Robin Hood (2018)
Cast
- Taron Egerton as Robin Hood
- Jamie Foxx as Little John
- Jamie Dornan as Will Scarlet
- Eve Hewson as Maid Marian
- Ben Mendelsohn as Sheriff of Nottingham
- Tim Minchin as Friar Tuck
Producer
- Leonardo DiCaprio
Director
- Otto Bathurst
Director of Photography
- George Steel
Story
- David James Kelly
Screenplay
- Ben Chandler
- David James Kelly
Editor
- Christopher Barwell
Music
- Joseph Trapanese
Action, Adventure
104 minutes
You could build a suspension bridge over the gap between what "Robin
Hood" could have been and what it is. Its hero is credible as a man who
wants to rob from the rich and give to the poor, but the storytelling is
so impoverished that the message can't stick.
"Robin Hood"
is a malleable tale, but the core is always the same: a cocky underdog
fights the power on behalf of mistreated citizens. This new version from
director Otto Bathurst ("Peaky Blinders") captures the heart of the
legend, but frustratingly fails to translate it. Bluntly
political and surprisingly coherent in its messaging, the movie is
filled with deliberately modern details signaling that it's a folktale
aimed at modern multiplex audiences, closer to a science fiction or
fantasy epic than a "Barry Lyndon"-style "accurate"
representation of life in another era. If the filmmaking and writing
weren't so undistinguished, this could have been special. Instead, it's a
flat and often grating experience, dotted by pockets of intelligence
and surprise.
This incarnation of Robin of Locksley ("Kingsman: The Secret Service" star Taron Egerton)
is a traitor to his class—a veteran of the Crusades who is literally
to-the-manor born. He battles the cruel and corrupt Sheriff of
Nottingham (Ben Mendelsohn)
after returning home and realizing that the bad guy has taxed his
community into oblivion to fund the war effort. Robin is joined by the
Saracen Little John (Jamie Foxx), who becomes his friend and mentor after Robin risks treason charges to save John's son during the Crusades.
Robin,
John and their allies start stealing gold from the bad guys, Robin's
face-concealing black hood becoming a revolutionary emblem on par with
the Guy Fawkes mask. At the same time, Robin ingratiates himself into
the Sheriff's inner circle, gathering intelligence for his growing
rebellion, and uncovering a conspiracy to subjugate the people that's
even more awful than what he'd imagined. The film's supporting
heroes—including Robin's former fiancee Maid Marian (Eve Hewson) and the local clergyman Friar Tuck (Tim Minchin)—are
quite jaded about the world. They require little prompting to join
Robin's campaign to give gold and hope back to people who've been abused
or taken for granted by the state.
Ben Chandler and David James
Kelly's script takes a story that's several centuries old and marries
it to modern-day concepts and language, and the filmmakers try to push
that strategy to the next level. Like Guy Ritchie's recent attempt to
update another ancient English hero in "King Arthur: Legend of the Sword"—and,
for that matter, Kevin Reynold's 1991 hit "Robin Hood: Prince of
Thieves," from which this film borrows freely—this is a loud, fast,
choppy production, with a punkish yet earnest edge. It often apes the
look and feel of Christopher Nolan's Batman films, trading energy for
elegance, and enthusiastically owning its many, blatant anachronisms.
Marian has circa 2016 smoky-eye makeup, the costuming showcases some of
the yummiest custom-cut leather jackets in cinema history, and the
combat sequences feature archers rapidly firing arrows at each other at
close quarters, like gunfighters in a John Wick film. An opening action
sequence set in Syria has stuttering handheld camerawork in the vein of "Saving Private Ryan" and "Black Hawk Down."
The dialogue is likewise packed with modern aphorisms and political
slogans that seem meant to lodge in the mind and incite passions. At one
point, the corrupt Sheriff of Nottingham, who's presented as a
Trump-Bolsonaro-Le Pen-styled nationalist/racist despot, quotes George
W. Bush's post-9/11 statement "They hate us for our freedom," in
reference to the Muslim hordes that the Christian warriors are fighting
overseas. He warns that they'll overrun England unless everyone pitches
in with their treasure and blood. "They'll burn your houses!" the
Sheriff bellows. "They'll burn your land!" Robin and John's friendship
is treated as a bond between men who are smart enough to see through the
forces that are trying to trick them into hating each other.
The
film's genuine cynicism towards the powers that be is palpable, and it
runs deeper than you expect. The Sheriff is in cahoots with a cruel and
greedy Cardinal (F. Murray Abraham), who reveals that they're secretly
funding both the Christians and the Muslims overseas to keep the war
machine going and the gold pouring into the coffers of the local mine
and foundry, which employs much of the local population and belches
flame and toxic fumes. Marian's new husband Will Scarlet (Jamie Dornan),
whom she married after Robin was reported dead in the war, is what 2018
political commentators would call a "centrist," expressing guarded
sympathy for the motives of Robin and the other rebels while decrying
their methods and worrying that they're going to upset a system that
provides him with a stable and comfortable life. This is the kind of
movie that turns boilerplate phrases into images, as when a newly
radicalized character becomes a literal bomb-thrower.
In contrast
to many other heroic narratives that are about nothing more than being
opposed to bad people doing bad stuff, this "Robin Hood" is about
institutional as well as personal corruption; it goes out of its way to
show how one feeds and expands the other, and how perpetrators cloak
themselves in political slogans and religious imagery while picking the
pockets of working people and turning nations against each other. The
movie is specifically an anti-organized religion statement as well as an
anti-capitalist and anti-nationalist statement: a Noam Chomsky editorial with bows and arrows.
The film's storytelling, however, is as conservative as its
messaging is intriguingly radical. While modernizing other aspects of
the legend, the script fails to find a new way into Robin's
relationships with John (essentially another neutered Black
mentor/father figure to a young, white man, his lopped-off hand
preventing him from ever besting his student) and Marian (a damsel in
distress, still, no matter how spunkily she resists the
rape-minded Sheriff and his goons).
The direction is
paint-by-numbers, capturing every piece of relevant action but evoking
nothing—which would be aesthetically offensive even if the costumers,
set builders and decorators weren't in there filling every frame with
colors and textures worth savoring. There's not a single witty or
lyrical image anywhere in the movie, which wastes its dynamic, wide
framing, and is shot in a glitzy, fast-cut style, characteristic of
high-end TV pilots, complete with BOOM! sounds to inform us that
something important just happened. A lot of the special effects are
dodgy, particularly a wagon chase scene where Robin, Marian and John
flee the Sherriff's guards and the assassin Guy of Gisborne (Paul Anderson) in the fiery mills. The actors are so clearly not
inhabiting the same space as the spectacle, they might as well be
standing on the deck of The Love Boat. But in the end "Robin Hood,"
succumbs to Marvel/DC syndrome, presumptuously setting up a sequel that
it's hard to imagine anyone demanding.
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