[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/knights_tale.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:''[[{{Tagline}} He will]] '''[[Music/QueenBand rock your world.]]'' ''']]
''A Knight's Tale'' is a 2001 GenreBusting medieval sports romantic comedy film written and directed by Creator/BrianHelgeland. Loosely based on the first story from Creator/GeoffreyChaucer's ''Literature/TheCanterburyTales'', it stars Creator/HeathLedger, Creator/RufusSewell, and Creator/ShannynSossamon, with a supporting cast including Creator/AlanTudyk, Creator/MarkAddy, Creator/JamesPurefoy, Creator/LauraFraser, and Creator/PaulBettany as Chaucer himself.

The film plays like a combination of sports movies and romantic comedy, except that the sport is [[TheTourney jousting]] and the setting is TheLateMiddleAges (specifically UsefulNotes/TheHundredYearsWar). Our hero William is a superficial squire who, with the help of some humble friends, attempts to make his mark by [[FakeAristocrat posing as a noble knight]], becoming Europe's best jousting sensation and winning the heart of a fine maiden.

The film is notable for its gleeful embrace of AnachronismStew, featuring 14th-century courtiers dancing to Music/DavidBowie and peasants doing the ''stomp-stomp-clap'' cadence from "[[Music/{{Queen}} We Will Rock You]]."
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!!This film contains examples of:
* AchievementsInIgnorance:
** William never raises his head to prevent splinters from the lances penetrating his visor, since he has never received any proper training in jousting, and so does not know of these subtle techniques by other knights. It does, however, mean he keeps his eyes on his target at all times, and is implied as to be one of the key reasons why he's so effective.
** William/Ulrich unknowingly scores major brownie points with Jocelyn when he is the only knight in the tournament at Rouen to not claim he would win the tournament for her. [[spoiler:He later annoys her in Paris when he ''does'' tell her this, prompting her demand that he throw his first several matches.]]
* ActOfTrueLove:
** Having gotten so many declarations of how a suitor will win the tournament for her, Jocelyn gives Will an ultimatum when he does the same in Paris - [[spoiler: that he should ''lose'' to prove his love for her. After he goes through about half the tournament just taking the strikes, she sends word that he's proven himself, and should now fight to win.]]
--->'''Chaucer''': There she is, the embodiment of love. Your Venus.\\
'''Will''': [[ThisIsGonnaSuck And how I hate her.]]
** Later played seriously when William's friends stand by his side against the mob after his true identity has been revealed and he's [[StockPunishment being pilloried]].
* AdvantageBall: Carefully minded throughout. At the beginning, Adhemar has the advantage by virtue of his greater experience, but once William finds his feet and begins to feel more confident, he begins to win easily, until [[spoiler: Adhemar starts cheating]]. At the end, Chaucer's RousingSpeech gives him the edge he needs.
* AmbiguouslyAbsentParent: William's father, John Thatcher, is seen in flashbacks and reunites with his son near the end. William's mother isn't so much as mentioned. Based on the time period, she's most likely dead.
* AnachronisticSoundtrack: The soundtrack is filled with 1970s music such as [[Music/{{Queen}} "We Will Rock You"]], [[Music/DavidBowie "Golden Years"]] and [[Music/{{ACDC}} "You Shook Me All Night Long"]] that's deliberately out of place for the 14th-century. The intention was to convey that people of the era felt the same way about their music as a modern audience does about rock music. There's also the fact that the typical alternative, a full orchestral score, would have been just as anachronistic; most orchestral instruments didn't exist in the 14th century.
* AnachronismStew:
** Other anachronisms are put in for RuleOfFunny and RuleOfCool. Kate puts her brand on Will's armour - the Nike logo. Jocelyn has a lot of hairstyles that are inspired by punk-rock and there's even a wooden version of the London Eye visible at one point. Some of the costumes are anachronistic because the designer thought they looked neat.
** While Anjou (of which the villain is supposed to be the Count) had once been an English possession (in fact, it was originally the seat of the Plantagenet family, of which the Black Prince was a member), by the time this movie is set, Anjou was a French possession held by the then current King of France John II, who the Black Prince defeated in battle at Poitiers, which is depicted in this movie.
** Armor at this time was usually painted or [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluing_(steel) heat-blued]], both for decoration and to protect against rust (galvanized steel wouldn't be invented for centuries). Most of the armor in the film is bare metal, with only BlackKnight Count Adhemar wearing a suit of blued armor. This is a near-OmnipresentTrope for works set in TheLateMiddleAges and is largely the Victorians' fault: they thought suits of armor looked better on display with the paint stripped.
* AndImTheQueenOfSheba: William attempts to introduce himself to Chaucer as "Sir Ulrich" but is so unconvincing Chaucer sees right through it and snarks back at him.
-->'''William:''' I'm Ulrich von Liechtenstein, from Gelderland, and these are my faithful squires, Delves, of Dogington, and Falhurst, of Crewe.\\
'''Chaucer:''' ''({{Beat}})'' I'm UsefulNotes/RichardTheLionheart. Pleased to meet you! No, wait a minute, I'm UsefulNotes/{{Charlemagne}}. No, I'm Saint John the Baptist!
* {{Angrish}}: [[FieryRedhead Wat]] is prone to this.
* AnswerCut: A variation -- after Adhemar compares Ulrich to an anvil, the movie cuts to William, who's remarking that Adhemar hits like a hammer.
* AppealToForce: When William introduces himself to Chaucer as "Sir Ulrich von Liechtenstein from Gelderland", Chaucer derisively replies, "I'm Richard the Lionheart, pleased to meet you." William promptly pulls a knife on him and Chaucer goes, "Now ''that'', I ''do'' believe, ''Sir Ulrich.''"
* ArcWords: "A man can change his stars."
* AristocratsAreEvil: Adhemar, the evil rival, is Count of Anjou. On the other hand, William is a good guy, and his friends are seen making up stories about how evil his aristocratic opponents are in order to encourage him to beat them. It works a little ''too well''.
* ArrangedMarriage: Adhemar reveals at the opening ceremonies for the London tournament that he's started negotiating with Jocelyn's father to marry her.
* AscendedFanboy: William, obviously.
* AsTheGoodBookSays: Adhemar's "You have been weighed, you have been measured, and you have been found wanting", which is later reiterated by Wat, Roland, Kate, and Chaucer, is taken from Daniel 5:27 in the Bible: "Tekel: Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting." [King James Version]
* AsYouKnow: When they first realize Sir Thomas is Edward, Prince of Wales, Chaucer goes on about his ruthlessness and skill in battle at some length before an annoyed Watt cuts him off with, "We're English, Geoff, we know who he is!"
* AudienceParticipationFailure: At one point during the filming, the Czech extras hired to play a crowd watching one of the tournaments (very few of whom actually understood English) were supposed to cheer wildly after Chaucer gave his speech. But, as most of them didn't understand English, the crowd hadn't actually understood their instructions, and were confused about when Chaucer was finished. When actor Creator/MarkAddy abruptly broke into wild cheering, the crowd finally got it and began to cheer as well. Director Brian Helgeland thought this was so funny [[ThrowItIn he actually kept it in the film]] and reshot some sequences before and after to make their reaction more appropriate to the story.
* BadassLongcoat: Chaucer and Prince Edward love wearing these. Sir Ector is also seen wearing one in the flashback where he takes William as squire.
* TheBard: Chaucer is a variant.
* BattleCry: [[spoiler:[[SayMyName WILLIIIIAAAAAAAM!]]]]
* BecauseYouWereNiceToMe: William twice jousts against a Sir Thomas Colville. The first time Colville is injured on the second lance, and William agrees to have them both tilt and then not strike each other to maintain Colville's honor. The second time, William learns right before the bout that Colville is really [[KingIncognito Prince Edward incognito]], and before the others can withdraw for him William tilts at him. Edward is both impressed by William's willingness to face him as a WorthyOpponent, as well as grateful for the earlier honorable draw; and repays the kindness after William is revealed as a commoner by knighting him. Moreover, he fakes evidence that William is descended from an ImpoverishedPatrician and warns anyone that [[ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem to question him is treason]].
* BecomingTheMask:
** The earliest hint of this is when he and his companions compose a love letter to Jocelyn, and he says "With all the love that I possess, William." Chaucer reminds him that he's ''Ulrich''. He ultimately compromises on "the knight of your heart".
** [[spoiler:When the truth comes out, Will refuses to run even knowing it could spare him his life. He believes himself to be a knight in his heart, even if he isn't one on paper. His companions agree this may be so but the judges only care for paper.]]
--->'''William:''' No! I will not run! I am a knight!
* BerserkButton: Roland is initially unwilling to gamble all of their money on the Paris tournament, ignoring the taunts of the Frenchmen, until they go too far:
-->'''Frenchman:''' And most importantly, because the Pope himself is French.\\
'''Roland:''' ... Well the Pope may be French, but Jesus is English. You're on!
* TheBigDamnKiss: [[spoiler:The movie of course ends with one between William and Jocelyn after the tournament is won. Prince Edward even plants a big kiss on his wife after the win]].
* BigGame: The world championships. At which William and Adhemar are finally to have a rematch.
* TheBlacksmith: A female one, no less, acting as a farrier and armoursmith.
* BlackKnight: Two of them appear as William's opponents:
** Adhemar is the main rival and BigBad who wears a suit of black armour. He's a formiddable jouster and an established nobleman with a terrible reputation for cruelty. He also eventually resorts to cheating by having his lances fitted with pointed tips to injure William.
** "Sir Thomas Colville" also wears black armour but is a WorthyOpponent and not a villain, in fact he's actually [[KingIncognito the Prince of Wales in disguise]]. He wears black armour as royal colours or symbols would give him away.
* BlasphemousBoast: PlayedForLaughs. The Frenchmen trying to get Wat, Roland, and Kate to join their bet with Chaucer in Paris start goading them with TrashTalk. One goes too far for Roland when he says an English knight won't win because the Pope is French. Roland angrily retorts with the absurd but hilarious line, "Well, the Pope may be French, but Jesus is English!"
* BlasphemousPraise:
-->'''Wat:''' And your love? Have you proven that yet?\\
'''William:''' Wat, you remember church as a boy. The fear, the passion. That's what she makes me feel. And for that, I say my rosary to Jocelyn and no one else.\\
'''Wat:''' William, that's blasphemous.\\
'''William:''' Then may I burn in hell.
* BlatantLies:
** Will introduces himself to Chaucer, having blatantly just made up his "Sir Ulrich von Liechtenstein" alias. Chaucer sarcastically replies, "I'm Richard the Lionheart, pleased to meet you."
** Prince Edward justifies [[spoiler:knighting William by announcing that he's discovered Will is descended from nobility]], then basically dares anyone to call him on it: "[[AssPull This is my word]], [[ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem and as such is beyond contestation.]]"
* BlondBrunetteRedhead: Male example. The trio of friends at the beginning has William as the blond, Roland as the brunet and Wat as the redhead. Geoff gives them another blond and then Kate's black hair. This is averted with the female characters, who are all dark-haired.
* BluntYes: When Jocelyn [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone expresses guilt]] over William's injuries after [[spoiler:asking him to lose in order to prove his love for her]]. William replies, "[[CaptainObvious Yes it is]]".
* BoomHeadShot: Or the jousting equivalent. As Adhemar explains to Jocelyn, breaking your lance on your opponent's helmet is worth more points because it's more difficult.
* BoringButPractical: Adhemar and his herald's assessment of William's jousting: "His technique, rudimentary. His style, nonexistent".
* BrickJoke: When Geoffrey first joins the gang, Wat warns him that betraying them will result in "pain, lots of pain". They, Roland and Kate engage in gambling before the Paris tournament, unaware that Will will force himself to lose it. When Geoff tells Wat that loss is just part of gambling, Wat follows through on the "Lots of pain!" He is even implied to give Geoff a wedgie.
* BringIt: William to Adhemar at the final, do-or-die joust.
-->'''William:''' Let's dance, you and I.
* BuxomBeautyStandard: [[DiscussedTrope Discussed]] when writing the letter to Jocelyn - they spend rather a lot of time discussing whether or not William should mention her breasts. Kate, at least, has an opinion on Jocelyn's.
-->'''Geoff:''' You could... I would tend to look above her breasts.\\
'''William:''' [[ComicallyMissingThePoint I miss her throat?]]\\
'''Geoff:''' Still higher, a little towards the ''heavens''.\\
'''Kate:''' The moon at least. Her breasts were not ''that'' impressive.
* CerebusCallback: In the scene where William first arrives in London, he imagines that a young boy cheering him on is himself as a child. Later on [[spoiler:as he stands in the pillory]] the same boy runs up to him and slaps him in the face.
* TheChampion: {{Inverted}} and {{lampshaded}} when Jocelyn calls William out on this trope, telling him that the ''more'' impressive feat to her would be if he intentionally lost as "proof of his love". [[LoveMakesYouStupid No points for guessing how this turns out]].
* CheatersNeverProsper: Sir Adhemar is an excellent jouster and defeats Will easily the first time they tilt against each other, with Will lampshading that Adhemar is the only real opponent he has to beat. [[spoiler:So naturally, when he finally resorts to cheating with a tipped lance against Will, it's the first time he loses.]]
* ChekhovsSkill: {{Subverted}} with William's swordsmanship--he's shown early on to be very good in the sword, and wins a tournament in the sport in his first go... then declares that it's Tournament Champion or nothing (annoyed at being humiliated by Count Adhemar) and he never picks another sword up for the rest of the film.
* TheCobblersChildrenHaveNoShoes: "Oh, but this leak won't do, Father. Not in the chamber of a Thatcher." His father answers that for a blind thatcher, it's actually rather fitting.
* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: Adhemar is almost always wearing black. And looking ''good''! He's also literally the GreenEyedMonster, motivated mostly by his jealousy of William.
* CombatPragmatist:
** Adhemar's aide shows signs of this. When Adhemar asks how ''he'' would defeat "Ulric", the man suggests ambushing him in his sleep and beating him with a stick.
** Taking this idea, Adhemar [[spoiler:followed "Ulrich" looking for some scandal or fact he can use against him. He gets more than he could wish when he finds him returning to his home and meeting his real father.]]
* ComeToGawk: People do this to those in the [[StockPunishment pillory]].
* ComicallyMissingThePoint:
** Sir Ector has a heart attack while taking a dump between bouts, so William puts on Sir Ector's armor to take his place in the tournament (and hopefully win because they've been completely out of food money for days). He's ebullient about getting to joust for the first time.
--->'''William:''' I've waited my whole life for this moment.\\
'''Roland:''' You waited your whole life for Sir Ector to shite himself to death?
** Wat's usual state of mind. For just one example, his response to Jocelyn's disparaging description of William as "a silly boy with a horse and a stick" after a fight.
--->'''Wat:''' It's called a ''lance'', helloooooo!
** William is trying to write a love letter to Jocelyn with the group's help, and has no idea how to express how much he misses her. Wat suggests, "How about her breasts? You miss them."
-->'''Geoffrey:''' You could... I would tend to look ''above'' her breasts.\\
'''William:''' I miss her throat?
* CostumePorn: Practically every scene Jocelyn appears in has her sport an entirely new outfit and hairdo.
* CrazyJealousGuy: Adhemar. If he cannot woo Jocelyn, he will simply work out a deal with her father to marry her.
* CripplingTheCompetition:
** Discussed, then played with, and finally played straight:
--->'''Count Adhemar:''' How would you beat [Ulrich]?\\
'''Advisor:''' With a stick. While he slept. But on a horse, with a lance? That man is unbeatable.
** Following this, Adhemar plays with the trope by striking at Will ''politically'', exposing him as a false-knight so he can't compete. When ''that'' doesn't work (because Will actually gets knighted), Adhemar resorts to straight up cheating by using actual pointed lances ''disguised'' as the tournament-legal blunted ones. The stabbing injury he inflicts on Will with one forces him to shed his armor and risk ''death'' to continue competing.
* CurbStompBattle: Will after getting told by Jocelyn [[spoiler:to win, after previously being told to lose, crushes his remaining opponents.]]
* CurtainClothing: When asked what William will wear to a banquet, Roland's inspiration, and description comes from the cloth tent he is staring at. In his own words "Eh... green. Um... trimmed in a kind of... pale... green... uh, wi-with, uh... wooden toggles."
** However, when we later see William wearing the tent-turned-tunic, there isn't a toggle to be seen, nor is the tunic made from the tent either. It was probably repurposed from something, but not from the tent Roland was looking at since the fabric he used is embroidered throughout and has a different pattern.
* CutHisHeartOutWithASpoon: Wat threatens Geoffrey with this during the trio's first encounter with Chaucer. Chaucer is nonplussed more than anything.
-->'''Wat:''' Uh, betray us, and I will fong you, until your insides are out, your outsides are in, your entrails will become your extrails I will w-rip... all the p... ung. Pain, lots of pain.
* DavidVersusGoliath: A plucky peasant with an antique suit of armour versus the combined nobility of Europe and, more specifically, the undefeated champion of Europe.
* DanceSensation: Both in the opening song and the ballroom scene.
* DarkIsEvil: Adhemar; dark hair, dark armor, dark horse, dark heart.
* DarkIsNotEvil: {{Played with}} Prince Edward, called the Black Prince. As mentioned in HistoricalHeroUpgrade, against his enemies, he is a scourge and bringer of death and terror. However, if one has gained his respect, then he is this idea. Seen best when [[spoiler:he knights William because of his valor and his friend's love for him]].
* DeadPersonImpersonation: Sir Ector dies before the final stage of the last tournament he entered. William impersonates him during that stage and that's what inspires him into making up a nobility status so he can enter more tournaments.
* DeathGlare: Adhemar has a nice one that he fixes on his herald (who looks ready to wet himself) when he discovers that Will has been winning so many tournaments while he's been busy warring. In the commentary they mentioned how they [[MickeyMousing timed the music to match his expression]].
* DeathOrGloryAttack: The movie ends [[spoiler:with William doing this to Adhemar. In their first two tilts, Adhemar struck William hard enough to dent his armor, forcing William to take it off. In their third tilt, William charges against Adhemar completely unarmored, ensuring that either he would unhorse Adhemar or he would take a fatal stab from Adhemar's lance.]]
* DeliberateInjuryGambit: At the beginning of the film, when William is impersonating Sir Ector, he deliberately takes a blow to the helmet on the final tilt so that he can avoid taking it off during the award ceremony.
* DeliberateValuesDissonance: {{Played straight}}, then subverted.[[spoiler:William is stripped of everything, [[StockPunishment put into the pillory]], and humiliated for daring to rise above being a peasant squire. Then the Prince knights him anyway]].
* DirtForcefield: Mostly {{averted|trope}}, as characters appear just as dusty and dirty as they ought (and the Black Prince has a ''bad'' case of Helmet Hair when William reveals him), most of the time. Played straight, though, when Kate is shown working on the below mentioned Nike armour; a blacksmith working in her forge ought to be ''covered'' in soot, while she's just got a little bit of dust on her forehead.
* DiscriminateAndSwitch: How Will convinces Kate to fix his armour.
-->'''William:''' It's just as well, they told me I was daft for even asking.\\
'''Kate:''' Who?\\
'''William:''' The other armourers.\\
'''Kate:''' Did they say I couldn't do it because I'm a woman?\\
'''William:''' No, they said you were great with horseshoes, but shite with armour. The fact that you were a woman wasn't even mentioned.
* DisqualificationInducedVictory:
** William wins the second tournament in part because his strongest opponent, Count Adhemar, forfeited his semifinal joust when he learned his opponent Sir Thomas Colville was really Prince Edward of England incognito. William proceeds to tilt at Edward anyway, winning the tournament and [[ChekhovsGun the prince's respect]].
** During the Paris tournament, William starts losing on purpose because the LoveInterest told him to to prove that he loved her. This would have been a problem, except that none of the other competitors did particularly well, either, so after Jocelyn relents, William is able to win despite losing his first round of jousts.
* DistractedByTheSexy: ''So'' distracted that William accidentally rides his horse straight into a church after Jocelyn, getting shouted at by the priest for desecrating it by doing so.
* DoubleStandard: Jocelyn gets annoyed when, during their argument in the church, the priest tries to shush her and not William.
* DownToTheLastPlay: The final joust, of course, as befits a sports movie. [[spoiler:William loses the first two rounds and gets wounded so badly he has to take off his armor and have his lance strapped to his arm, meaning he'll either be the first person to unhorse Count Adhemar or die trying. Of course, he makes it.]]
* TheDulcineaEffect: Jocelyn merely passed by William.
-->'''William:''' I can't. Love has given me wings, so I must fly. I can't explain it. She makes me feel like a poet.\\
'''Roland:''' You may feel like a poet... but you sound like an idiot. You don't even know her name.\\
'''William:''' Her name? Her name is Aphrodite. Calypso. Venus. Take your pick.
* EnsembleDarkhorse: Chaucer becomes one InUniverse. When stalling for time during the last tilt, Chaucer says he missed his introduction and draws a huge applause.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: Sir Adhemar at first seems like just another suitor pursuing Jocelyn, but his gleeful humiliation of Will when he approaches shows that he's ''extremely'' petty. And when Will allows Sir Colville to withdraw gracefully, Jocelyn remarks upon his mercy.
-->'''Adhemar:''' Then he shows his weakness. [[VirtueIsWeakness That's all mercy is]].
* EvenEvilHasStandards: Whilst not evil, per se, merely being on the side of the antagonist, Adhemar's herald nonetheless looks on, ashamed and disgusted, as Adhemar [[spoiler:has Will arrested, instead of facing him fairly in the lists.]]
* EvilGloating: Adhemar has a real penchant for this. [[spoiler:After he exposes Will as a FakeAristocrat, Adhemar meets him in his prison cell to gloat about it and how it didn't matter, because he couldn't have beaten a real noble anyway. There's no reason for him to do this other than he can.]]
* ExpositoryHairstyleChange: William's long dreadlocks get cut short offscreen, and he shaves his beard, to look more like a knight.
* FailureMontage: William's first attempt to get to grips with the skills of jousting.
* FakeAristocrat: William pretending to be Sir Ulrich von Liechtenstein, which provides most of the drama of the movie.
* TheFashionista: Jocelyn likes wearing different clothes and dressing to match her knight because a flower is only as good as its petals.
* FieryRedHead: Wat, who is prone to violent outbursts.
* ForgingScene: Kate notices that Will wears armour that wasn't made for him. She volunteers to make him some that's so light-weight he wouldn't know he was wearing it. After she is finished the knight is presented with a suit of shiny new armour.
* GenderedInsult:
** A slightly unintentional one while they're teaching William to dance:
--->'''Chaucer:''' ''[keeping time with a staff on a tub]'' And one and two and three and four, ''[smacking William and Wat's hands which are gripping too tightly]'' and your hands should be light like a birdie on the branch, and one, two, three and four, and Wat doesn't lead, he follows like a girl.\\
'''Wat:''' ''[remains silent for a couple uncomfortable {{Beat}}s, then gives a faux-nervous chuckle]'' *THWACK*\\
SmashToBlack\\
'''Chaucer:''' ''[fade back in, turning around with the staff over his shoulders and a bit of cloth up one bloodied nostril]'' And one and two and twirlie-twirlie-twirlie […]
** And then done intentionally to get back at Wat for the punch.
--->'''Chaucer:''' And one and two and three and four, you can hit me all day 'cause you punch like a what?\\
'''Roland:''' ''[while sewing William's dress]'' A girl!
* GenreBusting: It's a sports movie with a romantic comedy subplot... except the sport is ''jousting''.
* GracefulLadiesLikePurple: Jocelyn's hand-maiden Christiana is often clad in light purple dresses. She is just as delicate and feminine as her mistress.
* GracefulLoser: Definitely not Adhemar, but his herald counts. He seemingly holds no particular animosity towards William and is seen smiling and sincerely applauding the latter's victory over his own liege in the climactic joust.
* GrandRomanticGesture: Will purposefully loses a tilting match to prove his love (getting beat up in the process); to paraphrase Jocelyn, when Will tells her he'll win the tournament for her, "You would win the tournament anyway; if you want to prove your love, you will lose." Then, once he's taken his lumps, she sends her handmaiden to tell him if he loves her, he'll win the tournament. This does not go over well with William, or his friends.
-->'''Chaucer:''' There she is, William. The embodiment of love. Your Venus.\\
'''William:''' [[PreAsskickingOneliner And how I hate her.]]
* GirlyGirlWithATomboyStreak: Jocelyn is outwardly feminine and a proper noblewoman who also happens to visibly enjoy watching men clobber each other in jousting, wears very "Punk Rock" looking hairstyles, and is not at all shy about voicing her own opinions or standing up for herself.
* HairOfGoldHeartOfGold: William's blond hair marks him as a WideEyedIdealist and a kind soul.
* HairTriggerTemper: Wat. He tends to get angry very easily.
* HammyHerald: Geoffrey for William, although his very first attempt after a swordfight falls completely flat with the audience. Subsequent introductions are ''much'' better received. Adhemar's own herald eventually starts copying Chaucer's style after seeing how big of a reaction he gets from the crowd.
* TheHeart: For all Wat's goofiness, when William is at last jousting under his own name, and his father is in the crowd, Wat brings home the whole point of the final joust:
-->'''Wat:''' That's your name. Sir William Thatcher. Your father heard that.
* HeelFaceTurn: While not exactly a villainous character, [[spoiler: Adhemar's herald is seen clearly shocked at William walking to his arrest with his head held high, and ultimately cheers him on when he wins the tournament]].
* HelmetsAreHardlyHeroic:
** Will is injured just before the final lance, which will determine who wins the world championships. Not only does he opt not to wear his helmet, he takes off ''all his armor'', saying he "can't breathe with it on," because the chest plate was damaged enough that it was pushing at the wound and compressing his chest.
** Averted in most of the earlier jousts. In commentary, the director noted the convenience of being able to cut from shots of the actors, ending when they pulled down their face plates, to shots of the stunt men.
** And in the first joust, William used the damage to his face plate to justify not showing his face during the prize ceremony, which would reveal that he isn't actually Sir Ector.
* HeroicBSOD: William shows signs of this [[spoiler:after his arrest, and doesn't really snap out of it until after he's knighted.]]
* HeroicSecondWind: After two rounds in the final against Adhemar, William is struggling to stay conscious thanks to [[spoiler: a shard from an illegally-tipped lance embedded in his shoulder]] and can barely hold his lance, with Adhemar gloating to William's face about his inevitable victory. Then Chaucer runs over with news for William:
-->'''Chaucer''': She's here...and so is your father.\\
''(William sees Jocelyn and his father in the stands and turns back to Adhemar with newfound steely resolve)''\\
'''William''': Let's dance, you and I.
* HerosMuse: Jocelyn is the noblewoman who has never been unhorsed.
-->'''William:''' Your name, lady. I still need to hear it.\\
'''Jocelyn:''' Sir Hunter, you persist.\\
'''William:''' Perhaps angels have no names. Only beautiful faces.
* HeroesPreferSwords: Before he gets the hang of tilting, swordplay is easily William's best skill. Then subverted: William abandons the sword tournaments because jousting is far more prestigious and heroic.
* HistoricalBeautyUpgrade: Creator/PaulBettany is considerably better looking, not to mention taller and thinner, than the actual Creator/GeoffreyChaucer was.
* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: Edward the Black Prince is portrayed as a likable individual who values William's courage and the bond of companionship he has with his friends. The ''historical'' Black Prince was well-known for conducting brutal scorched-earth campaigns that ravaged the French countryside, and to have despised and scorned the lower classes. Partly this can be seen as ProtagonistCenteredMorality -- the characters do mention his pillaging and burning of villages, and Edward's fondness of William despite him being lower class is motivated by William doing him two big favours earlier in the movie when he had no reason to do so, and willingly letting himself be arrested instead of fleeing.
* HoldingTheFloor: When William needs to tend to his injury, Chaucer hops up in front of the crowd and shouts "Wait! I missed my introduction" and manages to stall long enough for William to recover.
* HollywoodHealing: William gets a piece of his opponent's lance stuck in his shoulder, and he cannot hold his own lance. As soon as William wins the championship, he can move his arm normally, and there's no indication of injury. And there's no mention of removing the piece of lance stuck in his shoulder, which would be very risky surgery in that age.
* HollywoodHistory: Not unusually for Mesdieval period pieces, the film is ostensibly set during the 1300s but all the knights wear styles of armor that wouldn't be developed until the following century.
* HomoeroticSubtext: Played for laughs. Wat returns from taking Will's love letter to Jocelyn acting rather flustered, and when asked if she gave him anything to give Will in return, Wat very nervously kisses Will and then spits on the ground. Will is too thrilled by the IndirectKiss to notice.
* HonorBeforeReason: When [[spoiler:Will is exposed, all of his friends urge him to run while he still can, with Jocelyn even saying that she'll be happy to live a poor farmer's life with him. But Will is a knight, and he won't withdraw for anything, so he shows up anyway and lets them arrest him. Fortunately, it works out: Prince Edward was so impressed by his dedication that he knighted him for it, letting him compete as himself.]]
* HuddleShot: At the end, spoken by the main characters, in turn:
-->'''Watt:''' You have been weighed...\\
'''Roland:''' ... You have been measured...\\
'''Kate:''' ... And you absolutely...\\
'''Chaucer:''' ... Have been found wanting.[[note]]Taken from Daniel 5:27 in the Bible.[[/note]]\\
'''William:''' Welcome to the new world. And may God save you, if it is right that He should do so.
** It also doubles as an IronicEcho, as Adhemar used those very words against William; first, after he had beaten William in the joust on the first tournament they share, the second is after William's been ousted as a peasant.
* HypocriticalHumor:
** In the church, the priest says that Jocelyn should pray that her beauty fade swiftly, as she's SoBeautifulItsACurse, and offers up his ring for her to kiss. Her calling it lovely makes him quickly move on to other matters.
** Before his first match with Adhemar, Christiana goes to William to tell him Jocelyn's name on her behalf. Roland watches her walk away, causing Geoff to close his gaping mouth. Roland in turn nudges a distracted William to remind him to concentrate on the match and not the girl.
* ICantDance: Will, who subsequently gets lessons from Geoff and Kate.
* IJustWantToBeSpecial: William wants to "change his stars" to become a knight even though he's only a peasant.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: In contrast [[spoiler: Prince Edward just wants to opportunity to joust like a 'normal' nobleman, but everyone who knows or finds out who he is withdraws. Thus is born the identity of 'Thomas Colville'.]]
* IllKillYou: One of the things Wat screams as he's kicking Sir Ector's corpse at the beginning. "If you wasn't dead, I would kill you!"
* InevitableTournament: The movie is a series of inevitable tournaments.
* InsultBackfire: Adhemar attempts to humiliate William by making him do a traditional dance of his home country. With Jocelyn's help, William improvises one, and over the course of a couple of minutes, the musical backdrop seamlessly morphs from medieval dance music into "Golden Years" by David Bowie, and everyone goes from formal dance moves to free-style disco dancing, subtly making it clear that William does indeed represent the future. The stony look on Adhemar's face of ''Well that shouldn't have happened'' is hilarious.
* InThePastEveryoneWillBeFamous:
** Chaucer. It's averted In-Universe, as William, Wat, and Roland have no clue who he is when he introduces himself.
** The Black Prince, too, but that's slightly more back up by the plot.
* IronicEcho:
** "You have been weighed, you have been measured, and you have been found wanting." First from Adhemar to Ulrich, then from William and his crew to Adhemar.
** Adhemar does it to himself. Early, he derides Ulrich as having "no style." Later, after tilting against him, Adhemar remarks that Ulrich ''still'' has no style... but then, neither does an anvil.
* IShouldWriteABookAboutThis: Chaucer says he'll write a story about the events in the film, an allusion to ''Literature/TheCanterburyTales''. He also threatens a pardoner and summoner by saying he'll immortalize them as fools in his work; The Pardoner's Tale and The Summoner's Tale are indeed portions of ''Canterbury.''
* ItWillNeverCatchOn:
** Kate invents the Bessemer Process for heating steel 400-500 years before it happened. When William first walks out in his thin, lightweight new armor, he's meet with guffaws of ridicule... until he easily swings himself up onto horseback unassisted (in contrast to an earlier shot of servants laboring to heft a heavily-armored knight into the saddle). The laughter dies off in a hurry then.
** Kate etching "the mark of [her] trade" ([[ProductPlacement the Nike logo]]) into her armour is also received with ridicule.
* {{Jerkass}}: Adhemar, upon first meeting William, immediately insults him several times and he just gets worse from there. They seem to have even gone out of their way to make him completely utterly unlikable
* {{Knighting}}: [[spoiler:William's eventual reward, thanks to Prince Edward.]]
* KingIncognito: The Black Prince has his reasons.
** He wants to joust without people knowing its him and treat him like any other competitor. He certainly doesn't want to win by virtue of being royalty and people surrendering rather than risk striking him. [[spoiler:He respects William for riding against him despite knowing who he truly is]].
** Later he dons a robe to hide in a crowd so he can watch [[spoiler:William in the pillory, and witnesses his friends going up to protect him from the crowd.]]
* KneelBeforeFrodo: [[spoiler:Happens when the KingIncognito gets cognito.]]
* KnightInShiningArmour: Duh. Just to be really old-fashioned, Adhemar wears black armour. And a scowl.
* LadiesAndGerms: One of Chaucer's introductions.
-->'''Chaucer:''' My lords... my ladies... (''Chaucer bows then turns to the audience'') ... and everybody else here ''not sitting on a cushion''!
* TheLadysFavour: Jocelyn sends one of her scarves to William before his first match with Adhemar, which is also how he finds out her name. He ends up losing both the match and the scarf which falls to the arena floor. Adhemar scoops it up with his lance and returns it to Jocelyn. She takes the scarf but coldly walks away without speaking to him.
* LargeHam:
** Geoffrey Chaucer is this when announcing William. For a herald, it's practically in the job description.
--->'''Chaucer:''' SIR ULLLLLLLLLLLLLRIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICH VON LICHENSTEIN! ({{Beat}}, to wild applause) ''God'' I'm good!
** A small, but really fun element, is when Adhemar's herald (who up until this point had been doing the usual staid and boring introductions) starts to ham it up himself on the part of Adhemar, and suddenly starts to get more applause for Adhemar from the crowd. Seems being a LargeHam is the wave of the future when it comes to heraldry.
* LastSecondWordSwap: Chaucer nearly gives away William's real name:
-->'''Chaucer:''' Please, Will-- Please will you help me, Sir Ulrich.
* LettingHerHairDown: We see Jocelyn with her hair down as she is preparing for bed. It's no coincidence that this is when she admits that she loves William - to the audience at least.
* LightningBruiser: Will goes from effective but clumsy to nimble and maneuverable with Kate's armor upgrade.
* LiteraryAllusionTitle: The movie borows its name from "The Knight's Tale" contained in Creator/GeoffreyChaucer's ''Literature/CanterburyTales''. Maybe as a nod to that connection, the movie has a young Geoffrey Chaucer appear in a supporting role. The movie's plot is completely dissimilar to Chaucer's "Knight's Tale", though.
* TheLostLenore: A rare male example of this trope being blacksmith Kate's dead husband.
* LoveAtFirstSight: William for Jocelyn.
* LoveIsLikeReligion:
** After being invited to a banquet by Jocelyn, William tells her that her beauty reminds him of the Bible.
--->'''Jocelyn:''' Sir Ulrich, you look fantastic.\\
'''William:''' Jocelyn, you look... Uh, you... You remind me of the Bible. When God stopped the Sun to give Joshua more time to defeat the Amorites.\\
'''Jocelyn:''' I don't understand.\\
'''William:''' If I could ask God one thing, it would be to stop the Moon. Stop the Moon and make this night, and your beauty, last forever.
** Again, after Jocelyn commands him to throw his jousts to prove his love for her:
--->'''Wat:''' And your love? Have you proven that yet?\\
'''William:''' Wat, you remember church as a boy. The fear, the passion. That’s what she makes me feel. And for that, I say my rosary to Jocelyn and no one else.\\
'''Wat:''' William, that’s blasphemous.\\
'''William:''' Then may I burn in hell.
* LoveMakesYouDumb: William fully understands ''this'' trope, as after making a faux pas to Jocelyn, she tells him that if he loves her, he'll lose. And so, at the beginning of the next tournament, after the flag for William's first tilt is dropped, and his opponent spurs on, the four members of the FiveManBand cheering William on...
-->'''Roland:''' What are you doing?\\
'''William:''' ''(sitting on his horse, going nowhere)'' ... Losing.\\
'''Wat:''' I don't understand.\\
'''William:''' ... Neither do I. ''CRASH!''
* LovedINotHonorMore: Sort of implied in the scene where Chaucer brings the news that Will is going to be arrested. All his friends think he should run. Jocelyn explicitly begs him to run, adding, "Do it for love." He still refuses, and his justification is simply, "I am a knight."
* MagneticHero: Will has the charisma to convince Wat and Roland to support his frankly insane plan. He soon rounds up Chaucer, Kate, Jocelyn and [[spoiler:the Prince]].
* MarqueeAlterEgo: The most likely explanation for William removing his armour in the final battle is so we can see Heath Ledger's face.
* MeaningfulEcho:
** When Will first talks Wat and Roland into his insane plan, the after [[spoiler:Will has been arrested.]]
--->'''Roland:''' ''(exasperated)'' God love you, William--\\
'''Will:''' I know, I know, "no one else will."\\
''(Later)''\\
'''Roland:''' God love you, William. . . so do I.
** Wat uses the threats "I will fong you" and "Pain, lots of pain" twice in the movie with different sets of words and {{Angrish}} spoken in-between the two. The first time is when he warns Chaucer not to betray him, William, and Roland. The second time occurs much later, when [[spoiler:he helps defend William (who is in the pillory) from the angry crowd]].
** A variant with both instances carrying the same sentiment. Geoffrey twice makes MyFriendsAndZoidberg comments about a situation, the Zoidberg being Wat who is standing next to him. The first time it's about women always understanding the simplicity of men and Wat just grumbles at him. The second time it's at the end of the movie [[spoiler:after William defeats Adhemar in the final tournament]]. He states that he will write about the entire story and everyone in it, except Wat, who looks like he wants to fong him but instead laughs and side-hugs him.
* MeaningfulName: William Thatcher, a Thatcher being a tradesman who makes roofs for buildings out of straw mat, in other words, most definitely not a nobleman by birth. A justified example - in that time period, a person's last name was often based on their family's trade. William's father is indeed a thatcher by profession, and William knows enough of the job to repair a leaky roof.
* MeaningfulRename: [[spoiler: ''Sir'' William Thatcher, indicating that William has indeed changed his stars and elevated his position.]]
* MotivationalLie:
** At the first tournament, Will uses this to trick Kate into mend his breastplate without paying first, telling her that the other smiths had called him daft for asking her.
--->'''Kate:''' Did they say I couldn't do it [[StayInTheKitchen because I'm a woman]]?\\
'''Will:''' No, they said you're great with horseshoes but shite with armor. The fact that you're a woman wasn't even mentioned.
** At the second tournament, Roland tells William that his opponent is cruel to his peasants. Wat gives a sotto "It's ''probably'' true" out of Will's earshot.
* NakedPeopleAreFunny:
** Chaucer just strolls into the film stark [[NakedFirstImpression naked]], seemingly completely okay with that. It ends up becoming foreshadowing.
** A deleted scene (restored in the extended cut DVD) has Will and his group seeing Chaucer walking naked again in the middle of the night, and assuming he's yet again lost everything gambling. [[spoiler: he was just grabbing an apple for his hungry wife, after they'd just finished having sex.]]
** Sadly, it didn't actually happen, but at one point Jocelyn asks Will (who's in a very bad mood) what he'll be wearing to this dance, to which he replies "Nothing." Her response is a humorous [[ShamelessFanserviceGirl "Then we shall cause quite a stir, for I shall dress to match."]]
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Adhemar's early attempts to embarrass Will and woo Jocelyn backfire and end up pushing them together.
** His public insulting of William/Ulrich elicts pained sympathy from Jocelyn towards William/Ulrich, and later on, when William refuses to finish off an injured Colville, Adhemar claims mercy is nothing but weakness, drawing further silent disapproval from Jocelyn and indirectly making William/Ulrich look better in comparison.
** At the ball, Adhemar asks Will to demonstrate a dance from Gelderland. He's obviously trying to cause embarrassment, but what he accomplishes is to give Will a perfect opportunity to invent a dance and put up any peculiarities to cultural differences, instead of having to try to remember the dances he had hastily learned a few hours before. By contrast, based on his comments in a deleted scene, Adhemar can't dance at all.
* NomDeGuerre: Two of them, both due to the men in question trying to hide their identities for various reasons:
** William Thatcher styles himself as Sir Ulrich von Liechtenstein, to hide the fact that he is a peasant.
** [[spoiler:Edward, the Black Prince, goes as Sir Thomas Colville, as nobody would dare tilt with him if they knew who he ''really'' was. Notably, Edward is entirely unsuccessful in hiding his identity as word gets around quick who he is.]]
* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: Done deliberately -- Creator/LauraFraser was apparently expecting to be asked to put on a generic English accent, as usual, and was delighted to be allowed to use her natural Scots accent.
* NotSoAboveItAll:
** During the joust at the beginning of the film, there's a shot of a lord and two ladies looking rather dismissive of the commons loud (and anachronistic) singing. The next shot of them, however, shows the ladies clapping along and the lord actually joining in with the singing, perhaps caught up in the spirit of the thing.
** Roland is often the voice of reason and emotional centre of the group but he still has his moments of getting caught up in the other three men's antics. Example one, while Chaucer is teaching William how to dance, he joins to also say that Wat punches like a girl, then just sits back and watches the fight ensue. Example two, he pointedly ignores a group of French men trying to entice the whole group into an all-or-nothing bet on an upcoming tournament. It's not until one of the French men claim that the Pope himself is French that [[BlasphemousBoast he retaliates by saying that Jesus is English]] and confirming the bet.
* NotSoDifferentRemark:
** A rare complimentary fashion, Edward laments how alike he and William are.
--->'''Edward:''' What a pair we make, huh? Both trying to hide who we are, both unable to do so.
*** William, when told that Coleville is Prince Edward, says this.
---->'''William:''' Why, he's in a disguise like me so he can compete.
** Subtly, Adhemar and William.
--->'''Adhemar:''' No style whatsoever... but neither has an anvil.\\
(cut)\\
'''William:''' He hits like a hammer.
* NotSoFakePropWeapon: {{Downplayed}}: Adhemar explains to Jocelyn during the Rouen tournament that, while tournament lances have blunted tips to make them less lethal than battlefield lances, "accidents happen." [[spoiler:Adhemar himself causes such an accident in the finale when he replaces his lance tip with one made of "spun sugar and boot-black" that conceals a sharpened steel point, and badly wounds William with it.]]
* TheObstructiveLoveInterest: Jocelyn. It's implied that she's sick of numerous knights vowing to win the tournament for her, so she asks William to do his ''worst'' to prove his love. When he does so - and proves his sincerity - she lets him off.
* TheOner: William and Jocelyn's long walk-and-talk scene in the cathedral. On the DVD commentary Brian Helgeland admits that he shot the scene this way to save money as filming one long take meant they were done sooner than if they'd had to film from different angles.
* OneOfTheBoys: Kate. A credits scene has her winning a farting contest amongst them.
* OnlyOneName: William[[note]]Along with his father[[/note]] and Chaucer are the only characters whose full names have been revealed.
* OrbitalKiss: Played with. [[spoiler:William and Jocelyn's]] BigDamnKiss in the finale is shot like one, but the camera doesn't actually go all the way around: it just turns while the two do a TwirlOfLove in the opposite direction to complete the shot.
* OopNorth: William's friend Roland is from Yorkshire--[[ActorSharedBackground just like his actor, Mark Addy]]--and Wat is from the Midlands. And to his credit, Creator/AlanTudyk does a pretty good accent.
* PairTheSpares: Roland often becomes a BetaCouple with Jocelyn's handmaiden Christiana in fan fics. There are several scenes in the movie in which one can see Roland and Christiana chatting happily in the background. Made explicit in a deleted scene where Chaucer's wife visits the tournament. Jocelyn and William go off together, Roland and Christiana go off together, and Wat attempts to go off with Kate but she just hands him a pastry and walks in the opposite direction. After taking a bite, [[BigEater Wat seems perfectly happy with the situation]].
* PeerlessLoveInterest: The peasant William falls in love with the noble lady Jocelyn.
-->'''William:''' Geoff, 'tis my lady.\\
'''Geoffrey:''' Oh, geez, William, you aim too high.\\
'''William:''' Oh, if there's another way to aim, I don't know it.
* ProchronicProduct: Kate, the group's blacksmith, is suggested to have developed a version of the Bessemer process for steelmaking in the middle of the 14th century, allowing her to forge William a suit of plate armor much lighter than any other knight has.
* ProducePelting: The townspeople pelt William while he's in the stocks. Chaucer puts in an attempt at ShamingTheMob but he too is quickly silenced by a volley of rotten vegtables.
* ProductPlacement: Not that the movie got any money for it, but that trademark that Kate etches into her armor? ''A pair of upside down Nike swooshes.'' Though, WordOfGod states it was unintentional.
* PurelyAestheticEra: A story set in the 14th century, but with ''1970s rock music''. WordOfGod claims that the music is a kind of audible TranslationConvention. Authentic 14th century music would just sound odd to modern audiences, so updating the music to modern-day stuff allows the audience to understand what the music means to the characters. This decision makes a bit more sense when you realize that the "traditional" alternative, a classical soundtrack, is just as anachronistic as a rock one.
* PurpleProse: Geoffrey Chaucer's job. It occasionally gets so purple that he just gets dead silence since no one knows what he's saying..
* RagsToRiches: As William wins more tournaments, he and the others are shown to have gotten better clothing compared to the beginning.
* RankScalesWithAsskicking: Edward, Prince of Wales, and consummate WarriorPrince who bonds with William over really, really liking a good fight.
* ReassignedToAntarctica: Sir Adhemar runs afoul of this (though it's still a prestigious position in its own right) because [[spoiler: of his refusal to joust against Prince Edward]]. His mercenerary company is called to the front lines, which is a great honor but also means he can't fight tournaments.
* RichSuitorPoorSuitor: William vs. Count Adhemar, though as he keeps winning tournaments, Will gets considerably less poor.
* RousingSpeech: Chaucer delivers one [[spoiler:before the final joust between William and Adhemar, giving William the resolve to keep fighting despite his injury by reminding all present that William has gone from being a peasant to being officially knighted]].
* RuleOfCool: Face it, this is pretty much the entire point of this movie. [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools Not that we're complaining...]]
* RunningGag: Chaucer's line of "Well, maybe not ''you''..." towards Wat.
* SatelliteLoveInterest: Jocelyn. For most of the film's story, all the poor girl gets to do is stand on the sidelines and then have either a love scene or a fighting scene with Will, though she's lucky enough to get moments of [[DeadpanSnarker witty lines]] and [[PluckyGirl displays of spunk]]. She also kind of lampshades this: her initial rejection of Will is based on him treating her like this trope, as every knight who was smitten with her pretty face has done. She asks him to think of her as a person, not a prize, and when he ''does'', she falls for him. Not that the audience gets to know her very well, she still fits the trope for us, as this is an unfortunate side effect of having to watch the story primarily from William's POV - some characters who might have been more developed individuals had they had more narrative time dedicated to them come off as shallow and unexplored characters, as is the case with Jocelyn.
* SayMyName: '''WILLIIIIIIIIIIIAM!''' Interestingly enough, William is the one who does it.
* ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem: [[spoiler:Edward, the Black Prince, pulls one of these while William is in the pillory, even going so far as to personally knight William himself just to allow him to compete. He basically declares that William has noble blood and then dares anybody to contradict the Crown Prince of England.]]
* SecretLegacy: Invoked, though actually averted. [[spoiler:Since he wouldn't be allowed to knight William otherwise, Prince Edward declares that his personal historians have found out that William is actually a descendant of an ancient royal line. Nobody buys it and he doesn't expect them to, but he's the Prince and they can't contradict him.]]
* SelfProclaimedKnight: There are two. One is the classic struggling underdog, William Thatcher, the peasant who's masquerading as the knight Sir Ulrich Von Lichtenstein, and the other is [[spoiler: Sir Thomas Colville - otherwise known as Edward, the Black Prince, jousting in disguise.]]
* ShamingTheMob: Subverted in the theatrical cut; Chaucer, having previously demonstrated his ability to work a crowd, tries to shame the mob that gathers around William when he's in the [[StockPunishment pillory]]. He gets as far as three words in before the mob silences him with a volley of rotten vegetables. However, in the extended cut of the film, Chaucer succeeds in ShamingTheMob into chastened silence [[spoiler:before Prince Edward steps in. This scene was cut to beef up Prince Edward's role. ]]
* SheCleansUpNicely:
** As a male example, William cleans up twice; First in the scene after he trains with Wat and Roland, his long dreadlocks are gone, and he is clean shaven. Second, when he has his hair combed, and dresses up for the banquet.
** Chaucer is introduced naked but completely covered in dirt and generally looking pretty unkempt. He looks a lot better once he's washed and dressed.
* ShieldsAreUseless: William's master's old suit of armor comes with a shield, which does little more than attract derision from the crowd. His new suit of armor does not come with a shield, nor does it need one. TruthInTelevision, as full plate armor did in fact make shields obsolete.
* ShipTease: Roland is seen chatting to Jocelyn's handmaiden Christiana more than once, and in a deleted scene they go off together arm in arm.
* ShoutOut:
** William's choice of nom-de-guerre has a certain appropriateness.
** And the Black Prince and his companions shedding their disguising monks' robes is a clear homage to a similar scene in ''Film/TheAdventuresOfRobinHood''.
* ShowyInvincibleHero: William. Count Adhemar is the only knight of similar ability in the entire tournament circuit, a point made painfully clear when he is forced to leave on campaign and "Sir Ulrich" wins every tournament in the progress. However, thanks to his statesman Geoffrey Chaucer acting as hype man and his fearless method of tilting, the crowds love every moment of it.
* SigilSpam: There's a deleted scene where the trio discuss their coat of arms and decide on three [[ThePhoenix phoenixes]] to symbolize them rising from the ashes of Sir Ector's failed career and death. The phoenix can be seen emblazoned into various clothes and other items associated with them.
* SkewedPriorities: After being ReassignedToAntarctica, Adhemar shows more concern with Sir Ulrich's winning streak than the war campaign he's in charge of.
* SoBeautifulItsACurse: Mocked; Jocelyn, admonished for her beauty by a priest, laments it in a deadpan monotone to get him off her back.
* SpannerInTheWorks:
** The DeadPersonImpersonation is nearly uncovered before it properly begins when the noble officiating the first tournament commands "Sir Ector" to remove his helmet when receiving his prize. Luckily, William took his opponent's lance in his helmet visor and is able to use the damage as an excuse not to remove it, on the grounds that he physically can't.
** In Paris, Chaucer organizes a bet with a trio of French gentlemen that Ulrich and not a Frenchman will win the tournament. Unfortunately, at the same time, Jocelyn demands that William throw his matches to prove he loves her (on the logic that winning, even in her name, just glorifies him and doesn't really prove anything about how he feels about her). Fortunately for the boys' and Kate's pocketbooks, after the first day, Jocelyn agrees he's made his point and tells him not to lose another match.
** In London, Count Adhemar follows "Ulrich" hoping to find something he can use to beat him, and spots him with his lowborn father and blows the whistle to the authorities, wrecking the band's scheme and forcing him to forfeit. [[spoiler:Then Prince Edward ruins ''that'' plan by knighting William (to repay him for being a NiceGuy when he jousted William as Sir Thomas Colville) and reinstating him in the tournament.]]
* SpoiledSweet: Jocelyn is a noblewoman and is kind-hearted, disapproving of Adhemar's cruel tendencies. She's also more like a best friend than a mistress to her lady-in-waiting.
* SpottingTheThread: {{Defied}} in the deleted scenes, one of which has Will, Roland, and Wat agreeing to change "Ulrich's" coat of arms to three phoenixes (up from Will's proposal of one, since there's three of them) because somebody might recognize the deceased Sir Ector's white stag banner.
* TheStinger: The four non-Will members of the FiveManBand are having a [[ToiletHumour competition]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6LYon31qAi8 to see who pays for drinks.]] Wat loses.
* StockPunishment: Several people are seen there. One even [[InsultBackfire mockingly tells young William if he wants to be a Knight, he would]] [[ArcWords change his stars]].
* TakeThat: Roland delivers one during a bet to a trio of bragging Frenchmen in a bar.
-->'''Frenchman:''' And, most importantly, because the Pope, himself, is French!\\
'''Roland:''' ... Well the Pope may be French, but Jesus is English. You're on!
* TapOnTheHead: In Adhemar's third tilt at William, he aims for "Ulrich's" helmet because his lance glanced off without breaking on the previous tilt. William is temporarily knocked senseless and barely stays on the horse.
* TeamPowerWalk: William and company do one as they go to the London tournament, [[spoiler:just before William gets arrested. ]]
* TeethClenchedTeamwork: Chaucer and Wat have this relationship to a violent degree, with both of them dedicated to Will's success and mostly working together to help him, but constantly getting on each other's nerves. Wat seems to resent Chaucer's insertion of himself into the group, particularly his tendency to get himself into trouble and put the group at risk. Chaucer on the other hand knows how useful his clerical skills are and apparently has some disdain for the other's less refined skillset and violent tendencies. Wat's HairTriggerTemper gives him little patience for Geoffrey's elaborate wordplay and sly comments, while the latter clearly gets a kick out of goading him, which means that most flare-ups between the two result in hurt feelings from Wat, and bruises or a bloody nose for Geoffrey.
* ThatPoorCat: Heard in the background during a bar fight.
* ThisIsGonnaSuck: William, at one point in the movie, has to lose to all matches in the tournament to prove his love for Jocelyn, all the while [[AmusingInjuries taking loads and loads of punishment]]. See LoveMakesYouDumb for more details.
* ThrowingTheFight: How Jocelyn tells William to prove his love.
* TiredOfRunning: "I will not run! I am a knight!"
* TomboyWithAGirlyStreak: Kate is OneOfTheBoys and a blacksmith, but she also teaches William how to dance. And she finds his 'lose to prove his love for Jocelyn' move very romantic.
-->'''Roland:''' Are you a woman or a blacksmith?\\
'''Kate:''' Sometimes I'm both.
* TheTourney: Central to the plot, replacing the usual competitions for a sports movie.
* ToiletHumor: The post-credits scene has Wat, Roland, and Kate having a little farting contest to see whose is the weakest and will be the one to pay for the round of drinks.
* TownGirls: Tough blacksmith Kate is the Butch, graceful noblewoman Jocelyn is the Femme, and her soft-spoken handmaiden Christiana is the Neither.
* TrainingMontage: To the tune of "Low Rider", featuring an array of increasingly-inventive lance training set-ups, with Roland and Wat taking most of the punishment from both William's initially terrible jousting skills and his all-too-good swordsmanship.
* TrappedByGamblingDebts: Geoffrey Chaucer is introduced naked because he gambled his clothes away, and then once they arrive at the first tournament almost immediately loses his clothes again ''and'' gets stuck in ten gold florins besides that. William offering to cover his debt earns him Chaucer's UndyingLoyalty, and he swears it off....except for one more bet in a tavern, as a matter of national pride.
* {{Troll}}:
** The boys at one point start shining a small mirror in Adhemar's herald's face to distract him and make him muck up his introduction. The result is worth a laugh:
--->'''Herald:''' The Count Adhemar, son of Philippe de Vitry, son of Gilles... Master of the Free Companies, defender... of his enormous manhood... ''(Adhemar's face twitches)'' ...a shining example of chivalry, and champagne!
** Jocelyn also has a bit of a troll side to her - and she clearly enjoys making William jump through hoops to prove he's actually in love with her. There's also her hilarious interaction with an evidently rather SarcasmBlind priest who calls her SoBeautifulItsACurse.
* TrophyWife: Adhemar aims to turn Jocelyn into one for himself, deciding that if he can't woo her with his skills, he'll simply negotiate with her father. He even goes as far as calling her "a real thoroughbred trophy" to William's face.
* TrueCompanions:
** Will and his friends, who all stick together to the bitter end.
** [[spoiler: As noted earlier, this is a factor in Prince Edward's decision to rescue him. "Your men love you. If I knew nothing else about you, that would be enough."]]
* TruthInTelevision: Blacksmiths' wives were taught smithing to produce arrowheads more often than not; a widow taking up her late husband's trade [[RealityIsUnrealistic would not have been odd at that time]].
* UnskilledButStrong:
** Both Ademar and his herald are impressed with William's jousting technique, which exhibits no technical skill but hits like a megaton punch:
--->'''Ademar:''' No style whatsoever... neither has an anvil.
** Earlier, they note that he has rudimentary style, nonexistent technique, but he's fearless. Adhemar goes on to explain to Jocelyn that while the visor of a knight's helmet is small, splinters can penetrate, and most knights raise their heads at the last second, losing sight of their target but protecting their eyes. "Ulrich" doesn't (chances are that William doesn't know to do so). Jocelyn is impressed, [[AchievementsInIgnorance because he keeps his eyes on the target]].
* UnusualEuphemism: Wat's use of "fong". It's [[DVDCommentary apparently]] ye old slang for 'kick'.
* UptownGirl: William tries to get his {{Blue Blood}}ed love interest to face the realities of life with him, a destitute fugitive from the law.
-->'''William:''' Where will we live? In my hovel, with the pigs inside during the winter so they won't freeze?\\
'''Jocelyn:''' [crying] Yes, William... with the pigs.
* VillainForgotToLevelGrind: When they first tilt, Count Adhemar beats William, because while William is talented, he's inexperienced, while Adhemar has been jousting for years. By the time they meet up again in the finale, William's had a lot of practice, refined his technique and improved his armor, while Adhemar is at the same level he started the movie.
* VillainRespect: While he spends the whole movie against Will, Adhemar has to admit that Will has done well in the joust, and in their first joust he remarks, "No style whatsoever... neither has an anvil." I.e., that Will's technique might not be the best, but he can deliver and take hits as well as anyone. All that respect is thrown out the window once [[spoiler:he finds out William's true identity]].
* TheWatson: Jocelyn is the prime example, at one point asking the antagonist to explain the rules of jousting, which she doesn't understand.
* WanderingMinstrel: Geoff Chaucer fills this role.
* WarriorPrince: Prince Edward is a minor character and his campaigns for England are mentioned. He likes to joust in secret, and Will being willing to go up against him despite his rank earns his admiration.
* WeaponsOfTheirTrade: When [[spoiler:William is arrested and put in the pillory]] and his TrueCompanions arrive to support him, Kate brings her blacksmith's hammers. From her body language, it's quite clear she's prepared to use it to defend Will if necessary.
* WeWinBecauseYouDidnt: Due to the way tournament jousts are scored, when William takes Sir Ector's place in the opening joust, his opponent has to completely unhorse him to win due to points Ector accrued in previous tilts. William completely misses him, but keeps his seat despite being hit in the face hard enough to crumple his helmet's faceshield (he takes advantage of this to avoid showing his face to the judge, which would have exposed the switch and landed them in prison).
* WellDoneSonGuy: William, to an extent - his father clearly loves him, he just wanted to prove he could [[ArcWords "change his stars"]].
* WhatTheHellHero: {{Subverted}}. After they find out [[spoiler:Sir Thomas Colville is really Prince Edward]], William tilts at him anyway before Chaucer can withdraw for him. Chaucer calls him out for [[spoiler:"knowingly endangering royalty"]], to which William retorts, [[spoiler:"He knowingly endangers himself." A moment later, Edward himself arrives to [[OpinionOverride thank William for treating him like any other opponent]].]]
* WidescreenShot: Two riders coming at each other is just made for this.
* WorkingClassHero: William Thatcher, a peasant squire who tricks his way into competing with the noble knights. Unlike most examples, [[spoiler:he doesn't have the support of the other peasants at first (they're quick to shame him in the pillory along with everyone else), but Geoffrey Chaucer's RousingSpeech at the final match wins their approval and has them yelling his name.]]
* WorthyOpponent: Sir Thomas Colville to William. [[spoiler: Colville is actually the Black Prince, Edward, jousting in disguise much like William is, and anyone who realizes Colville's true identity instantly withdraws rather than risk hurting the Prince. William does not withdraw - much to Edward's delight.]] And in their first matchup, Sir Colville admits that he wouldn't be able to do another full tilt, but wants to finish their joust - and Will obliges him, both men riding past with their lances raised in respect.
* YouKnowImBlackRight: A brief one, when Roland remarks "Women, eh?" to Kate. She doesn't say anything, she just gives him a DeathGlare.
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