This was Bing Crosby's penultimate movie. He did do a remake of "Stagecoach" and continued on television for seven more years. While he is charming as usual and does a wonderful number with Martin and Sinatra, the movie changes mood with him. He's involved in a subplot with orphans and...
RegisterLog in Sign up with one click: Facebook Twitter Google Share on Facebook Robin Hood (redirected fromRobin Hoods) Encyclopedia Robin Hood n. A legendary English outlaw of the 1100s, famous for his courage, chivalry, and practice of robbing the rich to aid the poor. ...
This includes reproductions of the texts of Robin Hood and the Monk (including a previously unpublished fragment), Robin Hood and the Potter, seven different editions of A Gest of Robyn Hode and the three early plays. It is a very useful volume for advanced studies. Buy it on Amazon.com ...
This is by far, my favorite telling of the Robin Hood story! For anyone interested in acquiring a copy of it, I suggest looking to UK sites that may have it. It is/was available in the PAL format, so US viewers will have to either play it on their PC/laptop, or have a region ...
Nollen also explores nontraditional representations of the legend, such as Frank Sinatra's Robin and the Seven Hoods and Westerns featuring the Robin Hood motif. A filmography is provided, including production information, and the text is highlighted by rare photographs, advertisements, and ...
With a pair off blood-irons in her hands, Were wrapped all in silke. 15 'Sett a chaffing-dish to the fyer,' said dame prioresse 'And stripp thou vp thy sleeue:' I hold him but an vnwise man That will now warning leaeve.. 16 She laid the blood-irons to Robin Hoods vaine...
Robin Hoodhas been envisioned in many different cinematic forms from the laughable (Frank Sinatra’sRobin and the Seven Hoods) to an Americanized Hollywood product (Costner’sPrince of Thieves), but never has it been handled so poorly. After selling his soul to a sorceress Robin is killed in...
His band consists of a "seven score" group of fellow outlawed yeomen – called his "Merry Men".[1] He has been the subject of numerous films, television series, books, comics, and plays. In the earliest sources Robin Hood is a commoner, but he would often later be portrayed as the ...
That all the outlaws of that forèst That horn they couldè know, CCCCXLVIII And them together gatherèd In a little throw; Seven score of wight young men Came ready on a row, CCCCXLIX And fairè didden off their hoods, And set them on their knee: ...
Robin Hood is the archetypal English folk hero; a courteous, pious and swashbuckling outlaw of the medieval era who, in modern versions of the legend, is famous for robbing the rich to feed the poor and fighting against injustice and tyranny. He operates with his "seven score" (140 strong...