Robin des Bois (2010)
Robin Hood (original title)

PG_13  140 min  -  Action | Adventure | Drama
Robin des Bois Poster
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.9/10 X  
Users: (44,109 votes) 429 reviews | Critics: 271 reviews

In 13th century England, Robin and his band of marauders confront corruption in a local village and lead an uprising against the crown that will forever alter the balance of world power.

Director:

Ridley Scott

Writers:

Brian Helgeland (screenplay), Brian Helgeland (story), and 2 more credits »

Release Date:

12 May 2010 (France)
Watch Trailer »

Photos

Cast

Cast overview, first billed only:
Russell Crowe Russell Crowe ...
Cate Blanchett Cate Blanchett ...
Max von Sydow Max von Sydow ...
William Hurt William Hurt ...
Mark Strong Mark Strong ...
Oscar Isaac Oscar Isaac ...
Danny Huston Danny Huston ...
Eileen Atkins Eileen Atkins ...
Mark Addy Mark Addy ...
Matthew Macfadyen Matthew Macfadyen ...
Kevin Durand Kevin Durand ...
Scott Grimes Scott Grimes ...
Alan Doyle Alan Doyle ...
Douglas Hodge Douglas Hodge ...
Léa Seydoux Léa Seydoux ...

Storyline

Birth of a legend. Following King Richard's death in France, archer Robin Longstride, along with Will Scarlett, Alan-a-Dale and Little John, returns to England. They encounter the dying Robert of Locksley, whose party was ambushed by treacherous Godfrey, who hopes to facilitate a French invasion of England. Robin promises the dying knight he will return his sword to his father Walter in Nottingham. Here Walter encourages him to impersonate the dead man to prevent his land being confiscated by the crown, and he finds himself with Marian, a ready-made wife. Hoping to stir baronial opposition to weak King John and allow an easy French take-over, Godfrey worms his way into the king's service as Earl Marshal of England and brutally invades towns under the pretext of collecting Royal taxes. Can Robin navigate the politics of barons, royals, traitors, and the French? Written by don @ minifie-1  

Plot Summary | Plot Synopsis

Plot Keywords:

King | Politics | Sword | Village | Traitor  | See more »

Genres:

Action | Adventure | Drama

Motion Picture Rating (MPAA)

Rated PG-13 for violence including intense sequences of warfare, and some sexual content. See all certifications »

Parents Guide:

View content advisory »

Details

Country:

USA | UK

Language:

English | French

Release Date:

12 May 2010 (France) See more »

Also Known As:

Robin Hood See more »

Filming Locations:

Angle, Pembrokeshire, Wales, UK See more »

Box Office

Budget:

$200,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend:

$36,063,385 (USA) (16 May 2010) (3503 Screens)

Gross:

$105,219,735 (USA) (1 August 2010)
See more »

Company Credits

Show detailed company contact information on IMDbPro »

Technical Specs

Runtime:

140 min  | 131 min (Cannes Film Festival)  | 156 min (director's cut)

Sound Mix:

DTS  | Dolby Digital  | SDDS

Color:

Color

Aspect Ratio:

2.35 : 1
See full technical specs »

MOVIEmeter:

Down 16% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro

Fun Facts

Trivia

Universal Pictures acquired the rights to Ethan Reiff and Cyrus Voris's spec script in an aggressive bidding contest with other studios such as New Line Cinema, Warner Bros., Sony, New Regency Enterprises, and DreamWorks. See more »

Goofs

Anachronisms: When the French stage their landing on the English coast, they are brought on shore by boats that look suspiciously like Higgins boats that were used in the D Day invasion of Normandy, except that they are powered by rowers. Higgins boats and their characteristic opening bow, were not to be invented for another 750 years. See more »

Quotes

Eleanor of Aquitaine: Milking a dried udder get's you nothing but kicked off the milking stool!
Prince John: Mother, spare me your farmyard memories, you have none and I don't understand them.
See more »

Crazy Credits

The first part of the end credits are in the same style as Ridley Scott's production company 'Scott Free Productions'. See more »

Connections

Featured in Scream Awards 2010 (2010) See more »

Soundtracks

"Women of Ireland - Mná na h-Éireann"
Written by Seán Ó Riada
Performed by Marc Streitenfeld See more »

Frequently Asked Questions

See more (Spoiler Alert!) »

User Reviews

 
Solid, but not great
12 May 2010 | by Eric Petit (United States) – See all my reviews

Solid is the keyword. From the screenplay, to the cinematography and the performance, the film is based on solid grounding. Indeed, we couldn't imagine less from the people assembled on the project. And the first signs are indeed good, starting as an origin story that traces Robin's steps returning from the Crusades and arriving in Nottingham. The plot is immediately both compelling and fresh with regards to the well known tale.

The first problem we run into is that the film never allows itself to linger. This creates two problems: the sense of purpose it reaches for through urgency has a tendency to be lost to aimlessness, and the characters never have the space to generate real depth of emotion.

Imagine only this: Russel Crowe, Cate Blanchett and William Hurt together have collected three Oscars, and an additional nine nominations. Yet it it's hard to lavish praise on their performances, because they never manage to inspire empathy as well as we might wish. The sense of urgency - of imminent physical danger to their person, of the crucial importance of their quest - never quite strikes home.

The screenplay doesn't always help them. It attempts to give the tale a strong moral foundation, by associating it with burgeoning democratic ideals in feudal Britain, unconvincingly: suspension of disbelief failed this reviewer.

For both these reasons, the epic sense of greatness that saturates Mr. Scott's similar works never works in this one. Indeed, in the anticipated climax of the battle, slow motion shots fall flat, and emotion never reaches an expected high, in spite of the film's competence in the action scenes.

This is a work that strangely echoes others, as well. People will be drawn to comparisons with Gladiator; these aren't particularly relevant beyond Russell Crow's similar (yet less engaging) performance. Rather, Robin's journey from the crusades and through England, in which he prospers on fateful luck and earned respect, copies Ridley Scott's own Kingdom of Heaven. In their themes and ambition these three films are alike, but Robin Hood doesn't thrive from the comparison. Where flaws are shared, what made the other two great is oddly lacking in this latest historical epic from the director.


197 of 302 people found this review helpful.  Was this review helpful to you?

Recommendations

Message Boards

Recent Posts (updated daily)
I started laughing when... christianfagrell
Prince of Thieves far superior to this movie bcronrath
Robin Hood DIRECTOR'S CUT - Reviews and Comments deux-7
I hate when movies wait until the end to have the good stuff! foolish_mortals
Forest thieves with weird masks Leary-Kevin
I don't get all the criticism... tsmontana
Discuss Robin des Bois (2010) on the IMDb message boards »

Contribute to This Page


Explore More