1938 film by Michael Curtiz and William Keighley
The Adventures of Robin Hood
is a 1938 American
Technicolor
epic
swashbuckler film
from
Warner Bros. Pictures
. It was produced by
Hal B. Wallis
and
Henry Blanke
, directed by
Michael Curtiz
and
William Keighley
, and stars
Errol Flynn
,
Olivia de Havilland
,
Basil Rathbone
,
Claude Rains
,
Patric Knowles
,
Eugene Pallette
, and
Alan Hale
. The film is particularly noted for its
Academy Award
-winning score by
Erich Wolfgang Korngold
.
The film was written by
Norman Reilly Raine
and
Seton I. Miller
. The storyline depicts the legendary Saxon knight
Robin Hood
, who in
King Richard the Lionheart
's absence in the
Holy Land
during the
Crusades
, fights back as the outlaw leader of a rebel guerrilla band against Prince John and the Norman lords oppressing the Saxon commoners.
The Adventures of Robin Hood
has been acclaimed by critics since its release.
[4]
In 1995, the film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States
Library of Congress
and selected for preservation by the
National Film Registry
.
[5]
Alan Hale, who plays Little John, had played the same character in
Douglas Fairbanks
's
1922 version
of the film and went on to play him again in
Rogues of Sherwood Forest
, released by Columbia in 1950, a 28-year span.
[6]
[7]
Plot
[
edit
]
Richard
, the
Norman
King of England, is taken captive in 1191 by
Duke Leopold
while returning from the
Third Crusade
. Richard's treacherous brother
Prince John
, aided by fellow Norman
Sir Guy of Gisbourne
, names himself regent of England, increasing the
Saxons
' taxes under the pretense of gathering a ransom for Richard.
The Normans exploit and oppress the Saxons.
Sir Robin of Locksley
, a Saxon noble, opposes the brutality and rescues
Much the Miller's Son
from being executed for
poaching
, earning Gisbourne's ire. Robin later confronts Prince John at a
Nottingham Castle
banquet, telling the assembled guests that he regards John's declaring himself regent as treason. John orders Robin's execution, but he escapes and flees with Much and
Will Scarlet
into
Sherwood Forest
. John seizes Robin's lands and names him outlaw.
Much is sent to recruit men to join their band. Robin and Will encounter
John the Little
on a
log bridge
, and after a
quarterstaff
contest, welcome him into their ranks. Dozens more men join Robin's band, swearing an oath to despoil the rich while aiding the poor, to fight injustice, and to show courtesy to all oppressed. They start a war against John and Gisbourne, dispatching those who abuse their power.
Robin's band encounters the rotund
Friar Tuck
, a renowned swordsman. Tuck joins the band and assists in capturing a company of Normans transporting a shipment of gathered taxes. In the company are Gisbourne, the cowardly
Sheriff of Nottingham
, and King Richard's ward
Lady Marian
. After their capture, the men are humiliated at a celebratory woodland banquet, with Marian given a seat of honor. Initially scornful, she comes to share Robin's views after he shows her examples of Norman brutality against the Saxons. Robin sends the convoy back to Nottingham Castle, telling them that they have Marian's presence to thank for their lives being spared.
Having noted Robin's focus on Marian during the Sherwood banquet, the sheriff suggests hosting an archery tournament, with the Lady Marian presenting a golden arrow as the prize to entrap Robin. Robin enters the tournament, is recognized by his archery skill, and is captured and sentenced to be hanged. Marian aids Robin's Men in a scheme to save him. After his daring escape, he scales the palace walls to thank her, and the two pledge their love for one another. Marian declines Robin's marriage proposal, electing to instead remain in the castle as a spy.
King Richard returns with several of his knights. The Bishop of the Black Canons sees through Richard's disguise and alerts John. John sends disgraced former knight Dickon Malbete to kill Richard, promising Dickon Robin's title and lands. Marian overhears and writes to Robin, but is found out by Gisbourne and sentenced to death. Her nursemaid, Bess, tells Much everything. He intercepts Dickon and kills him after a fight.
Richard and his men, disguised as Norman monks, travel through Sherwood and are stopped by Robin. Assuring Robin they are on the king's business, Richard accepts Robin's offer of hospitality and his condemnation of Holy Crusade, but does not reveal his identity.
Much relays Bess' news. Robin orders his men to find and protect Richard; now certain of Robin's loyalty, Richard reveals himself. Robin coerces the Bishop of the Black Canons to allow them to join his monks in disguise so they can enter Nottingham Castle. Once inside, Richard announces his presence, and a huge melee erupts. Robin kills Gisbourne after a lengthy duel, frees Marian, and prompts John's men to surrender.
Returned to his throne, Richard banishes John and restores Robin's rank, raising him to Baron of Locksley and Earl of Sherwood and Nottingham. The king also
pardons
Robin's men, and commands Robin to take the hand of the Lady Marian in marriage. As Robin exits the castle with her, he responds "May I obey all your commands with equal pleasure, sire."
Cast
[
edit
]
Uncredited:
Production
[
edit
]
The Adventures of Robin Hood
was produced at an estimated cost of $2 million, the most expensive film
Warner Bros.
had made up to that time.
[8]
It was also the studio's first film utilizing the three-strip
Technicolor
process.
[9]
The film was, in fact, planned to be shot in black and white for most of its development; the switch to Technicolor happened just three months before production started.
[10]
It was an unusually extravagant production for the Warner Bros. studio, which had made a name for itself in producing socially conscious, low-budget
gangster films
.
[11]
Producer Hal B. Wallis is generally seen as the film's creative helmsman.
[9]
The first draft of the script was written by Rowland Lee, but Wallis objected to its heavily archaic and fanciful dialogue (one line he cited was "Oh my lord, tarry not too long, for I fear that in her remorse she may fling herself from the window. Some harm may befall her, I know."). At Wallis's insistence, the script was heavily rewritten to modernize the dialogue, and whether any of Lee's work survives in the completed film is unclear.
[10]
The scene in which Robin Hood first meets Prince John, Guy of Gisbourne, and Maid Marian went through several iterations. Initially, the scene was to be at a jousting tournament with Robin tilting against Guy of Gisbourne, mimicking the 1922
Douglas Fairbanks
production of
Robin Hood
, but screenwriter Norman Reilly Raine pointed out that a banquet scene would be much less expensive to produce, and so long as Technicolor was employed, would look just as lavish to the average moviegoer.
[10]
In another draft, instead of a deer, a slain villager was who Robin Hood brought in and dumped on Prince John's table. Wallis felt the use of a dead villager expended all the tension of the scene in "a momentary kick", and preferred the use of a deer from an earlier draft, which allowed the tension to simmer with the threat of an explosion at any moment.
[10]
During the brawl where Robin escapes from the banquet hall, Basil Rathbone was trampled by an extra whose spear cut his foot badly, requiring eight stitches to close the wound.
[12]
James Cagney
was originally cast as Robin Hood, but walked out on his Warner Bros. contract, paving the way for the role to go to
Errol Flynn
.
[9]
The filming was postponed three years as a result.
[13]
Though Olivia de Havilland was an early frontrunner for the role of Maid Marian, for a time, the studio vacillated between
Anita Louise
and her for the part. De Havilland was ultimately chosen because the success of
Captain Blood
established the pairing of Flynn and de Havilland as a safe bet to help ensure box-office success.
[10]
Location work for
The Adventures of Robin Hood
included
Bidwell Park
in
Chico, California
, which substituted for
Sherwood Forest
,
[14]
although one major scene was filmed at the California locations "Lake Sherwood" and "Sherwood Forest", so named because they were the location sites for the Fairbanks production of
Robin Hood
. Several scenes were shot at the
Warner Bros. Burbank Studios
and the Warner Ranch in
Calabasas
. The archery tournament was filmed at the former
Busch Gardens
,
[15]
now part of
Lower Arroyo
Park,
[16]
in
Pasadena
.
Scenes which were filmed, but not included in the final cut include the disguised King Richard brawling with Friar Tuck, and Robin riding off with Maid Marian; the latter would have been the concluding scene of the film, and appears in the theatrical trailer despite not appearing in the film itself.
[10]
Stunts
[
edit
]
All the arrows in the film were shot by professional archer
Howard Hill
.
[10]
Those shot with arrows wore clothing padded with balsa wood on protective metal plates; the metal plates prevented injury (though impact was fairly painful), and the arrows lodged into the balsa wood to create the illusion of bodily penetration.
[10]
Hill, although listed as the archer captain defeated by Robin, was cast as Elwyn the Welshman, an archer seen shooting at Robin in his escape from Nottingham Castle, and later, defeated by Robin at the archery tournament. To win, Robin splits the arrow of Philip of Arras, a captain of the guard under Gisbourne, who had struck the bullseye. Hill did, in fact, split one arrow with another during filming (albeit while firing from a much closer range than from which Robin Hood is portrayed as shooting), but it did not look good enough on film, so the shot was redone with some effects trickery.
[10]
Stuntman Buster Wiles, a close friend of Errol Flynn's and his frequent on-set stand-in, maintained that the arrow-splitting stunt was carried out using an extra-large arrow (for the target) and that the second arrow had a wide, flat arrowhead and was fired along a wire. This wire can briefly be seen attached to the
fletching
of the arrow, in the final film. Wiles discusses the scene in his autobiography,
My Days with Errol Flynn
.
Flynn performed most of his own stunts in the film; exceptions include Robin jumping onto a horse with hands tied behind his back (during the hanging scene), scaling the fortress gate and coming down the other side, and a few select shots in the duel between Robin and Guy of Gisbourne.
[10]
Music score
[
edit
]
In 1938,
Erich Wolfgang Korngold
was conducting opera in Austria when he was asked by Warner Bros. to return to Hollywood and compose a score for
The Adventures of Robin Hood
.
[17]
: 27
Music historian Laurence E. MacDonald notes that many factors made the film a success, including its cast, its Technicolor photography, and fast-paced direction by
Michael Curtiz
, but "most of all, there is Korngold's glorious music".
[18]
: 49
Also, film historian
Rudy Behlmer
describes Korngold's contribution to this and his other films:
Korngold's score was a splendid added dimension. His style for the Flynn swashbucklers resembled that of the creators of late 19th-century and early 20th-century German symphonic tone poems. It incorporated chromatic harmonies, lush instrumental effects, passionate climaxes?all performed in a generally romantic manner. Korngold's original and distinctive style was influenced by the Wagnerian
leitmotif
, the orchestral virtuosity of Richard Strauss, the delicacy and broad melodic sweep of
Puccini
, and the long-line development of Gustav Mahler.
[19]
: 38
In reply to Warner Bros.’ request, Korngold told studio head of production Hal B. Wallis that he was a composer of drama and the heart, and felt little connection to what he perceived as "a 90% action picture."
[10]
Wallis was persistent, and Korngold finally agreed to begin composing on the condition that he not have a contract, and work on a week-by-week basis so that he could withdraw if he were dissatisfied with the music he composed. However, Korngold later admitted that the real reason he changed his mind was
Adolf Hitler
's November 1937 meeting with Austrian ministers, which convinced Korngold that the situation was no longer safe in his home country.
[10]
As Korngold feared, Austria was
annexed by the Nazis
, and his home in Vienna was confiscated.
[19]
: 35
This meant that all Jews in Austria were now at risk, so Korngold stayed in America until the end of
World War II
.
[20]
Korngold called his film scores "
Opern ohne Singen
", operas without singing, but otherwise approached their composition just as he would for the operatic stage.
The Adventures of Robin Hood
was, therefore, a large-scale symphonic work, and despite the studio music department's providing a team of orchestrators, including future Oscar-winner
Hugo Friedhofer
, to assist Korngold, the amount of work was immense, especially for the limited time he was given to compose. In describing this dilemma to his father, Julius Korngold, one of Vienna's foremost music critics, the elder Korngold suggested that themes from his 1920 symphonic overture "Sursum Corda" ("Lift Up Your Hearts") would serve splendidly for much of the most demanding action-scene music, and Erich agreed.
It also gave him his second
Academy Award for Best Original Score
and established the symphonic style that was later used in action films during Hollywood's Golden Age.
[18]
: 50
Modern-day epics such as the
Star Wars
and
Indiana Jones
trilogies similarly included original symphonic scores.
[18]
: 50
Composer
John Williams
has cited Korngold as his inspiration in scoring the
Star Wars
series.
[21]
: 717
The love theme of Robin and Marian went on to become a celebrated concert piece.
Reception
[
edit
]
Contemporary reviews were highly positive. "A richly produced, bravely bedecked, romantic and colorful show, it leaps boldly to the forefront of this year's best", wrote
Frank S. Nugent
of
The New York Times
, as it premiered at the
Radio City Music Hall
.
[22]
"It is cinematic pageantry at its best", raved
Variety
. "A highly imaginative retelling of folklore in all the hues of Technicolor, deserving handsome box office returns".
[23]
Film Daily
called it "high class entertainment" with "excellent direction" and an "ideal choice" in the casting of Flynn.
[24]
"Excellent entertainment!" wrote
Harrison's Reports
. "Adventure, romance, comedy, and human appeal have been skilfully blended to give satisfaction on all counts ... The duel in the closing scenes between the hero and his arch enemy is the most exciting ever filmed".
[25]
John Mosher
of
The New Yorker
called it "a rich, showy, and, for all its tussles, somewhat stolid affair", praising Flynn's performance and the action sequences but finding the "excellent collection" of supporting actors to be "somewhat buried under the medieval panoply".
[26]
Review aggregator
website
Rotten Tomatoes
reports that 100% of critics gave the film a positive rating based on 50 reviews, with an average score of 8.94/10. The film is 13th on their list of the 100 best classic films.
[27]
Rotten Tomatoes summarizes the critical consensus as, "Errol Flynn thrills as the legendary title character, and the film embodies the type of imaginative family adventure tailor-made for the silver screen".
[28]
Box office
[
edit
]
The Adventures of Robin Hood
became the sixth-highest-grossing film of
the year
,
[8]
with just over $4 million in revenues
[3]
at a time when the average ticket price was less than 25 cents.
[29]
According to Warner Bros records, the film earned $1,928,000 domestically and $2,053,000 overseas.
[2]
In
1938
,
The Adventures of Robin Hood
was the seventh-highest-grossing film nationally in the U.S., and the highest-grossing film the same year in the southern states of Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Arkansas.
[30]
Warner Bros. was so pleased with the results that the studio cast Flynn in two more color epics before the end of the decade:
Dodge City
and
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex
.
[31]
A sequel,
Sir Robin of Locksley,
was announced, but never developed.
[13]
Awards and nominations
[
edit
]
Other honors:
Legacy
[
edit
]
The film's popularity inextricably linked Errol Flynn's name and image with that of Robin Hood in the public eye, even more so than those of
Douglas Fairbanks
, who had played the role in 1922.
[35]
The film became a benchmark for later movie adaptations of Robin Hood.
This was the third film to pair Flynn and Olivia de Havilland (after
Captain Blood
and
The Charge of the Light Brigade
). They would ultimately star together in nine films, the aforementioned and
Four's a Crowd
(1938),
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex
(1939),
Dodge City
(1939),
Santa Fe Trail
(1940),
They Died with Their Boots On
(1941) and
Thank Your Lucky Stars
(1943), although they shared no scenes in the last film.
[36]
Scenes and costumes worn by the characters have been imitated and spoofed endlessly. For instance, in the 1949
Bugs Bunny
animated
short film
,
Rabbit Hood
, Bugs is continually told by a dim-witted Little John, "Don't you worry, never fear; Robin Hood will soon be here." When Bugs finally meets Robin at the end of the film, he is stunned to find that it is Errol Flynn, in a spliced-in clip from this film (he subsequently shakes his head and declares, "It
couldn't
be him!"). Other parodies were
Daffy Duck
and
Porky Pig
in
Robin Hood Daffy
(1958) and
Goofy
and
Black Pete
in
Goof Troop
episode "Goofin' Hood & His Melancholy Men" (1992).
The Court Jester
, a musical comedy starring
Danny Kaye
, is in great measure a spoof of Robin Hood.
Basil Rathbone
even appears as the villain and has a climactic sword fight with Kaye.
Most of the
Mel Brooks
parody
Robin Hood: Men in Tights
relied on this film for its aesthetics, although the plot was almost completely a riff on
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves
, as well as referencing the
1973 Disney version
. Mel Brooks also spoofed the Robin Hood legend in his 1975 television series
When Things Were Rotten
.
A fragment of one of the film's sword fighting scenes was converted to
sprites
by
Jordan Mechner
and used for his 1989
platform game
Prince of Persia
.
[37]
Errol Flynn's acrobatic swordplay became a crucial touchstone for the
light-saber
duels choreography in
Star Wars
movies.
[38]
In
Disney
’s 2010 animated film
Tangled
, the appearance and personality of
Flynn Rider
are partly inspired by that of Errol Flynn,
[
citation needed
]
with his surname also being used in homage.
[39]
Comic adaptation
[
edit
]
Knockout Comic
(weekly picture paper,
Amalgamated Press
, London) No 434, June 21, 1947 ? No 447, September 20, 1947, 14 issues, 28pp in black-and-white and drawn by Michael Hubbard)
[40]
[41]
Produced when the film was first revived after
World War II
, with several deviations made from the film's plot, the
comic strip
's storyline is generally faithful to the look and narrative of the Warner Bros.' film. However, the famous climactic duel between Robin and Sir Guy is reduced to a couple of strip panels, with Robin remaining dressed in his earlier monk's habit. The strip opens with a joust between Robin and Sir Guy, a scene which was in the original screenplay, but was never actually filmed.
[19]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
The Adventures of Robin Hood
at the
AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- ^
a
b
c
Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1?31 p 18 DOI: 10.1080/01439689508604551
- ^
a
b
c
Glancy, H. Mark. "Warner Bros film grosses, 1921?51." Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. March 1995
- ^
"100 Best Classic Movies of All Time"
.
rottentomatoes.com
. Retrieved
8 February
2024
.
- ^
"25 old films honored"
.
St. Petersburg Times
. December 28, 1995. Archived from
the original
on November 22, 2021
. Retrieved
July 22,
2009
.
- ^
"Detail view of Movies Page"
.
afi.com
. Retrieved
19 April
2016
.
- ^
"Complete National Film Registry Listing"
.
Library of Congress
. Retrieved
2020-09-11
.
- ^
a
b
Higgins, Scott (2007).
Harnessing the Technicolor Rainbow: Color Design in the 1930s
. University of Texas Press. pp.
138
?139.
ISBN
9780292779525
.
- ^
a
b
c
Ebert, Roger (August 17, 2003).
"Roger Ebert's review of "The Adventures of Robin Hood"
"
.
Chicago Sun-Times
. Archived from
the original
on April 30, 2007
. Retrieved
March 30,
2007
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
Behlmer, Rudy
(2010).
The Adventures of Robin Hood - Audio Commentary
(DVD). Warner Home Video.
- ^
"The mobster and the movies"
.
CNN
. August 24, 2004
. Retrieved
July 9,
2008
.
- ^
Turner Classic Movies, extraduction by Dave Karger, May 13, 2023.
- ^
a
b
Thomas, Tony;
Behlmer, Rudy
; McCarty, Clifford (June 1969).
The Films of Errol Flynn
.
Secaucus, New Jersey
:
Citadel Press
. pp. 62?67.
ISBN
978-0806502373
.
- ^
The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations by Tony Reeves. The Titan Publishing Group. Pg.14
"Film location titles"
. Archived from
the original
on 2015-06-25
. Retrieved
2015-06-21
.
- ^
Higham, Charles
(1984).
Sisters: The Story of Olivia de Havilland and Joan Fontaine
. Dell Publishing. p. 72.
ISBN
0-440-17866-5
.
- ^
"Archery club, hikers clash over Lower Arroyo Park trail in Pasadena"
.
ABC News
. May 25, 2011. Archived from
the original
on November 1, 2014
. Retrieved
April 4,
2015
.
- ^
Thomas, Tony.
Korngold: Vienna to Hollywood
, Turner Entertainment (1996)
- ^
a
b
c
MacDonald, Laurence E.
The Invisible Art of Film Music: A Comprehensive History
, Scarecrow Press (1998)
- ^
a
b
c
Behlmer, Rudy.
The Adventures of Robin Hood
, Univ. of Wisconsin Press (1979)
- ^
Bernardi, Daniel.
Hollywood's Chosen People: The Jewish Experience in American Cinema
,
Wayne State University Press
(2013) p. 48
- ^
Hischak, Thomas S.
The Encyclopedia of Film Composers
, Rowman & Littlefield (2015)
- ^
Nugent, Frank S.
(May 13, 1938).
"Movie Review ? The Adventures of Robin Hood"
.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
September 13,
2015
.
- ^
"The Adventures of Robin Hood"
.
Variety
. New York. December 31, 1937. p. 22
. Retrieved
March 11,
2018
.
- ^
Daly, Phil M. (April 29, 1938).
"Reviews:
The Adventures of Robin Hood
"
.
Film Daily
.
73
(99). New York: 8
. Retrieved
March 11,
2018
.
- ^
"The Adventures of Robin Hood with Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Basil Rathbone and Claude Rains"
.
Harrison's Reports
.
XX
(27). New York: 74. May 7, 1938
. Retrieved
March 11,
2018
.
- ^
Mosher, John
(May 21, 1938). "The Current Screen".
The New Yorker
. New York. pp. 71?72.
- ^
"100 Best Classic Movies of All Time"
.
Rotten Tomatoes
. Retrieved
8 February
2024
.
- ^
"The Adventures of Robin Hood"
.
Rotten Tomatoes
. Retrieved
June 30,
2019
.
- ^
Weitzman, Elizabeth (February 6, 2009).
"The Depression-era gems at 1930s prices"
.
New York Daily News
. Retrieved
October 5,
2010
.
- ^
"Warner Bros Film Grosses, 1921?51: the William Schaefer ledger". Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television.
- ^
Levy, Emanuel (September 12, 2016).
"Reel/Real Impact: Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)"
.
emanuellevy.com
.
- ^
"The 11th Academy Awards (1939) Nominees and Winners"
.
oscars.org
.
Archived
from the original on July 6, 2011
. Retrieved
2011-08-16
.
- ^
"Film Hall of Fame Productions"
.
Online Film & Television Association
. Retrieved
May 15,
2021
.
- ^
"Past Saturn Awards"
.
Saturn Awards
.org
. Archived from
the original
on September 14, 2008
. Retrieved
May 7,
2008
.
- ^
King, Susan (May 12, 2010).
"Classic Hollywood: 100 years of Robin Hood movies"
.
The Los Angeles Times
. Retrieved
October 2,
2010
.
- ^
"AFI Catalog of Feature Films"
. American Film Institute
. Retrieved
19 April
2016
.
- ^
Mechner, Jordan
(2011).
Classic Game Postmortem: PRINCE OF PERSIA
(Speech). Game Developers Conference. San Francisco. Event occurs at 38:35
. Retrieved
30 May
2013
.
- ^
Robey, Tim (2015-11-24).
"10 films that influenced Star Wars"
.
The Telegraph
.
ISSN
0307-1235
.
Archived
from the original on 2022-01-12
. Retrieved
2020-12-25
.
- ^
Hall, Sandra (2011-01-07).
"Tangled"
.
The Sydney Morning Herald
. Retrieved
2020-12-24
.
- ^
David Ashford/John Allen-Clark/Steve Holland:
Knockout Comic: An Illustrated Guide
(CJ Publications, UK ? 1997)
- ^
"Knockout 0434 (UK Comic Books)"
.
Comic Book Plus
. June 1947
. Retrieved
2020-12-26
.
Notes
[
edit
]
- ^
Roy Rogers
admired the then-named Golden Cloud so much that he bought Trigger to use in his own films. This eventually made Trigger one of the most famous animals in show business.
External links
[
edit
]
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