Robin Hood

3.00
    Robin Hood
    1973

    Synopsis

    With King Richard off to the Crusades, Prince John and his slithering minion, Sir Hiss, set about taxing Nottingham's citizens with support from the corrupt sheriff - and staunch opposition by the wily Robin Hood and his band of merry men.

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    Cast

    • Brian BedfordRobin Hood - A Fox (voice)
    • Phil HarrisLittle John - A Bear (voice)
    • Andy DevineFriar Tuck - A Badger (voice)
    • Monica EvansMaid Marian - A Vixen (voice)
    • Peter UstinovPrince John - A Lion / King Richard (voice)
    • Terry-ThomasSir Hiss - A Snake (voice)
    • Pat ButtramThe Sheriff Of Nottingham - A Wolf (voice)
    • Carole ShelleyLady Kluck - A Chicken (voice)
    • Roger MillerAllan-a-Dale - The Rooster (voice)
    • Ken CurtisNutsy - A Vulture (voice)

    Recommendations

    • 83

      IndieWire

      Robin Hood isn’t a history lesson, it’s a jaunty, beautifully animated series of very funny set pieces that remain effective, perhaps more so to younger audiences unfamiliar with the strong personalities doing the voices.
    • 80

      Empire

      Foxes with bows and arrows..what could be better than that?
    • 75

      LarsenOnFilm

      Not quite one of the Disney classics, yet still delightful, this little ditty owes much of its charm to its precise anthropomorphization.
    • 75

      TV Guide Magazine

      An inventive, well-animated, appropriately cast film.
    • 70

      Time Out

      Good baddies, good poignant bits, and an archery contest that degenerates into all-action American football make up for the familiar, repetitive plot and the several lapses of taste and intelligence inevitable in medieval Nashville.
    • 60

      The New York Times

      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.
    • 50

      Chicago Reader

      What sinks this one is the utter lack of the childhood insight and sympathy that really give the Disney films their staying power.
    • 50

      Time

      Even at its best, Robin Hood is only mildly diverting. There is not a single moment of the hilarity or deep, eerie fear that the Disney people used to be able to conjure up, or of the sort of visual invention that made the early features so memorable.

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