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Robin des Bois

Original title: Robin Hood
  • 1991
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
6.2K
YOUR RATING
Uma Thurman, Patrick Bergin, Jürgen Prochnow, Edward Fox, and Jeroen Krabbé in Robin des Bois (1991)
Trailer for this action film about the noble renegade
Play trailer2:10
1 Video
30 Photos
ActionAdventureDramaRomance

The Swashbuckling legend of Robin Hood unfolds in the 12th century when the mighty Normans ruled England with an iron fist.The Swashbuckling legend of Robin Hood unfolds in the 12th century when the mighty Normans ruled England with an iron fist.The Swashbuckling legend of Robin Hood unfolds in the 12th century when the mighty Normans ruled England with an iron fist.

  • Director
    • John Irvin
  • Writers
    • Sam Resnick
    • John McGrath
  • Stars
    • Danny Webb
    • Conrad Asquith
    • Barry Stanton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    6.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Irvin
    • Writers
      • Sam Resnick
      • John McGrath
    • Stars
      • Danny Webb
      • Conrad Asquith
      • Barry Stanton
    • 53User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Robin Hood (1991)
    Trailer 2:10
    Robin Hood (1991)

    Photos30

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Danny Webb
    Danny Webb
    • Much The Miller
    • (as Daniel Webb)
    Conrad Asquith
    Conrad Asquith
    • Lodwick
    Barry Stanton
    Barry Stanton
    • Miter
    Patrick Bergin
    Patrick Bergin
    • Robin Hood
    Owen Teale
    Owen Teale
    • Will Scarlett
    Jürgen Prochnow
    Jürgen Prochnow
    • Sir Miles Folcanet
    • (as Jurgen Prochnow)
    Uma Thurman
    Uma Thurman
    • Maid Marian
    Jeroen Krabbé
    Jeroen Krabbé
    • Baron Daguerre
    • (as Jeroen Krabbe)
    Phelim McDermott
    • Jester
    Carolyn Backhouse
    Carolyn Backhouse
    • Nicole
    David Morrissey
    David Morrissey
    • Little John
    Caspar De La Mare
    • Sam Timmons
    Cecily Hobbs
    • Mabel
    Gabrielle Reidy
    • Lily
    Stephen Pallister
    • Jack Runnel
    Kevin Pallister
    • Charlie Runnel
    Alex Norton
    Alex Norton
    • Harry
    Jeff Nuttall
    • Friar Tuck
    • Director
      • John Irvin
    • Writers
      • Sam Resnick
      • John McGrath
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    5.76.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6Randomdudeman

    Low Budget, but poetic, moral, and quite beautiful

    Action? Adventure? Swashbuckling excitement? Well you have come to the WRONG Robin Hood for that. The choreography is non-existent. But that's okay.

    There are other reasons to watch this movie, especially for aficionados and romantics. The costumes and sets are beautiful, delicately balanced between realism and romanticism. The greenery is lush, the settings are well chosen. There is a poetry in the dialogue, and the acting is heart-felt. This movie makes you think a little bit, including a moving, moral ending.

    The classic trope scenes of the Robin Hood fairy tale are a let down. Little Jon on the river is painful to watch, and not in a good way. The bow staff fight is a yawn, as is the absurd "action" scene of Robin floating down a gentle river. If you seek excitement, again, this is the wrong movie.

    On the other hand, you are treated to a version of the Robin Hood tale that offers an educational slant. Unlike Prince of Thieves, this Robin Hood dives into the Saxon-Norman antagonism that characterized the centuries following the successful invasion by the Normans under William the Conqueror. Set one to two hundred years after, this Robin Hood takes place in an England that is hosts to a ruling class of French/Viking descent. (There is even a clever allusion to the French Baron being a descendant of pirates).

    As mentioned, the acting is quite good, as is the script. The characters, which at the start of the film seem one-dimensional, become infused with real humanity as the movie progresses. No cartoon villains here, just flawed humans from a vicious era, and a meditation on the attractiveness and seductiveness of simple decency when presented as a possibility.
    amsdragons

    Far superior to Costner's version

    Only thing I liked about Costner's RH was Alan Rickman as the Sheriff. But this take was a "stylistic" departure from the old story. The "theives village" was fascinating! And Bergen was a much more convincing Robin. If you like this one check out the BBC TV production, "Robin of Sherwood" (1984) [TV-Series 1984-1986] starring Jason Connery (son of Sean.) It's the most intersting and "magical" of all Robin versions!!
    imdb-4883

    Just seen it - MUCH better than Costner version

    This has just been run on British TV. What a pleasure to see something from Hollywood that feels realistic when referring to something over here (no US cavalry riding to the rescue at the critical moment!!). Apart from that it is also well made, enjoyable and I'm just sorry I didn't start the recorder at the beginning. Uma Thurman is not the most gorgeous Marion I have seen (not too bad either though), but she was believable and that counts for a lot. The action scenes had a touch of authenticity about them that is all too often missing (for example when Robin was handed a staff by Will to battle with John Little it was a thick branch, forked at one end and obviously from a tree, not a martial arts supplier - just the sort of thing that might have been picked up in a real situation <accepting that something like that might well not have been lying around unless it was rotten>). All round, a film I will watch next time it is screened and I hope I manage to get the DVD recorder going in time next time.
    5Leofwine_draca

    Dour and uninspiring

    Okay, let's get this straight: just because ROBIN HOOD is more realistic and less bombastic than Kevin Costner's ROBIN HOOD: PRINCE OF THIEVES from the same year, that doesn't make it any good. It might be a more traditional film, but I actually prefer the Costner version, despite the many faults, errors and cheesiness, purely because it's a lot more fun.

    ROBIN HOOD gets a lot more of the facts right but it's lacking as a decent piece of drama, mainly because the characters, although carefully depicted, are all rather unlikeable. That's particularly true of Patrick Bergin, whose Hood, all wild eyes and wilder hair, appears to be something of a sociopath instead of the folk hero of old; I just can't buy Bergin in good-guy roles, and that's the same here. Stick to SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY, buddy.

    The supporting actors are better, with one exception. Jurgen Prochnow is less hammy but no less amusing than Alan Rickman in the Costner version, and it's always good to see Jeroen Krabbe in Hollywood fare. Owen Teale, Danny Webb and David Morrissey are all good choices as Merry Men. The exception is Uma Thurman, who's terribly miscast as Marian; the scenes in which she disguises herself as a boy are excruciating.

    Other than that, the script is overlong and underwritten and the action scenes just aren't very exciting. The sets and costumes are decent though, so it's just a shame that more effort couldn't have gone into making this a rousing swashbuckler of old. Instead it's a dour, uninspiring and ultimately forgettable version of a classic story.
    6JamesHitchcock

    The Other Robin Hood

    In the cinema, as in most areas of life, one occasionally comes across some strange coincidences. In 1960, for example, there were two filmed biographies of Oscar Wilde and two of Coco Chanel in 2009. Two films about Wyatt Earp appeared in 1993/4, although that was due less to coincidence than to creative differences among the team working on "Wyatt Earp", differences which led to the creation of the rival film "Tombstone" on the same subject. In the early seventies two studios were working on disaster movies about skyscrapers on fire, but in this case the coincidence was detected early on and the studios joined forces to produce the film now known as "The Towering Inferno".

    1991 was the year which saw two films on the legend of Robin Hood. "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves", a big-budget Hollywood blockbuster starring Kevin Costner, is by far the better-known of the two. This lower-budget version, simply entitled "Robin Hood", was only shown on television in the USA, although it was released in cinemas in other parts of the world. It did not feature any big Hollywood names; Uma Thurman may be a big name today, but in 1991 she was still more of an up- and-coming starlet.

    As in "Prince of Thieves" and several other films on this subject, Robin is portrayed as a Saxon earl, here named Robert Hode. (The idea that Robin was an aristocrat was a later addition to the legend; the recent 2010 "Robin Hood" with Russell Crowe reverts to the original story by making him a Saxon of more humble origins). He falls foul of the authorities, and is declared an outlaw, when he intervenes to prevent a miller, who has been caught poaching the King's deer, from being blinded. He flees into Sherwood Forest, gathers together the "Merry Men", and fights for justice and the rights of the Saxon peasantry against the corrupt Norman nobility.

    The film includes all the usual cast of Merry Men, including Little John, Will Scarlett, Friar Tuck and Much the Miller, as well as Maid Marian, but, oddly, not the normal villains. There is no Sheriff of Nottingham and no Sir Guy of Gisborne, and Prince John only puts in a brief appearance. (King Richard does not appear at all, although he is referred to). Instead, Robin's main antagonists are the Norman aristocrats Baron Roger Daguerre and Sir Miles Folcanet. (That is how it is spelt in the cast-list, although "Falconet" might be a more plausible French spelling). Sir Miles is a straightforward villain; it is he who wanted to have the unfortunate miller's eyes put out and he who is Robin's rival for Marian's hand. (She, of course, will have nothing to do with him). Daguerre, however, is a more ambiguous figure. He is Marian's uncle and originally Robin's friend; the two later fall out but are eventually reconciled, and Daguerre is converted to Robin's vision of an England where Saxon and Norman can live together in peace.

    One similarity which links this film with the Russell Crowe version is that both aim at a more "naturalistic" view of the Middle Ages to the romanticised "Merrie England" view presented in the Errol Flynn classic "The Adventures of Robin Hood" from 1938 and, to some extent, in "Prince of Thieves". Some might think this sort of naturalism misplaced in a film which is based on legend rather than historical fact, but both directors (John Irvin here and Ridley Scott in 2010) clearly felt that a film dealing with a peasant revolt against oppression should show us something of the conditions against which the peasants are revolting. Mediaeval life is therefore portrayed as drab, dirty and dangerous, not as something colourful and exciting. The look of the film is dark with muted colours; the leafless trees in Sherwood Forest suggest that the story takes place in winter and early spring.

    Patrick Bergin makes a charismatic hero, but few of the other characters, Thurman included, make the same impression. There is nothing particularly wrong with the performances of Jeroen Krabbé as Daguerre or Jürgen Prochnow as Folcanet, but neither of them makes as memorable a villain as Basil Rathbone's Gisborne in "The Adventures of Robin Hood" or Alan Rickman's Sheriff of Nottingham in "Prince of Thieves". Another weakness is it that lacks any real exciting or swashbuckling action sequences; not even the final attack on Nottingham Castle really counts as such. The climactic duel between Robin and Folcanet is in nothing like the same class as that between Flynn and Rathbone.

    This "Robin Hood" is certainly better than "Robin and Marian" from the seventies, which manages to be both dull and unrealistic, but I would not rate it as highly as either the 2010 version or "Prince of Thieves", both of which could generate greater excitement. As for "The Adventures of Robin Hood", that set a very high standard, and in my view none of the versions since 1938 have really lived up to it. 6/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Made the same year as Robin des Bois, prince des voleurs (1991) and thus did not receive a theatrical release in the United States.
    • Goofs
      Woad (the purple dye Robin throws at the tax-collector) wouldn't have been around in the middle of the village. The process used to make the dye smelled so bad that woad-makers had to live outside the village to make it. Also, while in the cauldron it actually looks green, the indigo/purple colour only shows up as you remove the dyed item from the liquid, so the dye would not have appeared purple in the bowl before Robin threw it.
    • Quotes

      Maid Marian: So what are you going to do to me? Tie me up?

      Robin Hood: Could be a lashing.

      Maid Marian: How many strokes?

      Robin Hood: As many as are necessary.

      Maid Marian: And then it's finished?

      Robin Hood: That depends. Have you ever been lashed before?

      Maid Marian: I've never had someone make me beg them to stop.

      Robin Hood: Then you've never had a proper lashing.

    • Alternate versions
      Made for cinematic release but competition from Robin des Bois, prince des voleurs (1991) ensured that it debuted on cable in the US (at 150 minutes) despite a cinema release elsewhere. USA videocassette version removes 34 minutes of footage.
    • Connections
      Featured in Minty Comedic Arts: 10 Things You Didn't Know About Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (2020)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 19, 1991 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • Germany
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Robin Hood
    • Filming locations
      • Peckforton Castle, Peckforton, Cheshire, England, UK(used as principle location)
    • Production companies
      • 20th Century Fox Television
      • CanWest Global Communications
      • Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $15,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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