Braveheart is a 1925 American silent contemporary Western film directed by Alan Hale Sr. and starring Rod La Rocque.
[1][2] Braveheart is a remake of the 1914 film Strongheart directed by James Kirkwood Sr. and produced by the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company.
He ends up being expelled after voluntarilly shielding Dorothy's brother from disgrace after attempting to throw a football game for some gambling interests.
[5][6] The movie was initially named "Strongheart" after a play written by Cecil's brother William C. deMille and produced on Broadway in 1905.
Strongheart suggested to the movie's screenwriter Mary O'Hara additions of Yakima history to the story (which were not in the 1905 original play).
Advertising for performance-lectures of Nipo Strongheart would occasionally have him in Indian costume as well as in a scene from the movie where he was dressed in normal attire.