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      • As a film, it's a touch too Hollywood, and full of too much patriotic Braveheart guff, but, on the whole, the American director and writer, Charles Martin Smith, has created an amiable and watchable heist movie.
      www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1212720-stone_of_destiny/reviews
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  2. With Charlie Cox, Kate Mara, Stephen McCole, Ciaron Kelly. The story of Ian Hamilton, a dedicated nationalist who reignited Scottish national pride in the 1950s with his daring raid on the heart of England to bring the Stone of Scone back to Scotland.

    • (4.4K)
    • Adventure, Comedy, Crime
    • Charles Martin Smith
    • 2008-12-19
  3. Stone of Destiny is a 2008 Scottish-Canadian historical adventure comedy film written and directed by Charles Martin Smith and starring Charlie Cox, Billy Boyd, Robert Carlyle, and Kate Mara. Based on real events, the film tells the story of the removal of the Stone of Scone from Westminster Abbey.

  4. The movie was good, the actors were good & it held my attention but the significance of the Stone of Destiny wasn't explained well enough to make me understand why proud Scottish place so much importance in it.

  5. As Scotland fails to establish its own parliament once again, young patriot Ian Hamilton vows to salvage national pride by returning the Stone of Destiny, a symbol of Scottish sovereignty to...

    • (17)
    • Charles Martin Smith
    • PG
    • Charlie Cox
  6. Stone of Destiny is a 2008 Scottish-Canadian historical adventure comedy film written and directed by Charles Martin Smith and starring Charlie Cox, Billy Boyd, Robert Carlyle, and Kate Mara. Based on real events, the film tells the story of the removal of the Stone of Scone from Westminster Abbey.

    • Charles Martin Smith
  7. Visit the movie page for 'Stone of Destiny' on Moviefone. Discover the movie's synopsis, cast details and release date. Watch trailers, exclusive interviews, and movie review.

  8. Stone Of Destiny is a kidnapping caper film, fictionalising the account of Ian Hamilton QC about the capture of the Stone of Scone (pronounced sk-oon, never to be pronounced like the doughy muffin of the same spelling) from Westminster Abbey on Christmas Day 1950.