USA action
1938
color 102 min.
Director: Michael Curtiz
CAV: out-of-print collectible
           2 discs, catalog # CC1166L
CLV: out-of-print collectible
           1 disc, catalog # CC1215L
Few
motion pictures have ever matched the 1938 Warner Bros. production of The
Adventures of Robin Hood for sheer entertainment. Even today this film ranks
high on any list of all-time favorites. Warner Bros. first considered filming
The Adventures of Robin Hood in 1935 with contract star James Cagney
slated for the title role, but in November of that year Cagney walked off the lot
for a lengthy dispute and one month later the studio presented newcomer Errol
Flynn in Captain Blood. After that film's extraordinary impact, The Adventures
of Robin Hood was tailored for Flynn and given a budget of $1,600,000 -- the
largest sum allotted to a Warner film up to that time. (The cost eventually
reached $2,000,000.)
Although non-stop action was the keynote of The
Adventures of Robin Hood, there was also above average dialogue, spirited
performances, and impressive spectacle. An important element in this unique mesh
was the excellent casting, including the premier swashbuckler Errol Flynn, who at
twenty-nine was at his peak and perfect for the role, with just enough seasoning.
He was "hero" personified. Olivia de Havilland was by now his ideal screen
romantic interest, having been paired effectively with Flynn in two previous
films. Their romantic scenes were played with believable ardor, grace and more
than a touch of humor.
In addition to all the other ingredients, Warner Bros.
used the then-new three-color Technicolor process. It was a wise decision, as the
legendary subject with its many lush forest scenes, costumes and pageantry, was
perfect for full color. Seen today, the hues are still extraordinary and the film
is one of the best examples of the old Technicolor process, which has been
obsolete since the mid-1950s.
Some of the favorite incidents of the Robin
Hood legend were used on the screen for the first time: the bout with
quarterstaves between Robin and Little John (Alan Hale) on a log spanning a
stream, Robin's first meeting with Friar Tuck (Eugene Pallette) and his forcing
the rotund cleric to carry him piggyback across the stream, and the King (Ian
Hunter) coming to Sherwood disguised as a monk. Finally, all the various archery
contests described in the many legendary versions were amalgamated into one major
archery tournament, wherein Robin splits his opponent's arrow (actually
accomplished by archery champion Howard Hill) and wins the Golden Arrow prize.
Robin and Sir Guy of Gisbourne (Basil Rathbone), chief conspirer under Prince
John (Claude Rains), become rivals for Lady Marian (Olivia de Havilland), a
Norman ward of King Richard the Lion Heart. This triangle, not present in any of
the old ballads, originated in the popular De Koven-Smith light opera version of
Robin Hood in 1890.
Since there was a little something suggested from
all sources, Flynn (or occasionally a stunt double) was required to engage in
some lithe leaping, wall-scaling, vaulting, vine-swinging -- and of course,
swordplay -- to take into account the Douglas Fairbanks heritage.
Audiences
then and now loved the movie, many people going back to see it time and again.
During World War II, it was one of the most popular films shown to members of the
armed forces overseas on bases or on ships. In 1948, ten years after its first
release, Warner reissued the film in theaters everywhere with new Technicolor
prints, treating it in the manner of one of their big, fresh attractions. The
public flocked once again, the picture performing better than most new films at
the box office and certainly better than the usual revival of an old movie. It
was reissued another time -- but in black and white only and on a more limited
basis -- just before being sold to television in the mid-1950s, where it has been
a perennial favorite. In a poll taken in 1977 for TV Guide, program
directors of television stations throughout the country were asked to name the
ten most popular, most often shown movies in their markets. Robin Hood was
number five, preceded by -- in order of popularity -- Casablanca, King
Kong, The Magnificent Seven, and The Maltese Falcon.
The
Adventures of Robin Hood avoids the pitfalls that plague so many other films
in the historical romance genre. The subject had been extraordinarily popular for
over six hundred years, and Warner Bros. had the good sense not to alter
drastically the material or to make it seem considerably more than it was. All
the elements are handled in a relatively simple and straightforward manner. The
dialogue is not too flowery or archaic in an attempt to be faithful to the
period; vigor and pace always offset the pomp and ceremony, and nothing tedious
mars the proceedings. Rather than lasting two hours or longer, as so many costume
adventure films do, Robin Hood runs its course in a brisk one hour and
forty-two minutes. During that time, the film is crammed with incident and action
-- all of it pointed and interestingly staged. There is a prevailing humor, not
forced or awkward, but light-hearted, impudent, and indigenous.
Relatively
little about the picture dates, except in a charming way. The characters,
costumes, castle, and forest are idealized, but then the film is not a document
of medieval life; rather, it is a fairy tale illustrated by Technicolor. The
"love interest," usually clumsy and arbitrary in costume adventure films, is here
properly motivated and nicely woven into the plot fabric. And the rich Erich
Wolfgang Korngold score serves as marvelous connective tissue, sweeping the film
along and providing a splendid added dimension.
Many other productions of the
Robin Hood legend followed. Some, like Disney's live-action feature of 1952,
The Story of Robin Hood, presented a substantially similar story with
variations in the details.
But the definitive Robin Hood for most
people since 1938 is the Warner Bros. version, wherein many elements of popular
entertainment are beautifully fused: fairy-tale romance, spectacle, color,
action, pageantry, humor, the triumph of right over might, the exultation of the
Free Spirit, the charm of the greenwood, and a vague nostalgia for a partly
mythical age of chivalry.
-- RUDY BEHLMER
Credits
Directors:
Michael Curtiz, William Keighley
Screenplay: Norman Reilly Raine, Seton I.
Miller
Executive Producer: Hal B. Wallis
Associate Producer: Henry
Blanke
Music Composed by: Erich W. Korngold
Dialogue Director: Irving
Rapper
Second Unit Director: B. Reeves Eason
Photography: Tony Gaudio,
A.S.C.,
Sol Polito, A.S.C.
Film Editor: Ralph Dawson
Art Director: Carl
Jules Weyl
Costumes: Milo Anderson
Make-up Artist: Perc Westmore
Sound:
C. A. Riggs
Orchestrations: Hugo Friedhofer, Milan Roder
Quarterstaff
Instructor: Al Caven
Transfer
This edition of The Adventures of
Robin Hood was transferred from a restored Technicolor 35mm fine grain print.