In a short piece at Variety, Roger Friedman (hat tip: Peter Chattaway) writes about the upcoming Ridley Scott movie Robin Hood:
Now comes Crowe and Scott. I am told they’ve been screening the new Robin Hood for insiders. Everyone likes it. Universal is counting on a big hit leading into Memorial Day. Certainly the main actors at least have accents to begin with.
But wait: Does the public want a dark, brooding Robin Hood…? Robin Hood movies and TV shows are always fun. The Ridley Scott movie doesn’t sound like fun from what I’ve been told. It’s dead serious. “I don’t know if it will make money,” says a source. “But it will be respected. It’s dark, violent and very Gladiator.”
“Robin Hood” started out as “Nottingham.” Many scripts came and went, and along with them, many millions of dollars. The shooting script was revised a lot while the movie was being shot. Crowe is prone to clashes with Scott. The rumors fly! Something tells me Universal won’t let anything but a blockbuster be the final release.
Nottingham, the project that ultimately became Robin Hood, was originally conceived, according to an earlier Variety piece, as “a revisionist take on the Robin Hood tale, with Nottingham as a noble and brave lawman who labors for a corrupt king and engages in a love triangle with Maid Marion and Robin Hood.” At that point, Russell Crowe was set to play the Sheriff. The change of title and recasting of Crowe suggests that Robin Hood is at least the protagonist again; whether we can call him the hero remains to be seen.
The last really solid Hollywood take on the traditional Robin Hood mythos (not counting the Kevin Costner folly, because, well, it doesn’t count) was over 70 years ago, and is essentially the only one in its class (unless you want to go back to the silent era). A revisionist take on Robin Hood would be one thing if the traditionally heroic Robin Hood could be taken for granted as a cultural reference point. What have we come to if we can only view a legendary icon like Robin Hood through skeptical, revisionist lenses?
Fantasy heroes like Aragorn or Spider-Man are another story. Those we can still do more or less straight, even if Peter Jackson’s Aragorn had to be all self-doubting and reluctant (even more so than Tolkien’s character) to seize his destiny, because Hollywood equates certitude with folly and doubt with thoughtfulness. (The Aragorn Complex, as I call this doubtful-leader device, can also be seen in The Prince of Egypt‘s Moses and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe‘s Peter Pevensie.) Nor do I object to the deeply ambiguous recent Hollywood depictions of, say, Batman and James Bond, dark characterizations with well-established roots in those characters’ histories. (Efforts to rehabilitate traditional villains, like Wicked‘s take on the Wicked Witch of the West, are another matter.)
Robin Hood is an icon of our own legendary past as well as our cultural ideals of justice, courage and charity. Another example is King Arthur. Poor King Arthur has never gotten his due from Hollywood, even in the Golden Age, though Richard Thorpe’s watchable 1953 film The Knights of the Round Table was at least a stab in that direction, and a conspicuously Christian one. Boorman’s Excalibur was an interesting pastiche of Arthuriana, but didn’t pull it together into a coherent whole, and First Knight was just a stinker (though I like Arthur’s response to Mordred’s philosophy of might: “God makes us strong for a little while, so that we may help one another”).
Worst was Antoine Fuqua’s King Arthur, which depicted Arthur as a well-meaning but naive Catholic loyal to “a Rome that doesn’t exist,” a figure of an enlightened but doomed Christianity strangely identified with the founder of the Pelagian heresy. Guenevere, here reimagined as a pagan Celtic warrior princess, taunts Arthur, “I belong to this land. Do you belong anywhere, Arthur?”
That sense of existential homelessness about sums up the kind of Hollywood revisionism I have in mind here as well as anything. Traditionally, stories about heroes like Robin Hood and King Arthur didn’t just entertain, they told us who we are and what we believe in. Our traditional heroes no longer know who they are or what they believe in. Self-doubt, self-examination and self-accusation are one thing. Take an axe to your own roots, and you wind up rootless.

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Hero or not, you do have to like the fact that we see Russell Crowe making the Sign of the Cross in the “Robin Hood” movie trailer. What’s not to like about that?
You’re absolutely right about The Aragron Complex. It drives me up the wall. We need more characters who want to make themselves into fit leaders.
Ah Steven, thanks again for reminding me to stick with the books, the classics… :)
You forgot about Robin Hood:Men in Tights…and there’s Star Trek:TNG’s “Qpid” with Worf’s immortal line “Sir, I protest. I am *not* a merry man!”
Why blow off “Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves”? I know that lots of Christian reviewers (Catholic and Protestant) don’t like it, but I never seen any compelling argument telling me why it’s bad from a Christian perspective. I would imagine that Catholics find the corrupt bishop and Friar Tuck as an ignorant drunk offensive, but such characters are at least historically plausible. I recall that one Protestant reviewer (Chuck Colson, I think) was unhappy with the positive depiction of Azeem, mostly because his scientific and medical knowledge is set in opposition to the sorry state of such knowledge in European Christendom at that time. But again, that’s historically accurate.
Of course, legends aren’t necessarily about historical accuracy. As you indicate above, the myth is a part of the cultural heritage of the English-speaking world. Mess with the myth too much and it loses its power.
—Lon Mendelsohn
Robin Hood Prince of Thieves stunk in every way. But as far as historical plausibility goes, nothing about it was remotely historically plausible—from the way returning crusaders were treated like Vietnam vets to Robin Hood’s laughable pop-psych “motivation” (A medieval nobleman who got upset about his father’s marrying a second time? It was practically REQUIRED.) But the best part was the Sheriff of Nottingham somehow having a shot at becoming King of England.
Remember the Disney Three Musketeers that came out about the same time? Porthos killed everyone on a rather large ship, if I recall, and somehow Cardinal Richelieu had a shot at becoming the actual King of France.
I remember a novel out about 15 years ago called “The Sheriff of Nottingham,” I believe. One of those “the villain is really the hero” stories. Maybe this was originally based on that novel.
If they’re trying to take the hero out of Robin Hood, then they deserve fire and thunder. Blast them! My blog is about the Robin Hood legend: http://adele.epictales.org
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