William Tell

6.2
20252h 13m

The narrative unfolds in the 14th Century, when the European nations vie for supremacy within the Holy Roman Empire. The ambitious Austrian Empire, desiring more land, invades neighbouring Switzerland, a serene and pastoral nation. Protagonist William Tell, a formerly peaceful hunter, finds himself forced to take action as his family and homeland come under threat from the oppressive Austrian King and his ruthless warlords.

Production

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Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Sky Trailer

Official Sky Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Official US Trailer

Official US Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer 2

Official Trailer 2

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer WILLIAM TELL - english

Official Trailer WILLIAM TELL - english

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: 'Action' TV Spot

'Action' TV Spot

Thumbnail for video: 'Traitor'

'Traitor'

Cast

Photo of Claes Bang

Claes Bang

William Tell

Photo of Ellie Bamber

Ellie Bamber

Princess Bertha

Photo of Rafe Spall

Rafe Spall

Stauffacher

Photo of Jonathan Pryce

Jonathan Pryce

Attinghausen

Photo of Ben Kingsley

Ben Kingsley

King Albrecht

Photo of Solly McLeod

Solly McLeod

Melchtal

Photo of Sam Keeley

Sam Keeley

Baumgarten

Photo of Jake Dunn

Jake Dunn

Stussi

Photo of Angus Kennedy

Angus Kennedy

Town Crier

Photo of Paul Bullion

Paul Bullion

Commander Armgard

Photo of Aron von Andrian

Aron von Andrian

Sergeant Heinrich

Photo of Diarmaid Murtagh

Diarmaid Murtagh

Master Builder

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Hmmm. Never before have I heard anyone proudly declare "We are Swiss" in quite such an underwhelming manner before, and that rather sums up the lacklustre performance of Claes Bang as the title character in this verbose crossbow chronology. Traumatised by his experiences in the Crusade, he's now not a natural rebel but is instead content to live peaceably with his wife and son. When he comes to the rescue of a stranger whose wife had just been raped and murdered by the occupying troops of the King of Austria (Sir Ben Kingsley) his former valiance is rekindled and releases all manner of hell on his unprepared, unarmed and unsuspecting people. Pursued by the maniacal "Gessler" (Connor Swindell) and his blonde henchman "Stussi" (Jake Dunn), he has to rediscover his skill with the arrow, and yes - there's the legendary scene with the apple and the boy's head! There is some stunning Alpine photography mingled in with the pretty obvious CGI, and to be fair to it there are plenty of action scenes as Tell and his rapidly increasing circle of friends proves to be quite adept at reducing their foes to wriggling corpses. Sir Ben has managed to fish out his eye patch from "The Last Legion" (2007) but like Sir Jonathan Pryce, he doesn't really feature enough to make much more than a few cameo appearances to add a little bit of Thespian gravitas to this rather sterile and flat history. The characters are really lacking in charisma in this film and the long-winded dialogue and charm-free efforts from all but, perhaps, Dunn - think a weedier version of "Stamper" from "Tomorrow Never Dies" (1997) just don't really resonate much at all. There's plenty of attention to the creative detail with the costumes and castles all fitting the bill nicely but it's probably half an hour longer than it needs to be and screams sequel at us at it's all rather rushed end.

K

Dasha K

1/10

I'm tired of this rubbish. What are the odds of an Iranian woman wandering around Switzerland in the middle ages? 0.0000002%? Or 0.0000001% 🤔

This is completely absurd, it completely devalues the entire script as well as the acting. They can't just make a movie with white people anymore. I guess some random organization has prohibited that?

You've reached the end.