- Format: Anamorphic, Box set, PAL, Special Edition,
Widescreen
- Language English
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region 2
- Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
- Number of discs: 2
- Classification: PG
- Studio: Warner Home Video
- DVD Release Date: 1 Jul 2006
- Run Time: 148 minutes
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves reinvented the legend for
contemporary cinema audiences, and in doing so far outstripped at the
box office even Kevin Costner's own infinitely superior
Dances with
Wolves to become the biggest hit of 1991. It's an entertaining
enough family adventure film, but plays like a big-budget TV movie with
no distinctive flair for action or romance. (Director Kevin Reynolds
would reunite with Costner four years later for the equally stodgy
Waterworld).
If the accents are all over the place, at least Mary Elizabeth
Mastrantonio makes a Maid Marion of ravishing Pre-Raphaelite beauty.
Morgan Freeman is fine as Robin's Moorish sidekick, though, other than
to expand the demographic, his character has no business being in the
story. Realising that the whole enterprise has the credibility of a
pantomime, Alan Rickman outrageously camps up his Sheriff of Nottingham,
stealing the film in the process. Costner makes an acceptable hero,
though he will never replace Errol Flynn in the definitive Adventures Of Robin Hood
If you can accept explosives in
13th-century England, that the approach to Sherwood Forest is a modern
conifer plantation and that the 170 miles from Dover to Nottingham is a
matter of a few hours ride via Northumberland, then you may find much to
enjoy here. Otherwise an already overlong film has been extended to an
excessive 148 minutes in this special edition, making far too much of a
not very good thing.
On the DVD: Robin Hood: Prince of
Thieves is presented as a two-disc set, with a 1.78:1 anamorphic
transfer that is generally good looking but with an occasionally soft
picture and some evidence of dirt and minor print damage. The Dolby
Digital 5.1 remix of the original stereo soundtrack is atmospheric and
powerful and shows off Michael kaman's score to its best. Though presented with 12 minutes of
footage not seen in the cinema version, the film still suffers most of
the cuts (amounting to 28 seconds) imposed by the BBFC over the years.
The main extras are a pair of commentaries: Costner and Reynolds
discuss the film in frank and enthusiastic detail, while on a second
track Freeman, Slater, writer/producer Pen Densham and cowriter/producer
John Watson offer a great deal of insight plus a fair bit of stating
the obvious, backslapping and critic bashing.
Robin Hood: The Myth,
the Man, the Movie (31 mins) is a cut version of a 45-minute TV
special originally broadcast in America the night before the premiere,
and offers an interesting if brief look at the Robin Hood story plus
some routine making-of material. Finally, there is a video of Bryan
Adams performing "Everything I Do, I Do It for You" live at Slane Castle
and 18 minutes worth of bland electronic presskit-style archive
interviews with Costner, Freeman, Mastrantonio, Slater and Alan Rickman,
plus the original American trailer, a stills gallery and cast and crew
list.