Tuesday, 1 July 2025

Towards a Complete List of Excellent Medieval/Fantasy Combat Scenes

Like, I suspect, 99.9% of my readers, I love a good film combat scene. Some non-fantasy favourites include the big gun battle towards the end of Heat, the final shoot-out in The Way of the Gun, the knife fight in Eastern Promises (A History of Violence has other good Cronenberg fight scenes) and the (criminally underrated) showdown in the (criminally underrated) David Mamet cult classic Heist

My preference for combat scenes is that they look realistic. This is not to say that any combat scene in a film is ever really 'realistic' (real life fights are mostly defined by none of the combatants having much of a clue what is going on). But I like the aesthetic of gritty, relatively unshowy, relatively low-key, but still exciting, encounters.

Here is a brief list of some favourites. You are encouraged to add your own in the comments:


The 'forest battle scene' from towards the start of Kingdom of Heaven. This receives negative points for heavily featuring Orloondo Bland, but bonus points for including the rarely-seen but laudable trope of combatants getting injured but still fighting on. Also notable for featuring David Thewlis, cast against type, as a wily knight templar.


Without wishing to go full Ridley Scott-fanboy, one would have to have a heart of stone not to appreciate the opening battle from Gladiator. When this film first came out, I saw it in the cinema one Saturday afternoon and then immediately went back into the cinema for the early evening showing. And this initial sequence remains a highlight in cinematic history, if you ask me.


The final fight in Roman Polanski's Macbeth. 'But bearlike I must fight the COURSE!' I just love the combination of brutality, bravura and bombast in this scene, shown in long, carefully placed shots, without a score to speak of. Note how quick they are with their weapons and dancing about in their armour (I have been told this is actually more realistic than the more laboured movements one sees in modern cinematic sword fights). 


The 2003 Beat Takeshi version of Zatoichi is my favourite. Japanese jidaigeki of this type always contain a scene in which a single samurai swordsman vaporises a collection of yakuza mooks. This one is executed with particular aplomb.


One of the boons of the internet age is of course that you get the chance to imbibe material shared by friends or acquaintances that would have simply been inaccessible (often literally) in times past. This scene from the 1974 Polish film The Deluge is a classic example.


Not exactly a fight scene, perhaps, but a scene of typical Mel Gibsonian extravagance and balls-to-the-wall film-making. Apocalypto is deeply flawed, but that it was made at all is impressive. And the spectacle is superb. 


The fight between Glass and Fitzgerland at the end of The Revenant is interesting for its focus on the knife. The fighters can tolerate any injury provided they are in control of the weapon, or at least so long as the other does not control it. 

Feel free to add your own!

17 comments:

  1. This post really meets me where I am! As an actor I've been in Macbeth three times, as young siwald (also died Trichotomy) Malcom, and Duncan over twenty some years, all productions influenced heavily by Roman. Also, I'm a karate black belt, and also, im a prosecutor and see real life fights on body worn camera on the regular. And also, play dnd in the yellow city with my kids. So I get to see violence as real life tragedy, self-help confidence builder, gaming cathartis, and real life shock. What I've seen in real life is fights is they aren't just one way, some are pushy and sad and somehave a guy get brutal and terrifying, which tends to reflect human nature. Like, everyone is playing dnd shooting magic missels and stuff and then my son Henry is like, I throw a flask of oil and then shoot flaming sphere with my bonus action and his sister Is horrified, but those goblins are quite dead. I guess this argues dnd combat is simulationist? Anyway, what I love most in cinema combat is what it shows about the characters fighting, in Macbeth it shows his total confidence fade into "oh shit" and the grit and honor of the challenger in the deluge. I think one of the great movie fight scenes is between Achilles and hector in Troy. Yeah, yeah, bad movie and unrealistic fight, but tells you who these men are and what matters to them with hardly any dialogue. As a last note, I don't think david thewlis as a bad-ass efficient killer casts against type, every time I see that guy it's like a coiled spring of ruthless violence. Harry Potter? Of course he is a werewolf, and I thought he was he was just going to kill the dude and set the house on fire on his way out in the Big Lebowski, just saying....

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    1. I did think about Achilles and Hector. Troy is a bit of a guilty pleasure of mine. Very silly but very entertaining.

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  2. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8j5IA0L_MI

    I've always found the machete fight from the first raid to be memorable

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  3. The King on Netflix as probably one of the best modern film knightly fight I have ever seen. Into the Badlands, while very string fu inspired, is a fun series.

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  4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqoUkEQMWQU

    Not exactly fantasy or medieval but I liked the Huguenot fights in The Princess of Montpensier. Also, Scott's Duelists, Wilde's Naked Prey, Kobayashi's Seppuku, Cromwell's Prisoner of Zenda, Lester's Musketeer movies come to mind...

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    1. Good depiction of general battle chaos!

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  5. The final duel from the Liam Neesan Rob Roy, primarily for how it ends, and how that ending is set up, even more than the choreography. The Mounds battle from Conan the Barbarian will always hold a special place in my heart, in spite of how ridiculous some of the weapons look.

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    1. I believe the Rob Roy fight had the same choreographer as Macbeth.

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  6. For Medieval I remember the final swordfight in the Ciaran Hinds Ivanhoe being really enjoyable.

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  7. The climactic battle in the Northman... two naked vikings in a volcano!

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  8. I just read an interesting analysis of the opening battle in Gladiator. Ah, here, acoup.blog/2025/06/06/collections-nitpicking-gladiators-iconic-opening-battle-part-i/ and there are two parts after it. The author, a history professor, is not impressed with its accuracy. I found it very cinematic though. Kurosawa's film inspired by MacBeth, Throne of Blood, had one hell of a final battle scene, with archers shooting at Toshiro Mifune on an elevated walkway. Mifune looks terrified in the scene because actual archers were shooting real arrows at him, or near to him.

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  9. Well, the Iconic Opening Scene of Gladiator is shit. The acoup blog explains why in detail. ;))
    I personally like many old-school Chinese kung fu movies (those where the scenes are not too heavily stylized). The Shaolin Temple with young Jet Li (when he wasn't a star) was a highlight of my early youth. Shootfighter was seen a bit later and is also quite good. The Street Fighter with Sonny Chiba the same. Among European ones I like the scenes in relatively recent Rob Roy with Tim Rot. Also, there were quite good scenes in 90s version of Hamlet. Deluge scenes are well-done, yes. There were lots of others, of course.
    Generally, I think that who had done the scene is a good indicator of quality, sorry for being Captain Obvious. ;))
    Mike

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