

- Robin hood the legend of sherwood running slow movie#
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One of the most endearing features of the series is the group dynamics between the outlaws. Robin of Sherwood Season 3, Part 1 DVD cover
Robin hood the legend of sherwood running slow tv#
Mark Ryan (Nasir) was a fight arranger for First Knight and King Arthur and was the voice of Bumblebee in the Transformers movies the late Robert Addie (Guy of Gisburn) was Mordred in Excalibur Clive Mantle (Little John), became a British TV icon with his role as Dr Mike Barrett in the long-running medical drama Casualty (and its spinoff, Holby City), and recently moved up from Little John to a cameo as Greatjon in the first season of HBO’s Game of Thrones only Ray Winstone (Will Scarlet) has really made a name for himself, with a string of critically acclaimed British gangster movies and the occasional Hollywood role ( Face, Nil by Mouth, Sexy Beast, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and others). Praed himself had a guest role in Dynasty, and a large part in a Brit mini-series, Riders, which was complete tosh. It has constantly amazed me that their subsequent careers have not made them better known – though, like many British actors, most seem to have concentrated on stage work. The acting from the young cast – Praed and the outlaws were all in their early-20s when the show was made – is excellent. Not history, nor fantasy, but a kind of “mystic history”.


Somehow, despite its fantasy elements, it produced something earthy and captivating. That Robin of Sherwood succeeded is a tribute to the skill of writer, cast and crew. Robin of Sherwood, Season 3 Part 1 DVD cover To blend such diverse elements together could so easily have gone wrong – you only need look at Costner’s Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves or, worse, the glam-rock of The New Adventures of Robin Hood to see how badly it can go. Robin himself is the “Hooded Man”, chosen champion of Herne the Hunter, presented as a benign pagan deity of the wildwoods. There are witches, evil sorcerers, Satanists and mysterious Saracens. And the magic is what makes this series so special, so endearing and so enduring.įor although Robin of Sherwood has its feet firmly rooted in solid medieval history – we see feudal relationships in action, governmental bureaucracy at work, peasants tilling the soil and craftsmen making their wares – its head is in the clouds. No, the characters don’t get any older – don’t ask, or you’ll spoil the magic. The first series ends with Richard’s return from captivity after the Crusades (1194) the second is set in the late 1190s, and the third in the reign of King John. The show is set, as are most 20th century retellings of the legend, in the reign of With the young, handsome Robin of Loxley (Michael Praed) leading his small band of young Saxon outlaws against the nasty Normans to a backdrop of pseudo-Celtic mysticism, pagan deities and beautifully filmed greenwood, it quickly began to capture the imagination of those who saw it – especially those of us who played FRPs.
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It was something of a “builder”, as the movie moguls say.

The first series of Robin of Sherwood sneaked onto British TV screens in 1983. In 2012 it was re-released in two Blu-Ray sets, one covering the two six-episode Michael Praed seasons, the other covering the 12-episode Jason Connery season. The complete series was re-released on DVD in 2010 and is available from .uk. In 2003, Network Videos released a limited edition (1,500 copies) Region 1 (USA, Canada, Japan) boxed set of 8 DVDs containing all three series. The Region 2 DVDs (UK and Europe) were released 2002 in four boxed sets.
