The Province

Film steals from poor gives to rich

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

At a recent preview screening of Robin Hood, some 400 cinemagoer­s and critics each gave two hours of their lives to director Otto Bathurst and his cast of merry men (and a couple of women). All told, that’s about one collective month of time spent watching an ill-written, miscast, miserably performed, historical­ly inaccurate story that cost an estimated $90 million to make. So there you have it : Robin Hood steals from the poor and gives to the rich.

Taron Egerton stars as Robin of Loxley. You may remember the actor as Eggsy from the Kingsman movies, schooled in the ways of warfare by an older mentor (played there by Colin Firth), then called upon to right a devious wrong. Well, that’s basically him in this one too. The mentor is John (Jamie Foxx), whom he meets after being drafted into fighting the Third Crusade.

That would make the time frame of Robin Hood about AD 1190 or so. But an unseen narrator in the opening scene tells us he “can’t remember” what year it was, and to “forget history.”

It’s useful advice, and has the benefit of making it easier to accept armour-piercing, stone-shattering, rapid-firing crossbow bolts, Molotov cocktails and the occasional RPA, or rocket-propelled arrow.

Robin isn’t the only character draped in anachronis­m. Marian, played by Eve Hewson, flutters through every scene in what appears to be the latest L’Oréal products. And it’s a good thing she’s using chemistry on her skin, because there’s none between her and Robin. For comic relief, we get Australian comedian-musician Tim Minchin as Friar Tuck, clearly forgetting the fourth commandmen­t of cinema, Thou Shalt Not Overact.

The plot is as straight as an arrow, though not as sharp. After falling for Marian, Robin heads off to Arabia for four years. When he gets back, the Sheriff has proclaimed him dead and ransacked his estate, and Marian has moved on to Will Scarlet (Jamie Dornan). Robin and John decide to harass the sheriff and “follow the money” — apologies to the late William Goldman, who popularize­d that phrase in All the President’s Men.

Foxx, by the way, is clearly better than the material, and he knows it; Robin practicall­y fades into the background in each scene they share.

Caught between Robin and the Sheriff are the ragtag residents of Nottingham, most of them working an undergroun­d mine of we’re-never-told-what. I’m going to guess it’s a rich vein of irony. And say what you will about Kevin Costner’s accent in 1991’s Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves; no dialogue coach can correct such historical clangers as hearing that Nottingham is “in lockdown.”

The final scene sets up the possibilit­y of a sequel. So the men of Robin Hood may be merry, but the ending is anything but.

 ??  ?? Taron Egerton stars in a Robin Hood remake full of historical clangers and lacklustre writing.
Taron Egerton stars in a Robin Hood remake full of historical clangers and lacklustre writing.

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