About Me

My photo
I am an amateur writer, I love to blog and connect with people online. If I could my whole day would be spent just writing.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Robin Hood Poised To Raid The Box Office

Robin Hood Poised To Raid The Box Office

The new Robin Hood film, starring Russell Crowe and helmed by Ridley Scott, will premiere at the Cannes Film Festival. It will open on May 14 in the United States and is apparently poised as late spring action blockbuster. However, since it isn't the first take on the legend of Robin Hood, one wonders if it will conquer the box office. Ironically, considering the pay scales of studio heads and actors, the no faxing payday loan generated from the grosses will really be doing the exact opposite of Robin Hood.

New Robin Hood with slight twist

The Ridley Scott Robin Hood is largely the same. Robin returns from the Third Crusade, having fought for Richard the Lionheart, and finds King John and also the Sheriff of Nottingham terrorizing the populace. Robin rebels, and with the Merry Men of Sherwood Forest fights the evil king off, robbing from the rich and giving to the poor. It promises to be a rollicking good time, and also the new version attempts to be just a little a lot more faithful to the period than previous versions.

Cannes you do the Can Can?

The film could be premiering at the Cannes Film Festival. Ridley Scott won’t be attending. He recently had knee surgery, as outlined by USA Today, and his recovery isn't progressing as fast as he desired. The cast must walk the red carpet without the director. The relationship between Scott and Crowe has been fruitful, as this was their fifth film together.

Sadly, there was never a Robin Hood

There isn’t really any evidence for an actual Robin Hood, though the story is a wonderful tale of rebellion against an evil government. The James Gang, Bonnie and Clyde, and John Dillinger never did anything for the common people except steal from them. King Richard actually spent as little time as possible in England. Richard also spoke hardly any English. Furthermore, the actual rebellion against King John was in the interests of the nobles, not really the commoners. Nevertheless, the Magna Carta was a good thing in the end.

Citations

USA Today

http://content.usatoday.com/communities/entertainment/post/2010/05/robin-hood-director-to-miss-cannes-opening/1



No comments:

Post a Comment