The idea of a revisionist take on a classic hero has been around for almost as long as the heroes themselves. The Death of Robin Hood doesn't bring a lot that's new to the table; even the focus on storytelling - the role of legend in shaping and warping real people's lives - was a pretty large part of Unforgiven a generation ago. But even with this kind of revisionist take, the point is that the story continues. Every new film gives Robin Hood a chance to live on.
On the side of a bleak and barren hill, Robin Hood (Hugh Jackman) lives, waiting for people seeking revenge for his countless crimes to show up and (try to) kill him. It seems that being a bandit was a license to rob and kill without pity; his good deeds (and Maid Marion) were all made up, while his brutal decades-long murder spree was wiped from the legend.
One thing that wasn't fictional was Little John (Bill Skarsgard), who turns up with a problem. A decade or so ago, he murdered a man, stole his identity, and took his farm and wife. It all worked out fine - the wife loved him, they had a daughter - but the locals finally cottoned on, threw him out, and claimed it all for themselves. Now he wants it back, and he needs Robin's help.
Robin says sure - he's basically just hoping to find someone tough enough to kill him anyway - and a series of extremely violent and somewhat horrifying murders take place. Robin isn't killed but he comes pretty close, and Little John ships him off to an island priory, where the woman in charge (Jodie Comer) is a renowned healer with a tragic past of her own.
Things progress from there, though not in the way you might expect. Robin does heal and becomes the protector of the island in a fashion, but his method of staving off the expected carnage shows him gradually growing in a way unrelated to his (already pretty impressive) skills with the bow and knife. Even on the island, he can't escape his past; his only way forward is to embrace it, for good or ill.
Jackman has form in this area, with Logan being a somewhat similar take on Wolverine. Visually his Hood is a scruffier, shaggier character; Jackman's performance suggests someone forced down a path he'd rather have not chosen, his killing skills an asset in a way that his other talents (he's a natural storyteller; in the few scenes where he gets to use that talent Jackman dials up the warmth) could never be in a violent world driven by revenge.
Unsurprisingly the tone is dour and brooding, especially early on, set in a bleak and windswept landscape that has little to do with Sherwood Forest. This grim setting undercuts the drama somewhat; this isn't a place where the thrilling tales of Robin Hood would seem even remotely plausible to the struggling inhabitants. A stirring tale of adventure this is not.
Strong performances all round (including Australian actor Murray Bartlett as the island's leprous orchard keeper) do eventually pay off, and thanks to a story that slowly struggles towards the light this becomes more than the one note slaughterfest it initially promises to be. Jackman's take is about as far from the swashbuckling hero as you can get, but a connection of sorts to the legend eventually surfaces; a good story always wins out in the end.
- Anthony Morris






