Film Review
If only Mel Brooks and his team of writers could fire comedy missiles
with the same unfaltering élan and precision as the folk hero
Robin Hood fires his arrows. Alas, whilst Brooks' send up of
the classic Robin Hood film offers some
moments of blinding hilarity, far too many of the gags miss their mark
and you can't help feeling that too much effort was expended firing
duds. The film is at least partly redeemed by its unabashed
political incorrectness, with just about every minority group you can
imagine (including gays, Jews, blacks, fat women and Marlon Brando) all getting
a fair ribbing in the name of entertainment.
The haphazard mix of juvenile screwball comedy and adult humour (chastity belt
gags for instance) is problematic, since the film is unsuitable for
children and too silly for most adults. The real difficulty
however is that all Robin Hood films inevitably have an element of
self-parody - how could they not with the hero clad in snug green
tights? - so the degree of comic separation between a spoof and the
original is minimal. You only have to watch Errol Flynn in
The Adventures of Robin Hood
(1938) to see the truth of this.
Not the most successful of Mel Brooks' spoofs then, and certainly not
in the league of his earlier
Blazing Saddles and
Young Frankenstein, but
Robin Hood: Men in Tights
still manages to be a moderately enjoyable romp. In any event, it
is far more entertaining than the overblown Kevin Costner film,
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves,
which it shamelessly (yet justifiably) lampoons. Say what you
like about this film but at least the title character is played by
an English man - albeit one who appears to have walked straight out
of a P.G. Wodehouse novel...
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Mel Brooks film:
Dracula: Dead and Loving It (1995)
Film Synopsis
Robin of Loxley discovers that the Crusades aren't quite what they are
cracked up to be when he ends up chained to a prison wall in a less
salubrious quarter of downtown Jerusalem. Still, with a little
help from his cellmate Asneeze, he manages to escape, free all his
fellow prisoners and swim all the way back to England without having to
put in a claim on his travel insurance. He arrives back home in
time to see his castle towed away for non-payment of taxes and meets up
with Asneeze's son, Ahchoo. The latter gives Robin some news that chills
his blood and raises his hackles like they have never been raised
before. With King Richard still playing the Great Crusader, his
brother John has usurped the throne and is even now tyrannising the
God-fearing folk of England, with the help of his villainous sidekick,
the Sheriff of Rottingham. To free his people from the tyrant's
yoke, and hopefully have some fun along the way, Robin assembles a band
of merry men which comprises his loyal blind servant Blinkin, the
bolshy tollkeeper Little John, demon knife thrower Will Scarlet O'Hara,
and several other alpha males who happen to like wearing green
tights. Realising the threat that Robin poses, King John devises
a cunning plan to have him disposed of. He organises an archery
contest which he knows his nemesis will be unable to resist and hires
hitman Don Giovanni to assassinate him during the tournament.
Unfortunately, he has not reckoned on Robin's resourcefulness and
ability to remember what is in the script. Men in green tights
are more dangerous than they look...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.