Robin Hood (1922 movie)
Robin Hood is a 1922 silent movie. It stars Douglas Fairbanks. Robin Hood was the first movie to have a Hollywood premiere.[2] The premiere was held at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre on October 18, 1922.
Robin Hood | |
---|---|
Directed by | Allan Dwan |
Produced by | Douglas Fairbanks |
Written by | Douglas Fairbanks |
Starring | Douglas Fairbanks Wallace Beery Enid Bennett Sam De Grasse Alan Hale |
Music by | Victor Schertzinger |
Cinematography | Arthur Edeson & Charles Richardson |
Edited by | William Nolan |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date | October 18, 1922 |
Running time | 127 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent film English intertitles |
Box office | $1 million (US/Canada)[1] |
The movie's full title is Douglas Fairbanks in Robin Hood. It was one of the most expensive movies of the 1920s. It cost about $1,000,000 to make. The movie is about the famous English outlaw. The movie received mostly good reviews.
In spite of the movie's careful construction, it received some negative responses. Vachel Lindsay thought the movie was "a heavy exhibit of armor that does not move." He thought it a failure because the first half of the movie was basically spectacle.
Nonetheless, Robin Hood was thought at the time to be a milestone in the development of movie art. It would be overshadowed however by the hugely popular Errol Flynn movie of 1938.[3]
Robin Hood (1922 Movie) Media
Wallace Beery, Enid Bennett, and Douglas Fairbanks listen to a recent invention only widely broadcasting for the previous three years: a radio.
Fairbanks as Robin Hood on the cover of Photoplay, illustrated by J. Knowles Hare
Notes
- ↑ Variety list of box office champions for 1922
- ↑ Zollo, p. 313.
- ↑ Vance 2008, p. 150.
References
- Vance, Jeffrey. 2008. Douglas Fairbanks. University of California Press.
- Zollo, Paul. 2002. Hollywood Remembered: An Oral History of Its Golden Age. Taylor Trade Publications.