The Bandit of Sherwood Forest

4.9
19461h 26m

Robin Hood's swashbuckling son comes to the rescue when England's boy-king is captured by the evil, power-hungry William of Pembroke.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Cast

Photo of Cornel Wilde

Cornel Wilde

Robert of Nottingham

Photo of Anita Louise

Anita Louise

Lady Catherine Maitland

Photo of Jill Esmond

Jill Esmond

The Queen Mother

Photo of Edgar Buchanan

Edgar Buchanan

Friar Tuck

Photo of Henry Daniell

Henry Daniell

The Regent - William of Pembroke

Photo of George Macready

George Macready

Fitz-Herbert

Photo of Russell Hicks

Russell Hicks

Robin Hood - Earl of Huntington

Photo of John Abbott

John Abbott

Will Scarlet

Photo of Lloyd Corrigan

Lloyd Corrigan

Sheriff of Nottingham

Photo of Eva Moore

Eva Moore

Mother Meg

Photo of Ray Teal

Ray Teal

Little John

Photo of Ian Wolfe

Ian Wolfe

Lord Mortimer

Photo of Miles Mander

Miles Mander

Lord Warrick

Photo of Mark Roberts

Mark Roberts

Robin Hood's Man (as Robert E. Scott)

Photo of Ross Hunter

Ross Hunter

Robin Hood's Man (uncredited)

Photo of George Eldredge

George Eldredge

Robin Hood's Man (uncredited)

Photo of Mauritz Hugo

Mauritz Hugo

Man-at-Arms on Search Patrol (uncredited)

Photo of Philip Van Zandt

Philip Van Zandt

Prioress Guard (uncredited)

Photo of Robert B. Williams

Robert B. Williams

Prioress Guard (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

8/10

Well buckle my swash son of Robin Hood!

The Bandit of Sherwood Forest is directed by George Sherman and Henry Levin and collectively written by Wilfrid H. Pettitt, Melvin Levy and Paul A. Castleton. It stars Cornel Wilde, Anita Louise, Jill Esmond, Edgar Buchanan, Henry Daniel, George Macready and Russell Hicks. Music is by Hugo Fridehofer and cinematography is shared between Tony Gaudio, William Snyder and George B. Meehan.

A wonderful spin on the Robin Hood legend, this finds Robin Hood (Hicks) enlisting the help of his son Robert (Wilde) in stopping the nefarious members of the Regency who seek to basically abolish the Magna Carta. What follows in narrative trajectory terms is the usual array of fights and face-offs, with bow and arrows skills supplementing the swordplay. There is of course some simmering passions at work, whilst loyalty and camaraderie is never ever far away.

There's such a sense of fun about the picture, it's like everyone is enjoying playing in a costume adventure. The Technicolor is luscious and the set design and art direction is impressive, more so when put into context the modest budget allocated to the production by Columbia.

The draw card is Wilde, a one time Olympic standard fencer, he utterly convinces as a swashbuckler and has charm in abundance. It's very unlikely anyone will ever fill a Robin Hood based film role with the panache that Errol Flynn did back in 1938, but Wilde most assuredly nails down a marker for one of the genre's best.

Not all the costuming strikes as period reflective, neither does one or two character accents, but it matters not one jot. A sometimes rousing and often engaging swashbuckling adventure, The Bandit of Sherwood Forest is one of the better "Hood" movies out there. 8/10

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