Showing posts with label The Adventures of Robin Hood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Adventures of Robin Hood. Show all posts

Saturday, July 1, 2017

My Journey with Olivia

My favorite photo of Olivia

Everyone's journey with Olivia de Havilland starts somewhere. For most it's her role as Melanie in Gone With the Wind (1939). Mine began when I was little. My dad was watching The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) on the old square tv. It was the scene where Robin Hood visits Maid Marion in her castle room. I wasn't much on the guy at the time - I've never been a fan of long hair on men - but Maid Marion, with her shining brown eyes, long thick braids, and shimmering blue dress definitely left a mark on me. She was the most beautiful woman I had ever seen and I wished I looked just like her.


In the years following (and pre-internet at my house), I wondered what version of Robin Hood my dad had been watching and who that lady was who played Maid Marion so well (even better than the fox Maid Marion in my favorite Disney film).

Fast-forward to the year 2012. I was watching You've Got Mail on dvd for the first time (after seeing it countless times on television - though usually it was just the ending). After it was over, and with "Over the Rainbow" still playing in my head, I checked out the special features. One of them was titled "You've Got Chemistry" and it introduced me to many on-screen couples I would soon come to know and love. I already knew and loved Mickey and Judy (and of course Hanks and Ryan from the feature film). New-to-me couples included Bogie and Bacall, Powell and Loy, and lastly Olivia de Havilland and Errol Flynn. As I watched clips from their eight films together, scenes from their most famous pairing in The Adventures of Robin Hood let me know that I had finally found my childhood Maid Marion.


Over the next year I acquainted myself Powell and Loy as Nick and Nora and the sizzling on-screen love affair between Bogie and Bacall. Then, in 2014 we finally got Turner Classic Movies and I recalled that last couple I had yet to delve in to.

April 5, 2014 - I watched They Died with Their Boots on (1941), my first Flynn/de Havilland film and their last pairing. They were instantly a new favorite (and last year's post for the blogathon as well as the subject for one of my Cinema Wedding Gown posts). Three days later I watched The Adventures of Robin Hood in it's entirety for the first time, in all its Technicolor splendor. It far exceeded my expectations. Rather than feel dated, it leapt off the screen, as fresh and vibrant as if it had been filmed the day before. Olivia de Havilland was everything that Maid Marion should be: beautiful, smart, strong-minded, principled, courageous, and did I forget to mention gorgeous?


The next film I watched with one of these newly discovered stars was The Sea Hawk (1940) starring Errol Flynn and, in the lead female role, Brenda Marshall. If I could remake any classic film, I would remake this one with Olivia in the lead (and a more substantially part of course). Olivia never needed the hero, rather, he needed her.

After that was The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939) with Errol Flynn, Bette Davis, and in a tiny part, Olivia. It pained me when Errol and Olivia didn't end up together. It just didn't feel right, like something was terribly wrong in the world! It was the same with The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936), which aired on TCM a few days later.

In between those two films, I saw my first Olivia film without Errol, My Love Came Back (1940). And while it seemed wrong for her to love someone other than Flynn, it instantly became a favorite. Olivia, being the fantastic actress that she is, is very convincing as a violinist. Not to mention she can get a man to ask her to dance all the while acting like she's not interested but will oblige him anyway.


Other Olivia films that year included Hard to Get (1938), Gold is Where You Find It (1938), Wings of the Navy (1939), The Dark Mirror (1946) - another favorite where Olivia plays twins, Princess O'Rourke (1943) - a BIG favorite, Dodge City (1939) and Santa Fe Trail (1940) - both with Flynn, The Male Animal (1942), and In This Our Life (1942).

The year 2015 brought me The Ambassador's Daughter (1956), The Irish in Us (1935), Alibi Ike (1935), Government Girl (1943), The Strawberry Blonde (1941), Thank Your Lucky Stars (1943) - a cameo appearance, and Captain Blood (1935) - her first with Flynn.

Last year started off with her Oscar-winning performance in The Heiress (1949), Gone With the Wind (1939) for the first time in its entirety, and My Cousin Rachel (1952) - three powerful performances.

I was therefore extremely excited when Olivia was named the Star of the Month for July on TCM, especially since I was hosting a blogathon in celebration of her 100 years here on earth. Her birthday being on the first of the month couldn't have been more ideal as, while reading all of the posts, I was able to decide which films I HAD to watch. As it turned out, I wanted to watch every one of them.


The order in which her films were shown, and in which I watched them, somewhat mirrored her career, beginning with period pictures and comedies then serious dramas. I was able to watch Raffles (1939), Call it a Day (1937), The Great Garrick (1937), It's Love I'm After (1937), Devotion (1943/1946), To Each His Own (1946), Hold Back the Dawn (1941), Light in the Piazza (1962), and Libel (1951). I saved Four's a Crowd (1938) - the only Errol/Olivia film I hadn't yet seen - for as long as possible.

There are still several I have yet to see (I didn't have room on the dvr last year to record all of the great films they showed. In fact, I had to make a list of the ones I could get from the library). I finally watched Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964) this year after finishing Feud: Bette and Joan. I will definitely be recording Anthony Adverse (1936) next Saturday and hope to actually get around to checking out some others from the library. I also need to make a new Top Ten List of her films, as I've seen so many more great Olivia movies since I originally published it.

The fact that Olivia is still with us and turned 101 today is a gift indeed to the Classic Movie Fan. I hear her goal is 110 and I plan on hosting a blogathon every year to celebrate her amazing body of work and her continued impact on people's lives.

This post is for the blogathon I am co-hosting with In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood. Here's hopefully to many more blogathons.

I just love these photos of Olivia from 2015 ♥♥♥

Thursday, June 30, 2016

Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993)

 

"Um... what is a non-classic movie doing on Phyl's blog??" you might be asking yourself right now. You may even be accompanying it by the look above. Well, I'll tell you. It's because I couldn't pass up writing about one of my favorite comedies for The Mel Brooks Blogathon hosted by The Cinematic Frontier in honor of Brooks 90th birthday.

"But how are you going to justify writing about it on THIS blog?" Because I'm going to talk about how it is actually quite similar to the famous 1938 The Adventures of Robin Hood starring Errol Flynn!!



The story of Robin Hood: Men in Tights is your basic Robin Hood tale but with a Mel Brooks twist (If you don't like Mel Brooks humor but are intrigued in this film I suggest you watch it next time it comes on TV, as several parts that may offend are removed).

The film opens with Robin of Loxley in jail. He is given a fake beard so that he blends in with the rest of the prisoner, tortured, and finally locked up. There he meets a fellow prisoner, in for jaywalking, called Asneeze, father of Ahchoo. "Bless you." "No, no, no. Ahchoo is my son. He is an exchange student."

You must go now, or you will miss the tide!

Robin helps Asneeze (and the rest of the prisoners) escape from prison with a feat of great strength, or as Asneeze puts it, "Great strength of feet!" and swims back to England. When he washes up on the beach, he is met by this impressive sight.


Robin then rents a horse and begins his journey to his family home. On his way he meets Ahchoo, who is getting beat up by the Sheriff of Rottingham's men. He helps Ahchoo, who then joins him on his journey.


Upon arriving at Loxley Hall, Robin discovers that his entire family is dead, including his goldfish Goldy, and his family home is being taken away for failure to pay back taxes. All that is left is Blinkin, the family's blind, faithful servant.

 
 
Blinkin: I thought it felt a bit drafty!
 
As they continue on their journey, now to avenge what has happened to his family, they meet Little John and Will Scarlet. But wait! Scarlet is his middle name. His full name is Will Scarlet O'Hara. "We from Georgia."


Once Robin has earned the respect of Little John, they too join his group of Merry Men. Robin then visits the castle, bursting in on a feast in practically the same way was Errol Flynn did 55 years before. It was this scene that had the most similarities with the 1938 film. It also points out a very important difference:

Robin: I'll lead the people in a revolt against you.
 
Prince John: And why should the people listen to you?

 
This of course pokes fun that Errol Flynn was not actually from England, but from Australia.
 

 
Robin also meets Maid Marion at the feast (who can't hold a candle to Olivia). Later, she comes to visit him at his camp to warn him of a "foul plot afoot." There is to be an archery contest to lure Robin out of hiding and where Dirty Ezio (who just so happens to look a lot like Clint Eastwood) will shoot him.
 
 
Robin goes to the tournament disguised as an old man - he looks like Mark Twain! - and... loses.
 
 
Robin wins, using his Patriot Arrow, and is arrested. To save him, Maid Marion promises to marry the Sheriff of Rottingham, the "most disgusting thing I can think of." But don't worry, everything works out in the end.
 

 
Mel Brooks clearly loved the original Robin Hood film when he made this one. Though not in glorious Technicolor, the film still has the feel of the original, but with Mel Brooks' signature stamp of humor.  
 
Cast:
 
Cary Elwes....................................Robin Hood
 
Richard Lewis................................Prince John
 
Roger Rees.....................Sheriff of Rottingham
 
Amy Yasbeck...............................Maid Marion
 
Mark Blankfield....................................Blinkin
 
Dave Chappelle....................................Ahchoo
 
Isaac Hayes.........................................Asneeze
 
Megan Cavanagh...........................Broomhilde
 
Eric Allan Kramer...........................Little John
 
Matthew Porretta...............Will Scarlet O'Hara
 
Tracey Ullman.......................................Latrine
 
Patrick Stewart............................King Richard
 
Dom DeLuis...............................Don Giovanni
 
Dick Van Patton...............................The Abbot
 
Robert Ridgely...........................The Hangman
 
&
 
Mel Brooks..............................Rabbi Tuckman
 
Read the other posts on Birthday Boy Brooks here!