109 - The Adventures of Robin Hood

Eavesdropping at the Movies - Un pódcast de Jose Arroyo and Michael Glass

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One of the first three-strip Technicolor films, and an action adventure classic, we visit 1938's The Adventures of Robin Hood, featuring Errol Flynn at his dashing, cheeky peak. We get swept up in its excited use of colour, social conscience, pleasantly laddish tone and swashbuckling combat. Mike sees some of the film at an ironic distance, particularly the action, which he finds charmingly amateur. But while some things might have significantly changed over the last eighty years, the connection to the characters and the film's sense of fun is intact. There's a discussion to be had over the film's messaging - José greatly appreciates the democratic tone to everything, the fairness with which Robin treats everybody and the grace with which he is able to accept defeat, while Mike suggests that his magnanimity would be more impactful if we were able to feel he were ever in true peril - but Flynn is simply so charming, so in control, and indeed, such a star, that the film can never sell it. Flynn conveys a certain superiority through masculinity, as José notes - he is a man among men. The Robin Hood legend endures, this 1938 version only one of countless film adaptations, and we discuss why that might be. And there's always room to mock Americans who try to tell English stories and get things wrong. It's the joy of being English. Recorded on 13th November 2018.

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