This review may contain spoilers!
The Death of Robin Hood follows the infamous outlaw at the tail end of his life. Robin is a wilder, meaner figure than the stories ever told: a true, ruthless outlaw. After a raid on a farmstead goes wrong, Robin embarks on a healing journey that forces him to reflect on his identity and the myth built up around him.
The story of Robin Hood, like many myths and pieces of folklore, is a story I have always found really fascinating. In Death of I found myself really believing the idea that Robin was this figure who had been made larger than life by gossip and word of mouth. The dishevelled Robin presented to us is wretched and played wonderfully by Hugh Jackman. This is an outlaw who lives comfortably with conducting murder and violence. He fights for scraps; in a way, he fights to kill because that's all that he has left. It's a very different direction to take the character, and I enjoyed this darker concept and the way Jackman falls into the harder edge of the role.
Michael Sarnoski crafts something here that is a feast for the senses. The Irish landscapes standing for ancient England are vast, primal and breathtaking. This film is littered with visual vistas that lend a powerful, rugged edge to the feature. I also found the way this film is captured to have a mysterious, yet intimate tone that cuts right to the character study element of Sarnoski's feature. Jim Ghedi crafts the musical score for this feature, and it has this sense of history to it. The echoing and mournful notes of the pipes, paired with the choral moments of Middle English song, are something to behold. In sharp contrast, I felt the editing often played around with odd transitions too much; the excessive fades really didn't suit the style of the movie.
There's an ambling, slow pace to The Death of Robin Hood. It's not here to be your action hero blockbuster Robin Hood story, no matter how much the trailers tried to sell the audience on it. After the first act, the film is a pensive reflection on Robin as a character. There are some interesting points in all of that, particularly when Robin passes a moment off as a story only to discover there was truth in it after all. But this is a depressing bender of a feature showing us a man who has compromised himself, who is rotten to the core. In his final days, he gets a mirror up to his bad actions while also finding a sense of peace. But even when being offered redemption, he scorns it. This film almost feels like a one-note attempt to do something different with Robin Hood; to make him old and foul-tempered. A man who seeks death throughout and finds it unconventionally. This is a film that doesn't really deconstruct the myth of Robin Hood; it rejects it and sculpts a hollow, hardened shell in its place.
I think Bill Skarsgård's turn as Edward/Little John was a bit of a surprise letdown for him. It's a moment that feels like Skarsgård is here to try out another bit of voice work, as opposed to tunnelling into the character. Jodie Comer is more of the moral conscience of the film. Comer has this resolute sensibility to her, and I loved her latter moral conflict over killing Robin. Younger performers in the film are often overlooked until it is too late. Noah Jupe being in this at all is a great example, given how little he contributes. But it's Murray Bartlett's turn as The Leper that really stood out for me. Bartlett has been on a real rise currently with The White Lotus and The Last of Us, but I adored his performance in this. The Leper is a guardian, a man who feels like he has known a world of violence and now gives protection to a sanctuary of peace. The final scene between Bartlett and Jackman is one of the best character exchanges of the film, and it does a phenomenal job of cutting to the theme at hand.
A funeral dirge of a film. I would give The Death of Robin Hood a 4.5/10.






