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Harry's Movie Check : William Tell (2025)

Movie poster from William Tell

William Tell

A 14th-century rebellion that remembers what stakes feel like

Movie Poster: William Tell
8/10 Movie

William Tell

A 14th-century rebellion that remembers what stakes feel like

133 min Action, Adventure, Drama, History

William Tell reinvents a old story for modern eyes without losing its bones. Director Nick Hamm treats the material seriously, the cast commits fully, and the film respects your time. If you want adventure that doesn't condescend, this delivers. Strongly recommended.

Harry Siegmund
Harry Siegmund 2 min read
Director
Nick Hamm
Genre
Action, Adventure, Drama, History
Runtime
133 min
Country
GB, IT, US, DE
Min. Age
16+
Year
2025
Type
Movie

Harry's Movie Review

William Tell takes the legend of a hunter forced into rebellion and sets it in 14th-century Switzerland, where Austrian expansion threatens everything he knows. Nick Hamm's film arrives as a genuine rarity: an action-adventure that takes its own story seriously. The stakes feel real because the film doesn't wink at you or undercut its own premise with irony. This is a very good cinema experience that treats an old story like it matters.

Claes Bang carries the film with a quiet intensity. He doesn't need grand gestures to show you a man pushed past his breaking point—it's in the set of his shoulders, the way he looks at his family before everything changes. The supporting cast anchors the world without vanishing into it. What impressed me most was that no one overplays their moment. Everyone seems to understand they're in something that demands restraint.

Hamm keeps the film moving through its two-hour-plus runtime without rushing. The pacing breathes. There are moments of genuine darkness when the Austrian occupation shows its teeth, and the film doesn't soften those edges. If anything, the middle section could have gone slightly longer—the revolution builds steadily but some quieter character moments would have deepened the personal cost—but this never becomes a real problem.

What stayed with me wasn't a single scene but the film's overall conviction. It commits to the idea that a pastoral nation defending itself matters, that a man choosing to fight is worth watching, that you don't need explosions every five minutes to keep an audience engaged. That kind of restraint is rarer than it should be.

Director
Nick Hamm
Genre
Action, Adventure, Drama, History
Year
2025
Runtime
133 min
Country
GB, IT, US, DE
Content Rating
R (16+)
Harry's Rating
8 / 10
Main Cast
Claes Bang, Connor Swindells, Golshifteh Farahani, Jonah Hauer-King, Ellie Bamber, Rafe Spall

Watch Movie Teaser

Trivia & Fun Facts

  • The film is directed by Nick Hamm, known for bringing psychological depth to period pieces and action narratives
  • William Tell was shot in multiple European locations to capture the authentic landscape and atmosphere of 14th-century Switzerland
  • The cast includes both rising talents and established actors, suggesting a production that balanced commercial appeal with artistic credibility

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. It's a refreshing take on historical action that doesn't rely on cheap manipulation or lazy shortcuts. If you appreciate films that treat their audience as intelligent and respect the time they're investing, William Tell delivers.

Set in the 14th century, the film follows William Tell, a hunter whose peaceful life ends when the Austrian Empire invades Switzerland. Forced to defend his family and homeland against an oppressive king and his warlords, Tell becomes an unlikely leader of rebellion.

The film features Claes Bang in the lead role, alongside Connor Swindells, Golshifteh Farahani, Jonah Hauer-King, Ellie Bamber, and Rafe Spall. Director Nick Hamm helms the project with a 133-minute runtime.

Harry's Movie Rating

Harry's Rating 8 / 10

Harry's Final Thoughts

Harry's Closing Curtain

William Tell proves that historical action cinema doesn't need to shout to be heard. It's confident in its own story and trusts you to follow. Hamm orchestrates a rebellion that feels earned, performed by actors who understand nuance over spectacle. At 133 minutes, it could justify every frame. This is genuinely worth your time—a strong recommendation for anyone tired of films that mistake loudness for excitement.

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Wednesday, July 15, 2026