He has become the Man and has to rediscover the rebelliousness of his youth,They should do a sequel to Kevin Costner's Robin Hood movie. What happens to Robin Hood in his later years and he is no longer the young man stealing from the rich to give to the poor.
He has become the Man and has to rediscover the rebelliousness of his youth,
Have the Sheriff as the good guy (a literal old west sheriff if you will) battling a villainous criminal/terrorist Robin Hood who's hiding in the forests!
Yes, they did, but the 80s was a long time ago now. I wouldn't mind seeing them lean into these elements again.The only other thing would be to lean into the green man/mythical/folk story/folk horror elements, but Robin of Sherwood did this in the 1980s.
A&E did attempt to do a realistic Ivanhoe back in the 90's (I think.. I still have the DVD somewhere) as a miniseries. It had Christopher Lee, Ciaran Hinds and mostly actors that weren't as well known with a pretty limited budget. Their Robin of Locksley was fairly dangerous, seeming. I'd like to see someone else redo that version of Ivanhoe with better production values, and maybe just do it as a full season rather than a miniseries.Yes, they did, but the 80s was a long time ago now. I wouldn't mind seeing them lean into these elements again.
Yes, they did, but the 80s was a long time ago now. I wouldn't mind seeing them lean into these elements again.
Frankly for a long time I've thought the only interesting thing left to do with the story is to flip the roles. Have the Sheriff as the good guy (a literal old west sheriff if you will) battling a villainous criminal/terrorist Robin Hood who's hiding in the forests!
The only other thing would be to lean into the green man/mythical/folk story/folk horror elements, but Robin of Sherwood did this in the 1980s.
Prince of Thieves arguably borrowed a bit from Robin of Sherwood, which had an Arabic merry man before Morgan Freeman’s Moor. And IIRCRickman’s Sheriff was supposed to dabble in witchcraft in early drafts but they edited a lot of those elements out of the script.Yes, they did, but the 80s was a long time ago now. I wouldn't mind seeing them lean into these elements again.
Thank God for the deleted scenes. And that the DIE HARD makers didn't do the same for Hans Gruber. If they had, we'd just have another RAMBO III or Steven Seagal series of unchallenging battles.A lot of Alan Rickman was cut from the movie because test audiences liked him too much.
After years of no interest from Sony, Jon Lovitz says Al Jean is working on a revival of "the Critic".
If "The Simpsons" can go on forever like a flying stuffed pig, if "Futurama" can come back from cancellation more times than Sweet Zombie Jesus, if "King of the Hill" get a new season after a decade of being over, if "Samurai Jack" came come long after it's cancellation to get one final concluding season, and "Beavis and Butthead" can get new episodes, SURELY, in an time where Hollywood is RIFE with opportunity to make fun of and online film critics, THIS show can come back.
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