Last night I saw
the Russell Crowe/Ridley Scott version of Robin Hood and thoroughly enjoyed it
– rather in the way I enjoy a thoughtless snuffle through a chocolate box. It was pure
Disney, ransacking history with innocent abandon - and it was nice to see the
French being the villains for a change - instead of the English. This is as it
should be. One can only take so much of Brave-Heart - it’s portrayal of
Edward 1st as a cold, clip-toned Victorian; and Patriot with its
quota of English psychopaths. No, it was good to see red-blooded French villainy. The
world was back in its place that night, and if the price involved reshaping
history, so be it.
I could take decaying Saxon Manor houses with large glass
windows, Cate Blanchett looking beautifully enigmatic and bleak, taking on the
role of Peter Pan and leading the ‘lost boys’ in the final battle. I could take
the French invasion fleet that wouldn’t have looked out of place at the D Day
landings. Those rectangular boxes disgorging fully armed knights ploughing
through surf – pure genius.
It was fun seeing
Eleanor of Aquitaine in London, and showing surprise when she hears of her
son, Richard’s death. Consummate actress, and presumably
with her own executive jet - it’s the only explanation - since Eleanor
nursed Richard in her arms as he died – in Southern France.
And I loved Oscar
Isaac’s portrayal of King John as a medieval Russell Brand…was that deliberate?
Johnny Depp based his pirate on Keith Richards. Okay, I know King John has a
bad press, but Russell Brand? Strange – like one of those chocolates you’re
never quite sure of.
To the very end
the film amazes. When Robin fires an impossible shot at the fleeing villain –
Godfrey - the arrow goes through Godfrey's neck at a trajectory that would have the
Kennedy conspiracy industry at it for years.
Finally we have
Robin playing a key role in the creation of the Magna Carta. That was a rich
and chewy chocolate – especially when he reveals knowledge of C17th
jurisprudence. “Every man’s home is his castle!” he declares – as did Sir Edward
Coke in The Institutes
of the Laws of England, 1628:
"For a man's
house is his castle, et domus sua cuique est tutissimum refugium [and
each man's home is his safest refuge]."
Mind you, King
John, initially confused by this, soon got his own back, riposting with another C17th concept that kings ruled by ‘Divine Right.’
There was one,
nutritious nut in this box of indulgence. The death of Sir Walter Locksley. He
looked so peaceful and good, adorned in white and garnished in lilies –
too good to be buried in fact. But, perversely, it reminded me of how many truly
good men and women have died over the years Sic transit
gloria mundi.
Sic transit gloria Robin Hood.