldiers the day after their secret marriage (held secretly so as to prevent the local English lord from exercising the repulsive right of prima noctae, the privilege of sleeping with the bride on the first night of the marriage), he springs into action and single-handedly slays an entire platoon of foot soldiers. The other villagers join him in destroying the English garrison, and thus begins the revolt against the English in what will eventually become full-fledged war. Wallace eventually leads his fellow Scots in a series of bloody battles that prove a serious threat to English domination and, along the way, has a hushed affair with the Princess of Wales (the breathtaking Sophie Marceau) before his imminent demise. For his efforts, Gibson won the honor of Best Director from the Academy; the movie also took home statuettes for Best Picture, Cinematography, Makeup, and Sound Effects. ~ Jeremy Beday, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Mel Gibson, Sophie Marceau, (more)

- 1986
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After a teenager is killed in a robbery, Hunter (Fred Dryer) discovers that the kid was working for his old enemy Hector "El Gallo" Rivas (Trinidad Silvas). Determined to circumvent the law, El Gallo has assembled a gang of teens who are too young to prosecute as adults to do his dirty work. Secure in the knowledge that they'll beat any rap imposed upon them, the kids are willing to commit murder on behalf of El Gallo--and it is this aspect of the case that nearly pushes Hunter off the deep end. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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