Has Ridley Scott robbed Robin Hood of his spirit?

Filed under: On Movies & Media

Ebert says he has...

That Robin Hood is nowhere to be found in Ridley Scott’s “Robin Hood”...

“Robin Hood” is a high-tech and well made violent action picture using  the name of Robin Hood for no better reason than that it’s an  established brand not protected by copyright. I cannot discover any  sincere interest on the part of Scott, Crowe or the writer Brian  Helgeland in any previous version of Robin Hood. Their Robin is another  weary retread of the muscular macho slaughterers who with  interchangeable names stand at the center of one overwrought bloodbath  after another.

Have we grown weary of the delightful aspects of the Robin Hood legend?  Is witty dialogue no longer permitted? Are Robin and Marion no longer  allowed to engage in a spirited flirtation? Must their relationship seem  like high-level sexual negotiations? How many people need to be covered  in boiling oil for Robin Hood’s story to be told these days? How many  parents will be misled by the film’s PG-13 rating? Must children go  directly from animated dragons to skewering and decapitation, with no  interval of cheerful storytelling?