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Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves

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Wikipedia article




'Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves' is a 1991 American action adventure film based on the English folk tale of Robin Hood that originated in the 12th century. It was directed by Kevin Reynolds and stars Kevin Costner as Robin Hood, Morgan Freeman as Azeem, Christian Slater as Will Scarlett, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as Marian, and Alan Rickman as the Sheriff of Nottingham. The screenplay was written by Pen Densham and John Watson.

The film received mixed reviews from critics, who praised Freeman's and Rickman's performances and the music, but criticized Costner's performance, the screenplay, and the overall execution. Nevertheless, it was a box office success, grossing more than $390 million worldwide, making it the second-highest-grossing film of 1991. Rickman received the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his performance as George, Sheriff of Nottingham. The theme song "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" by Bryan Adams was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song, and it won the Grammy Award for Best Song Written for Visual Media.

Plot



In 1194, at the end of the Third Crusade, Richard the Lionheart, King of England is visiting France. This leaves the cruel Sheriff of Nottinghamaided by his cousin Guy of Gisbourne, the evil witch Mortianna, and the corrupt Bishop of Herefordto rule the land. The Lord of Locksley Castle is killed by the Sheriff's men for remaining loyal to King Richard and refusing to join their gang. His lost son, Robin of Locksley, had followed the king's Crusade and spent five years in an Ayyubid prison in Jerusalem.

Robin and his comrade, Peter Dubois, break out of prison, saving the life of a Moor, named Azeem. Mortally-wounded, Peter makes Robin swear to protect his sister, Marian, and distracts the pursuers so Robin can escape. Robin returns to England with Azeem, who has vowed to accompany him until his life-debt is repaid. After a run-in with Gisbourne, Robin goes home and finds his father's rotted corpse on display in the ruined castle. Duncan, an old family retainer blinded by Gisbourne, tells him how his father was falsely accused of devil worship. The Sheriff consults Mortianna, who foresees King Richard's return and panics that Robin and Azeem "will be our deaths".

Robin tells his childhood friend Marian of her brother Peter's death and his promise, but Marian sees little need for his protection and is determined to stay and look after the people on her demesne. They flee the Sheriff's forces to hide in Sherwood Forest, and encounter an outlaw band also in hiding. Their leader, Little John, challenges Robin to a duel which Robin wins after some difficulty. Will Scarlet, one of the bandits, holds a grudge against Robin and protests when Robin assumes command of the outlaws. Robin shapes the group into a formidable force against Nottingham. They rob rich folk passing through the forest and distribute the stolen wealth and food among the poor. Friar Tuck joins them once he understands their cause. Marian offers Robin any aid she can, and they begin to fall in love.

Robin's successes infuriate the Sheriff, who worsens his abuse of the public, but which increases their support for Robin. The Sheriff kills Gisbourne for failing to stop the outlaws, and hires vicious mercenary Celtic warriors. The Bishop betrays Marian after she gives him a message warning King Richard of Nottingham's plots, and she is taken prisoner. Duncan rides to Sherwood, but is followed. The Sheriff storms and burns the outlaws' hideout, capturing many with Robin presumed dead. To consolidate his power and claim the throne, the Sheriff proposes marriage to Marian (who is Richard's cousin), claiming that, if she accepts, he will spare the lives of the woodsmen and their families, specifically the children caught during the attack. As well as her Lady-in-waiting. Marian reluctantly agrees, but the captured ringleaders, according to Nottingham are to be hanged anyway as part of the wedding celebration.

Will bargains with the Sheriff that he will find out if Robin is alive and kill him. Will informs Robin, Azeem, John, and a few other survivors of the Sheriff's plans, but does not trust Robin. Will reveals that the reason for his animosity toward Robin is because he is actually Robin's half-brother; after Robin's mother died, his father had taken comfort with Will's mother, a peasant woman. Robin's anger over what he saw as a betrayal of his mother's memory caused his father to leave Will's mother, leaving Will fatherless. Robin is overjoyed to learn that he has a brother, and they reconcile.

On the wedding day, Robin and his men infiltrate Nottingham Castle and free the prisoners. Azeem inspires the Nottingham peasants to revolt, forcing the Sheriff to retreat with Marian into his keep. The Bishop performs the marriage, and the Sheriff is about to consummate it when Robin bursts in and kills him in a fierce fight. Azeem kills Mortianna in defense of Robin, fulfilling his life-debt. Friar Tuck finds the Bishop fleeing with bags of gold, and burdens him with additional treasure before defenestrating him.

Robin and Marian profess their love for each other. Their wedding in Sherwood is briefly interrupted by the return of King Richard, who gives the bride away and thanks Robin for saving his throne.

Cast



Production



at a section of Hadrian's Wall between two crests just east of Milecastle 39, locally known as the "Robin Hood Tree"

Development

In August 1989, British writer-producer Pen Densham broke with the traditional account of Robin Hood as a devil-may-care adventurer, best embodied by Errol Flynn in 'The Adventures of Robin Hood' in 1938. He instead reimagined Robin as a rich kid transformed into a socially conscious rebel by imprisonment in Jerusalem during the Crusades. He wrote a 92-page outline, which was then rewritten as a screenplay by his producing partner, John Watson. On February 14, 1990, Morgan Creek, the small production company of 'Young Guns' (1988) and 'Major League' (1989), saw "gold on the page" and immediately funded the film. Watson scouted filming locations in the United Kingdom, setting September 3 as the filming deadline in aggressive competition against other potential 'Robin Hood' remakes from Twentieth Century Fox (Morgan Creek's former distribution partner) and Tri-Star Pictures.

Kevin Reynolds had directed Kevin Costner extensively in the past, including the challenging buffalo hunt scene of 'Dances with Wolves'. Reynolds said: "I'd done two pictures that hadn't made a dime, so I kind of knew [the studio] wanted me [for 'Robin Hood'] because of my connections with Kevin." Indeed, Costner had already rejected the script until hearing that Reynolds was directing: "I felt Kevin was such a good filmmaker I would do it".

Reynolds said, "what I did not want to do was 'Indiana Jones'. That has been done already". Costner wanted an accent but Reynolds thought it would distract audiences, and their indecision resulted in a drastically uneven delivery between each scene. 'EW' reported, "Even before it was finished, Costner was the subject of embarrassing rumors that his performance was too laid-back and his accent more LA than UK."

For the role of King Richard, comedian John Cleese was proposed but Sean Connery was selected at the passionate behest of Costner and Densham. Fearing that the sudden cameo of a notorious comedic icon would destroy the drama, Densham recalls, "I so wanted to not have the John Cleese that I said, 'Would you give me Sean Connery? We can't give him a credit because you can't have the audience waiting for the whole movie to see him but he only has to work one day." His requested $1 million fee was negotiated down to $250,000 and paid to a hospital in Connery's native Scotland as charitable compromise for making film history with the already over-budget project.

In 2015, Alan Rickman admitted he had secretly asked his scriptwriter friends Ruby Wax and Peter Barnes to punch up the script: "Will you have a look at this script because it's terrible, and I need some good lines." Reynolds added their lines.

Filming

Costner's explosive career gave him only a few days between the long-term epic projects of 'Dances with Wolves', 'Robin Hood', and 'JFK'. This project's timeframe was compressed by the cold seasons in England and by competition with other possible 'Robin Hood' films, giving Reynolds only 10 weeks for preproduction and little time for planning, rehearsal, or revision. Costner said, "It's very dangerous to be [working] so fast. We are relying on the weather, and every time the weather turns against us we could get behind. When that happens there is always the feeling that certain people want to do something about it to shorten the filming time. That is not always the cure." Reynolds said, "Are things going as planned? Ha! You always start with a picture in your mind, and it is a compromise all the way from there. We have been struggling from Day One. We are trying to finish by Christmas, and the days are getting shorter. It's horrible." On the first day of filming, the suddenly changing weather caused jet traffic to be diverted from London's Heathrow Airport away, and roar over the filming location at the Burnham Beeches.

Principal exteriors were shot on location in the United Kingdom. A second unit filmed the medieval walls and towers of the Cit de Carcassonne in the town of Carcassonne in Aude, France, for the portrayal of Nottingham and its castle. Locksley Castle was Wardour Castle in Wiltshirerestored in an early shot using a matte painting. Marian's manor was filmed at Hulne Priory in Northumberland. Scenes set in Sherwood Forest were filmed at various locations in England: the outlaws' encampment was filmed at Burnham Beeches in Buckinghamshire, south of the real Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire; the fight scene between Robin and Little John was at Aysgarth Falls in North Yorkshire; and Marian sees Robin bathing at Hardraw Force, also in North Yorkshire. Sycamore Gap on Hadrian's Wall in Northumberland was used for the scene when Robin first confronts the sheriff's men. Chalk cliffs at Seven Sisters, Sussex were used as the locale for Robin's return to England from the Crusades.

Interior scenes were completed at Shepperton Studios in Surrey.

Post-production

Furious at the studio's repeated demands for yet another heavy editing session just to boost Costner's presence and prevent Rickman's performance from stealing the movieand at the studio locking his own editor out of the cutting roomReynolds walked out of the project weeks before theatrical debut. He did not attend the screening.

Extended Version

A 155-minute Extended Version of the film was released as a 2-disc Special Edition on DVD on June 10, 2003. The 2003 cut adds 12 minutes of previously unreleased footage, which details the conspirators' plot to steal the throne from King Richard, and further explores the relationship between the Sheriff and Mortianna. In one scene, Mortianna explains that she killed the true George Nottingham as a baby and replaced him with her own infant son, revealing that she is the Sheriff's real mother. In another scene, Mortianna accuses the Sheriff's scribe (John Tordoff) of being disloyal, and suggests the Sheriff remove the scribe's tongue. A subsequent added scene shows the now-tongueless scribe forced to communicate via chalkboard. This creates a continuity error with a later scene that is retained from the theatrical cut, in which the scribe easily provides spoken directions to Robin and Azeem as they rescue Marian.

Release



The film was released in the United States and Canada on June 14, 1991 in 2,369 theaters and a record 3,175 screens.

Classification

'Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves' was submitted for classification from the British Board of Film Classification, which required fourteen seconds to be cut from the film to obtain a PG rating.

Home media

The original theatrical cut of the film was released on VHS in the US on October 30, 1991 and on DVD on September 30, 1997. A 2-disc special-edition DVD was released in the US on June 10, 2003, containing a 155-minute-long extended version of the film. This alternate cut of the film was released on Blu-ray in the US on May 26, 2009.

Reception



Box office

The film grossed $25 million in its opening weekend and $18.3 million in its second. It eventually earned $390,493,908 at the global box office, making it the second-highest-grossing film of 1991, immediately behind 'Terminator 2: Judgment Day'. It had the second-best opening to date for a non-sequel.

Critical response



On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 52% based on 56 reviews, with an average rating of 5.70/10. The critical consensus reads, "'Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves' brings a wonderfully villainous Alan Rickman to this oft-adapted tale, but he's robbed by big-budget bombast and a muddled screenplay." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 51 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.

'Chicago Sun-Times' critic Roger Ebert praised the performances of Freeman and Rickman, but ultimately decried the film as a whole, giving it two stars and stating, "'Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves' is a murky, unfocused, violent, and depressing version of the classic story... The most depressing thing about the movie is that children will attend it expecting to have a good time." 'The New York Times' gave the film a negative review, with Vincent Canby writing that the movie is "a mess, a big, long, joyless reconstruction of the 'Robin Hood' legend that comes out firmly for civil rights, feminism, religious freedom, and economic opportunity for all." The 'Los Angeles Times' also found the movie unsatisfactory, criticizing Costner for not attempting an English accent, mocking Robin's afternoon walk from the White Cliffs to Nottingham via Hadrian's Wall, which is actually .

Desson Thomson, writing for 'The Washington Post', gave a more positive review: "Fair damsels and noble sirs, you must free yourselves of these wearisome observations. This is a state-of-the-art retelling of a classic."[https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/robin_hood_prince_of_thieves/reviews?type=&sort=&page=3 Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves Reviews, Rotten Tomatoes] Owen Gleiberman, of 'Entertainment Weekly' also gave a positive review: "As a piece of escapism, this deluxe, action-heavy, 2-hour-and-21-minute Robin Hood gets the job done."[https://ew.com/article/1991/06/21/robin-hood-prince-thieves/ Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, Entertainment Weekly, June 21, 1991] Lanre Bakare, writing in 'The Guardian', calls Rickman's Sheriff, for which he won a BAFTA, a "genuinely great performance".

Accolades

{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders"

|-

! Award

! Category

! Nominee(s)

! Result

|-

| 20/20 Awards

| Best Original Song

| rowspan="3"| "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You"
Music by Michael Kamen;
Lyrics by Bryan Adams and Robert John "Mutt" Lange

|

|-

| Academy Awards

| Best Original Song

|

|-

| ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards

| Most Performed Songs from Motion Pictures

|

|-

| rowspan="3"| Awards Circuit Community Awards

| Best Actor in a Supporting Role

| Alan Rickman

|

|-

| Best Costume Design

| John Bloomfield

|

|-

| Best Original Song

| "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You"
Music by Michael Kamen;
Lyrics by Bryan Adams and Robert John "Mutt" Lange

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| BMI Film & TV Awards

| Film Music Award

| Michael Kamen

|

|-

| Most Performed Song from a Film

| "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You"
Music by Michael Kamen;
Lyrics by Bryan Adams and Robert John "Mutt" Lange

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| British Academy Film Awards

| Best Actor in a Supporting Role

| Alan Rickman

|

|-

| Best Costume Design

| John Bloomfield

|

|-

| Chicago Film Critics Association Awards

| Best Supporting Actor

| Alan Rickman

|

|-

| Evening Standard British Film Awards

| Best Actor

| Alan Rickman

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Golden Globe Awards

| Best Original Score Motion Picture

| Michael Kamen

|

|-

| Best Original Song Motion Picture

| "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You"
Music by Michael Kamen;
Lyrics by Bryan Adams and Robert John "Mutt" Lange

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Golden Raspberry Awards

| Worst Actor

| Kevin Costner

|

|-

| Worst Supporting Actor

| Christian Slater

|

|-

| Golden Reel Awards

| Best Sound Editing ADR

| Beth Bergeron, Jane Carpenter-Wilson, Lily Diamond, Jessica Gallavan,
Kimberly Harris, Paul Huntsman, Joe Mayer, Jeff Courtie, Dave Arnold,
Wayne Griffin, Allen Hartz, James Matheny, Frank Smathers, and David Williams

|

|-

| colspan="3"| Golden Screen Awards

|

|-

| rowspan="6"| Grammy Awards

| Record of the Year

| "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" Bryan Adams and Robert John "Mutt" Lange

|

|-

| Song of the Year

| "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You"
Bryan Adams, Michael Kamen, and Robert John "Mutt" Lange

|

|-

| Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male

| "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" Bryan Adams

|

|-

| Best Pop Instrumental Performance

| rowspan="2"| Michael Kamen

|

|-

| Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture or for Television

|

|-

| Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or for Television

| "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You"
Bryan Adams, Michael Kamen, and Robert John "Mutt" Lange

|

|-

| International Film Music Critics Association Awards

| Best New Archival Release Re-Release or Re-Recording

| Michael Kamen, Douglass Fake, Roger Feigelson, Frank K. DeWald, and Kay Marshall

|

|-

| Jupiter Awards

| Best International Actor

| Kevin Costner

|

|-

| London Film Critics Circle Awards

| British Actor of the Year

| Alan Rickman

|

|-

| rowspan="7"| MTV Movie Awards

| colspan="2"| Best Movie

|

|-

| Best Male Performance

| Kevin Costner

|

|-

| Best Female Performance

| Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio

|

|-

| Most Desirable Male

| Kevin Costner

|

|-

| Best On-Screen Duo

| Kevin Costner and Morgan Freeman

|

|-

| Best Villain

| Alan Rickman

|

|-

| Best Song From a Movie

| rowspan="2"| Bryan Adams "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You"

|

|-

| MTV Video Music Awards

| Best Video from a Film

|

|-

| rowspan="5"| Saturn Awards

| colspan="2"| Best Fantasy Film

|

|-

| Best Actor

| Kevin Costner

|

|-

| Best Supporting Actor

| Alan Rickman

|

|-

| Best Supporting Actress

| Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio

|

|-

| Best Costumes

| John Bloomfield

|

|-

| Yoga Awards

| Worst Foreign Actor

| Kevin Costner

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Young Artist Awards

| colspan="2"| Best Family Motion Picture Drama

|

|-

| Best Young Actor Co-Starring in a Motion Picture

| Daniel Newman

|

|}

In 2005, the American Film Institute nominated this film for AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores.

Music



The original music score was composed, orchestrated and conducted by Michael Kamen. In 2017, the specialty film music label Intrada Records released a two-disc CD album containing the complete score and alternates, though not the songs from Bryan Adams and Jeff Lynne. In 2020, Intrada issued a four-disc album, with the film score on the first 2 CDs; CD 3 has alternate takes and additional music, including the Morgan Creek Productions fanfare which was derived from this score; CD 4 features the assemblies used on the 1991 soundtrack album. The songs are again absent.

Certifications



Other media



Two tie-in video games called 'Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves' were released in 1991 for the Nintendo Entertainment System and Game Boy. Developed by Sculptured Software Inc. and Bits Studios, respectively, and published by Virgin Games, Inc., they are the cover feature for the July 1991 issue of 'Nintendo Power' magazine.

Kenner released a toy line consisting of action figures and playsets. All but one of the figures were derived by slight modifications to Kenner's well-known Super Powers line, and Friar Tuck, the vehicles, and playsets were modified from 'Star Wars: Return of the Jedi' toys.

See also



* 'Princess of Thieves' – 2001 television movie

* 'Robin Hood: Men in Tights' – 1993 parody film

* 'Robin Hood' – 1991 British film

* Robin Hood – English folk tale

References




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