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Robin Hood - Extended Director's Cut [Blu-ray] [Region Free]

3.4 out of 5 stars 482 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Russell Crowe, Cate Blanchett, Kevin Durand, Matthew MacFadyen, Mark Strong
  • Directors: Ridley Scott
  • Format: Blu-ray
  • Subtitles: English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Cantonese Chinese, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Icelandic, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese, Swedish, Mandarin Chinese
  • Dubbed: French, Italian, German, Spanish
  • Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired: English
  • Audio Description: English
  • Region: All Regions (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Universal Pictures UK
  • DVD Release Date: 20 Sept. 2010
  • Run Time: 156 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (482 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B003DZ1328
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 9,473 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

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Product Description

Product Description

Academy Award® winner Russell Crowe reunites with legendary Gladiator director Ridley Scott for epic action adventure in Robin Hood.

Discover the untold story of the man behind the legend as Robin, a heroic warrior, turns outlaw when he assembles a band of skilled marauders to confront injustice and lead an uprising against a weak and corrupt English King.

When the rebellious hero falls for the spirited Lady Marion (Academy Award® winner Cate Blanchett), he must first save her village and then confront a growing storm of threats from near and afar if he is to win her heart. As Robin and his men answer a call to ever-greater adventure, these unlikely heroes set off to battle for their country and return England to glory ... and ride into Legend.

Special Features:

  • Theatrical & Extended Cut
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Theatrical Cut Director's Picture In Picture notebook
  • The Art Of Nottingham
  • Rise & Rise Again: The Making of Ridley Scott's Robin
Subtitles:
Disc 1 - English SDH, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Cantonese, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Icelandic, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese, Swedish, Traditional Mandarin

Disc 2 - English SDH, French, Italian, Spanish, German, Arabic, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Swedish, Turkish, Slovenian

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By Trevor Willsmer HALL OF FAMETOP 50 REVIEWER on 20 Dec. 2010
Format: DVD
Despite a convoluted and tortuous pre-production history and the participation of two of the biggest bigheads in the business, Ridley and Russell's Robin Hood is a surprisingly impressive and enjoyable medieval epic that manages to find a new string for the old longbow by placing a prequel to the Hooded Man's outlaw days in a relatively accurately drawn Middle Ages with some contemporary relevance. Admittedly it's going to mean a lot more to British and European audiences, but it's hard not to notice that in its unloving royal siblings Richard (a gruff and bluff Danny Huston) and John (an impressive Oscar Isaac) there's more than a little Tony Blair - vain, bankrupting his abandoned country in unnecessary foreign wars and delusionally regarding himself as a pretty straight kind of guy yet quick to punish anyone who tells him the truth - and Gordon Brown - a petty and spiteful ruler who briefly wins over his people with promises he promptly drops as soon as his throne is secure and is woefully inadequate at turning the economy around. The film even uses the infamous political kiss-of-death phrase 'resigning to spend more time with his family' when honest chancellor William Marshall (William Hurt, looking surprisingly like the director) finds himself out of a job.

There are more nods to James Goldman than Errol Flynn here: Eleanor of Aquitaine gets a few bits of Lion in Winterish sniping without the barbed wit (though John's retort "Spare me your farmyard memories, mother: they're not real and I don't understand them" comes close) while the film begins, like Robin and Marion, with Robin and Little John in the King's bad books for being a bit too honest as the Lionheart loots his way back from the Crusades.
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Format: DVD Verified Purchase
I like different takes on the same subject matter. May be this is why -against all the negative feedback here- I still like this movie. It could also be the fact that I am not English (although I am very familiar with Robin Hood and I love the concept as it is universal) and have no national pride involved. Still, the aura around this film, the way it tells the story made me like it.
First of all, (my observations are nowhere near objective as I am no history buff) everything looked more authentic. The way Scott handles Lionheart and Prince John appear to be more realistic. May be this Robin Hood takes itself too seriously but I believe it is a fresh approach. Up to now, it has always been Robin Hood and his merry men. Now it is Robin Longstride with his ex-military guerilla.
Every legend has something true at its root, which has been so twisted out of shape that it would be very hard to recognize after so long a time. Ridley Scott is attempting to explain how this legend came to life. And I believe he succeeds.
Are there no flaws? Of course not. Crowe's accent is a problem but Blanchett's serene, strong Marion balances his faults. Beautiful shots throughout the movie made me disregard the slow storytelling. Actually, for me it strengthened the effect of the film. I hate it when a director goes too quickly over character build-up, scene setting to the battles etc. It is not all about action. The legend has a heart and the film also tries to reflect that.
There are times when the hype around a movie becomes its pitfall. I feel everybody expected the ultimate Robin Hood from Ridley Scott. It isn't. But it is still a very, very good movie.
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Format: Amazon Video Verified Purchase
Ignoring the plot, the mis-shaping of history, the acting and the production, what the hell was the accent Crowe was trying to use????
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Format: DVD
There are many things about this film to enjoy. The plot takes some nice turns and plays with the history in an engaging way. I liked it that Richard (one of the worst kings England ever had) bought it early on. I liked the Magna Carta idea and I liked the imaginative way in which Robert of Locksley became the outlaw Robin Hood. As one would expect from Ridley Scott, the film is beautifully shot and a very strong cast put in some notable performances. Max Von Sydow's portrayal of Locksley's father is touching and powerful and Oscar Isaac's John is more nuanced than many of those who have taken that role.
For all that, though, the film did not engage me as fully as it should have done, largely I'm afraid because of the two central characters. Russell Crowe is a fine actor, but here he just seemed to be going through the motions and wishing he was still in "Gladiator". This was not helped by the director's choice to use shots that echoed that earlier movie. In a similar way Cate Blanchett seemed to be reprising Galadriel, her face rarely allowing human emotion to flicker across it. Worse still was that there was no chemistry between the two of them. The pacing, too, needed more variation.

Incidentally, I was a little surprised that the barons were so ready to see off France in the name of "England" and that language was made such point. In 1199 most of the Barons were French and spoke French; as did everyone at the English court.
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Format: DVD
Just a reply to a couple of points raised by others.
Firstly, as far as we know, Robin Hood is a conflation of various other 'rebels'and now unknown story-tellers favourites or a purely mythical creation.
There would have been already well-known stories of adventure and derring-do re-ascribed to 'Robin Hood' as the action hero 'flavour of the medieval day'.
Therefore, adding another layer to the mythos is not a crime, it's more a continuation of the historical process - the myth of Robin Hood did not spring into being fully formed and finished, after all...
Secondly, Prince John DOES NOT SIGN anything like the Magna Carta in the movie - it actually gets destroyed!
Any complaints about the dates for the signing of the Magna Carta being out by years are therefore irrelevant, as are complaints about Robin Hood's dad writing it.
Obviously, it was just a template, later revived and improved by the English Barons : ) (Joke!)
And thirdly, as for Eleanor of Aquitaine not seeing herself as English, well, she WAS Queen consort of England from 1154-1189, 35 years, her husband being Henry, Count of Anjou and Duke of Normandy, later to become Henry 2nd OF ENGLAND.
At this point, the relationship between England and France was far more indistinct than in the modern day; great swathes of France were tied to England by marriage and conquest. If you were the monarch of a country, you would see yourself as a 'defender' of that nation, be it where you were born or not; it would be your royal duty.
Finally, the wandering accents - unless Ridley Scott did a Mel Gibson and made the whole film in Medieval Anglo Saxon English, Norman French and Medieval Latin, no accent is going to be 'authentic' - we're not even sure what the accents they had back then sounded like!
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