Robin Hood (1973)
Unsatisfied with the corruption and evilness of Prince John, the ruler of Nottingham, where people suffer from being abused and exploited by that corrupted king, Robin Hood, a young courageous and intelligent guy, who has come to help people face that corrupted prince, the thing that brings terrible for him and risks his life.
17 December 1928, Fairfield, Alabama, USA
2 July 1916, Lamar, Colorado, USA
October 15, 1967 in Los Angeles, California, USA
25 December 1913, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
16 August 1939, London, England, UK
16 February 1935, Morley, Yorkshire, England, UK
7 October 1905, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA
7 June 1940, Camberwell, Surrey, England, UK
16 April 1921, London, England, UK
15 March 1904, Burnley, England, UK
3 February 1925, Platteville, Wisconsin, USA
19 June 1915, Addison, Alabama, USA
14 July 1911, Finchley, London, England, UK
January 31, 1964 in Los Angeles, California, USA
24 June 1904, Linton, Indiana, USA
2 January 1936, Fort Worth, Texas, USA
25 May 1908, Great Falls, Montana, USA
November 04, 2009
Foxes with bows and arrows. What could be better than that?March 30, 2016
Of all the animated Disney movies from the '70s, Robin Hood had perhaps the most potential, but suffers from a mild case of "averageitis."November 18, 2009
Blatantly caters to a juvenile audience, without making even the slightest attempt to entertain the grown-ups unless it happens that they like Saturday morning cartoon-level hijinks.August 14, 2015
One of the worst animated films ever produced by Disney...February 08, 2008
Compared with modern Disney films, which are dominated by the self-absorption and eventual self-discovery of their main characters, Robin Hood offers surprisingly stark and interesting social questions.May 09, 2005
The visual style is charmingly conventional, as gently reassuring as that of a Donald Duck cartoon, sometimes as romantically pretty as an old Silly Symphony.February 21, 2014
...owes much of its charm to its precise anthropomorphization.November 04, 2009
What sinks this one is the utter lack of the childhood insight and sympathy that really give the Disney films their staying power.