Miserable trudge with Hugh Jackman turns hero into a cold-blooded killer

HomeNews

Miserable trudge with Hugh Jackman turns hero into a cold-blooded killer

movie review THE DEATH OF ROBIN HOOD ]]> ]]> ]]>

Festival In Focus: Seven Key Films & Events Not To Miss At This Year’s Glasgow Film Festival
‘The Voice’ Season 26 Episode 10 Recap
Surprise: Mikey Madison Wins Best-Actress Oscar 2025 for ‘Anora’


movie review

THE DEATH OF ROBIN HOOD

Running time: 123 minutes. Rated R (forceful bloody violence). In theaters.

Was it when Robin Hood shot an arrow through a boy’s eye socket or when Little John ripped off another man’s jaw?

Maybe it was the part when Robin slit a adolescent woman’s throat and held her to the ground as she bled out.   

But very quickly during the nauseatingly violent first couple scenes of the interminable “The Death of Robin Hood” did my mind and stomach completely reject all of director Michael Sarnoski’s high-on-its-own-supply film, even with more than 90 mostly insufferable minutes left to go.

The savagery recedes, sure. However the movie only goes from infirmed to sooty. 

Boy, does this tiresome medieval drudgery think it’s clever.

You see, Sarnoski, who also wrote the screenplay, has flipped the folkloric character, played by Hugh Jackman, on his feathered cap by turning him from a benevolent outlaw into a cold-blooded killer. From swashbuckling Errol Flynn to “The Sherwood Forest Chainsaw Massacre.”

We learn in a “Romeo and Juliet”-ish narration provided by Jodie Comer’s icy Sister Brigid that there was, in fact, no one “more wanton and wicked than the murderous bandit Robin Hood and his Little John.” 

In compact: “Steal from the rich and give to the poor” becomes “Kill anybody with a pulse.”

In “The Death of Robin Hood,” the legend is turned into a cold-blooded killer. A24 via AP

There are plenty of excellent movies about horrible men and homicidal maniacs, and they hold our attention in a variety of ways. Psychological complexity that gives us insight into why they do what they do is a substantial one, and so is a captivating plot. Sometimes the evildoers win us over with humor and charisma.  

You won’t find even a morsel of any of that in “The Death of Robin Hood.” Sarnoski tries to get by on cinematography and brooding. That’s it. But stunning, misty Northern Ireland scenery and an offputtingly dour leading man are not enough to lift this trudge out of its murky pit of depression and lethargy.

Of course, because of the prestige that automatically accompanies an A24 release and the acclaim Sarnoski received for 2021’s “Pig,” cinephiles will dig like truffle hogs for buried profundity here. Don’t bother. This is little more than “Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey” with stars, a bigger budget and delusions of deeper meaning.

Robin (Hugh Jackman) is nearly killed, but instead wakes up in a sanctuary to heal. A24 via AP

The lean explanation for the switcheroo on Robin is that 13th century Englanders only believe the man’s a hero because he invented his own glorified mythology to facilitate him to better stab, gouge and behead.

That he’s proudly offed hundreds, maybe thousands of people has somehow not entered the village rumor mill. 

Oddly pretentious, this is one of those annoying films that drones on about the weight and importance of storytelling rather than telling a weighty or significant story.  

Little John (Bill Skarsgård) and Robin Hood have killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people. A24 via AP

Jackman, looking like he’s about to herd two of every animal onto an ark, plays Rob, whose favorite hobby is brutality alongside his best mate. For instance, at one point we watch Little John (Bill Skarsgård) bash some needy guy’s brains out for a handful of bread. Hood’s not repentant or remorseful these days, he says, so much as “exhausted.”

During a fight when a father arrives to avenge the death of his sons, Robin hopes to finally give it a rest and die but is only gravely injured. Too bad! The movie could’ve ended early.

Instead he wakes up at a serene island sanctuary overseen by the serene and introspective Sister Brigid, where men are healed and children live at a safe and sound remove from danger.

Jodie Comer plays Sister Brigid. A24 via AP

While he’s recovering, Little John’s adolescent daughter Margaret arrives.

Protecting the helpless girl makes Robin see, sort of, that there are greater things in life than executing passersby. Ya think? So now we’ve reached the clichéd and obvious portion of the evening.

The latter third of the movie is, at least, an improvement because the viewer doesn’t want to vomit during it, and Comer brings her enticing secrecy to an underwritten character.

“The Death of Robin Hood” goes from infirmed to sooty. A24 via AP

Jackman, however, confuses intensity for feeling. The guy’s so tense he practically shakes as he works his muscles so tough to remain invested. He’s a collection of adjectives rather than a fully realized person. 

And the ickiness doesn’t fully go away either. There are several blood-letting sequences as Brigid drains the red stuff from Rob into a bowl. Ewwww-de-lally.

Call me ancient fashioned, but I’d prefer some green tights and merry men to this sour crud.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 0
DISQUS: