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Triff Robin Hood und seine lustigen Mannen und erfahre, was damals wirklich passiert ist.
England zur Zeit der Kreuzzüge: Als sich der bei seinem Volk äußerst beliebte König Richard Löwenherz auf ins Heilige Land macht, ergreift sein niederträchtiger Bruder Prinz John die Chance, um seinen Bruder endlich zu entmachten. Ab jetzt weht in England ein rauer Wind. Prinz John jagt seine Steuereintreiber durchs ganze Land, um die Bevölkerung regelrecht auszubeuten. Doch einer mag sich das nicht gefallen lassen: Der schlaue Fuchs Robin Hood...
Avis de la communauté (11)
Lady Kluck and Maid Marian are the best part of this movie. Can I just give them a 10/10?
A brilliant piece of animation tells a timeless tale.
Probably my favourite Disney movie of all time. I absolutely love it
Dashing outlaws and dastardly lawmen collide once again in Disney's appropriately scrappy, talking animal production of a well-worn literary tale. Smartly cast as a thrifty, roguish fox, Robin Hood is the charismatic engine that drives the whole affair. Whether athletically embarrassing palace guards in public, lifting a stash of the king's gold on the sly or winking at gobsmacked kids to share a taste of the day's thrills, he's a mesmerizing character. Dare I say, the animated version is right in-line with Errol Flynn's timeless, entrancing live-action take from thirty-odd years prior. One glance at Robin's optimistic vigor and never-say-die attitude and it's tough to look elsewhere. After a few lean years, Disney's animation department seems to have turned a corner with Robin Hood. They still take some artistic shortcuts - this film's become notorious for its use of repurposed shots from prior features, plus its copy-and-paste stock animations - but the workmanship is top-notch, bursting with life and detail and smooth, extravagant flourishes in motion. There's an energy to this picture, both in action and appearance, that smooths over most of the rough edges. It's not top-shelf material - neither as ambitious, nor as miraculous as the daunting epics of the studio's past - but few are. As innocent, inoffensive, swashbuckling adventures go, one could do a whole lot worse.
This Disney cartoon was grafted into my skin as a child, so it's impossible for me to review objectively. I just sit there, thinking about family who has since passed and remembering my childhood before I turned into a dick.