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Robin Hood (1973)

 Robin Hood (1973)
type
TVTItem
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973)
 Robin Hood (1973)
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RobinHood1973
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood, the 1973 animated feature by Disney and 21st film in the Disney Animated Canon, takes the classic story of the original Robin Hood, adds and removes stuff here and there, and replaces all the characters with Funny Animals — making this the first Disney Animated Feature to feature exclusively anthropomorphic characters.The film, as narrated by the rooster Alan-a-Dale, begins in the wake of Prince John's usurpation of the crown from his heroic brother, King Richard. He has burdened the country with outrageously high taxes, and his chief enforcer, the Sheriff of Nottingham (a heartless wolf), has no qualms stripping the residents of their very last farthing.The people's hope rests in Sherwood Forest, where a fox known as Robin Hood and his trusty bear companion Little John have made their hideout. They steal from Prince John and his lackeys with a variety of schemes and disguises, giving the funds back to the struggling citizens. They also have a liason of sorts in town, the meek yet principled badger Friar Tuck.Meanwhile, a beautiful and benevolent vixen known as Maid Marian lives in Prince John's castle along with her lady-in-waiting, a hen named Lady Kluck. She is Richard's niece, and in happier times she and Robin Hood were very close; even today, neither has forgotten the other, though they haven't been able to see each other in years. Unfortunately, Prince John is more than willing to use their affection to trap the thief who has humiliated him so many times...This movie was the first in the Disney Animated Canon that was made completely independent of Walt Disney, who had died in 1966 — The Aristocats was personally greenlit by Walt. The studio was suffering financially during its production, resulting in plenty of Recycled Animation from a multitude of films and within itself (this makes it one of the more economical entries in the Disney Animated Canon). Take a shot when you spot recycled animation or an animation blooper. While largely dominated by the handiwork of studio veterans such as the Nine Old Men and art director Ken Anderson, the film does, however, mark the debut of Don Bluth as a full-time animator for the Mouse, beginning the arc of his long and tumultuous relationship with the studio in full.This film is actually Disney's second adaptation of the Robin Hood legend. The first one was The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men, a live-action film from 1952. Furthermore, Disney has announced a CGI/live-action remake of this film, with the same kind of furry characters planned for it.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_10134c97
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Artistic License – Gun Safety
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_10134c97
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Artistic License – Gun Safety: Trigger keeps pointing Old Betsy at the Sheriff. 'She' has a tendency to randomly discharge even when the safety is on. Eventually the Sheriff gets smart about this and insists that Trigger walk ahead of him when he's carrying his crossbow.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_10134c97
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_102d3365
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Watch Where You're Going!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_102d3365
comment
Watch Where You're Going!: During the football-inspired clash with Lady Kluck, this happens to two rhinoceros guards. Also happens with Robin and Little John as they make off with the goods from Prince John's coach. The collision spills all the money everywhere, and the duo rush to hurriedly scrape it up again. The delay means that a suspicious Prince John, sticking his head out of the coach, catches them running off and realizes what's just happened.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1036c075
type
Forceful Kiss
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1036c075
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Forceful Kiss: Played for Laughs. While taking part in Skippy's roleplaying game, Marian tells him that the hero kisses the damsel upon rescuing her, something Skippy refuses to do. An offended Marian decides that if he won't, then she will. She then grabs Skippy and sweetly kisses his cheek, which earns him ridicule from the other children watching them.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_113480b7
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Canon Foreigner
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_113480b7
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Also, while Prince John and the Sheriff of Nottingham are present, Guy of Gisborne is nowhere to be seen; Canon Foreigner Sir Hiss more or less fills his role.
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_113480b7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1235f055
type
Dirty Coward
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1235f055
comment
Dirty Coward: Prince John in the Archery Tournament fiasco. While Robin Hood is fighting off the guards, Prince John tries to blindside him. However, Robin Hood easily disarms him before that happened, and Prince John immediately runs away in fear while pathetically begging for his life.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1235f055
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_137f2d7
type
Card-Carrying Villain
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_137f2d7
comment
Card-Carrying Villain: Not only does the Sheriff use underhanded tactics to collect every last coin from the townspeople, he enjoys every minute of it.
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_137f2d7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_140883ec
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I Will Show You X!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_140883ec
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I Will Show You X!: Friar Tuck's response when the Sheriff of Nottingham collects taxes from the poor box, before chasing the Sheriff out of the church.
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_140883ec
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_142b2370
type
Vile Vulture
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_142b2370
comment
Vile Vulture: Trigger and Nutsy, the Sheriff of Nottingham's vulture henchmen, assist him in making life difficult for the beloved outlaw. Nutsy is a subversion, as he's too stupid and good-natured to do anything terribly villainous, but Trigger plays it straight. However, unlike the Sheriff himself, the vultures are only Punch-Clock Villains and are just following orders.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_153299b4
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Boisterous Bruiser
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_153299b4
comment
Boisterous Bruiser: Both Little John and Lady Kluck are fierce party animals.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_153299b4
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_153299b4
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_15b2cab3
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Tempting Fate
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_15b2cab3
comment
Tempting Fate: Used and lampshaded.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_15b2cab3
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_15b2cab3
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_15da4941
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Badass Adorable
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_15da4941
comment
Badass Adorable: Skippy, a seven-year-old rabbit, shoots Prince John in the backside with an arrow! (It bounces off.)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_15da4941
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_170128e9
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Right Behind Me
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_170128e9
comment
Right Behind Me: The Sheriff and Sir Hiss are having a good laugh over the song "The Phony King of England" when Prince John enters the room. Hiss immediately tries to cover up by singing lyrics praising Prince John before the Sheriff corrects him ("... the sniveling, groveling —"). PJ throws a wine bottle at him.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_171ef47c
type
Not-So-Harmless Villain
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_171ef47c
comment
Not-So-Harmless Villain: Yes, Prince John is a cowardly, childish mama's boy, but that doesn't stop him from being a cunning and ruthless tyrant who is a fan of lethal and amoral force. The Sheriff as well. He's a bumbling goof, but nearly kills Robin in the climax of the film, burning the castle down in the process. He also has no qualms about hitting a dog in his broken leg, stealing a child's birthday money, or stealing the last money from the church's poor box, and despite summoning Friar Tuck's wrath in the process, he still overpowers and gleefully almost hangs him. He also is not above trying to burn down the castle if that's what it takes to kill Robin Hood.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_17a45ff5
type
Misplaced Wildlife
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_17a45ff5
comment
Misplaced Wildlife: Any raccoon that shows up in this movie fits this trope because raccoons are native only to the Americas. This may be a Funny Animal movie, but this movie takes place in Medieval England, and people in Europe back in the Middle Ages would have not even heard of raccoons, so this counts as Anachronism Stew as well. Friar Tuck is seemingly based on an American badger rather than a European badger. There's also all the crocodiles, vultures, rhinos, elephants, hippos, etc., which it's probably safe to assume the animators knew aren't typical British wildlife. However, some of these animals were known in England during the time period of the film, thanks to the zoo that was kept at the Tower of London for several centuries and populated with exotic animals gifted to the assorted monarchs. The fireflies Little John uses to make the crystal ball glow near the beginning do not exist in the United Kingdom. Sir Hiss being a python is another glaring example—there are three snake species native to the UK, the smooth snake, grass snake and European viper. None of them are pythons or even as large as Sir Hiss is. Averted by the wolves and bears; although they aren't found in Britain now, they would have been at the time.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_18aff462
type
Artistic License – Biology
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_18aff462
comment
Artistic License – Biology Rabbits in this movie are depicted with paw pads and hairless noses, which they do not have in real life. Maid Marian is explicitly stated to be King Richard's niece. Richard is a lion. Marian is a fox. The only way this makes any possible sense would be if Queen Berengaria, Richard's wife, was a fox, and Marian was the child of one of her siblings. She would then be Richard's niece by marriage. (This actually seems quite likely, since it's repeatedly stated that Marian is Richard's niece but no one ever mentions her also being John's niece, even though Richard and John are brothers.) It may or may not just be the animation style, but Sir Hiss, a snake, appears to have fur in some shots.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_18cc27ca
type
Accent Slip-Up
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_18cc27ca
comment
Accent Slip-Up: When Robin disguises himself as a blind beggar, he gives himself an old decrepit voice and a West Country accent to further the act. When he hears that Friar Tuck is going to be hanged, he briefly slips into his normal voice out of shock. At the beginning of the movie, Robin masquerades as a lady fortune teller, and is about to take a bag of gold when Hiss (who's been confined to a basket by Prince John) slaps his hand. Robin grunts out an unladylike “Ayy!� which luckily goes unnoticed by the prince.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_18dd6739
type
Dressing as the Enemy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_18dd6739
comment
Dressing as the Enemy: In the climax, Robin disguises himself as Nutsy to sneak past the Sheriff, and later Little John locks away the Sheriff and steals his clothes to stop him from investigating the bags that are being pulled from the castle chamber to the cells.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1ad6e2da
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Little Bit Beastly
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1ad6e2da
comment
Little Bit Beastly: Friar Tuck seems to be borderline, as he lacks the regular coloring of a badger, yet has humanoid ears.
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_1ad6e2da
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1ba8eb64
type
Visual Pun
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1ba8eb64
comment
Visual Pun: King Richard the Lionheart is a magnificently maned lion. There are also literal church mice, who are as poor as church mice.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1e0c10c5
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Laugh of Love
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1e0c10c5
comment
Laugh of Love: Maid Marian, upon recognising Robin (who's disguised as a stork), giggles while wishing him luck.
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_1e0c10c5
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1e7c47ab
type
Stealth Pun
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1e7c47ab
comment
Stealth Pun: When Prince John gets word of "The Phony King of England" being sung around the kingdom - even by Sir Hiss and the Sheriff of Nottingham - he doubles and triples the taxes, ordering the Sheriff to squeeze every last drop out of the insolent, musical peasants; in other words, it could be said that Prince John is collecting royalties from the villagers.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1f14978d
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Talking Animal
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_1f14978d
comment
Talking Animal: The entire cast. This is the animal kingdom, after all.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2006056c
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Girls Have Cooties
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2006056c
comment
Girls Have Cooties: The reason why Skippy refuses to kiss Maid Marian during their game. When Maid Marian decides to make him play along and kisses him he's visibly embarrassed, and his friend and sisters think it's hilarious.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_20860a0e
type
Punch-Clock Villain
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_20860a0e
comment
Punch-Clock Villain: The Sheriff of Nottingham often attempts to invoke this, whenever anyone calls him out on his ruthless tax collecting; but even in the beginning, when he arguably has a case about only doing what Prince John orders him to do, he clearly enjoys depriving people of what little money they have far too much. It isn't long before he shows he's just a sadistic asshole. Later, he crosses the line when he takes the last farthing from Friar Tuck's poor box for Prince John's taxes, and Friar Tuck loses his cool: Played straight by Nutsy and Trigger, regular guards who really are just doing their jobs and aren't abusing their position. This is reflected by the end of the movie, when the two are shown not as prisoners in jail, but as standing guard over the imprisoned John, Hiss, and Sheriff.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_21e5b9c7
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Failed a Spot Check
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_21e5b9c7
comment
Failed a Spot Check: Robin is so busy strutting and bowing to the crowd, in his stork disguise, that he doesn’t notice the rhino guards marching behind him as he makes his way to the Royal Box. This is a highly strange way to act towards someone who’s just won a tournament. Little John doesn’t seem suspicious about this either until it’s too late. The crocodile announcer at the archery contest utterly misses the massive riot going on around him, which leads to his getting run over by the tent stuffed with hippo and rhino guards (and Little John).
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_22cf536c
type
Chekhov's Gun
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_22cf536c
comment
Chekhov's Gun: Prince John's loud thumb-sucking. When he does it in his sleep, it wakes Sir Hiss just in time for him to see Robin Hood stealing bags of gold from the castle, leading to the final battle. The little rabbit sister Tagalong can't run nearly as fast as the other kids. This becomes very important in the final battle when she's struggling to keep up with the evacuating villagers, and Robin Hood has to turn around and rescue her, leaving him trapped on the wrong side of the portcullis.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_237404cc
type
Ironic Echo
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_237404cc
comment
Ironic Echo (also an instance of Strange Minds Think Alike): Early in the movie, the characters talk about how if Robin marries Maid Marian, King Richard will have an outlaw for an in-law. At the end of the movie, Richard says this exact phrase while laughing about the marriage.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_23d6eccb
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Non-Mammal Mammaries
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_23d6eccb
comment
Non-Mammal Mammaries: Lady Kluck (although one shot implies it's not actual cleavage, just a persistent wrinkle in her rather plump form).
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_24321e44
type
Only Sane Man
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_24321e44
comment
Only Sane Man: Mouse in this case. When the Sheriff stomps into the church, the Sexton and Friar Tuck are ready to pick a fight, but the sexton's wife tells them to be quiet. When the Sheriff takes the farthing, she simply orders him to put it back in the poor box rather than insult him.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2557e3a9
type
Palette Swap
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2557e3a9
comment
Speaking of children rabbits, the exact same shot of the dancing rabbits at Skippy's birthday party is reused during the archery tournament. Even more, the multiple dancing rabbits in both scenes are just one couple of rabbits with multiple palette swaps copy/pasted four times across the screen in a looped animation.
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_259d5879
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Anachronism Stew
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_259d5879
comment
Anachronism Stew: Many of the voices were filled by actors known for working in Westerns; as a result, some of the characters display mannerisms more akin to a Western (in particular the actors for Sheriff and his men play their roles as if they were a sheriff and his deputies from the Wild West or Deep South). Although Friar Tuck comes from the original legend, his presence during the reign of Richard I makes no sense, as the first Mendicant order was not founded until 1209, a full decade after the Lionheart's death. While it might be argued that "Friar" may represent Middle French/Middle English "Frere" = "Brother," which was in use as a form of address in the older monastic orders, Tuck's brown habit and (especially) rope girdle mark him clearly as a member of the Franciscan order, which would not be established until a good fifteen years after Richard's return to England. The rabbits sing "Happy Birthday to You!"—which was written in the late 19th century in Louisville, Kentucky—to Skippy. The film takes place in 12th century England. While in the ale barrel, Sir Hiss sings "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow" (although he says "for I'm a jolly good fellow"). Again, that song hadn't been written yet (it was written in 1709). In their first scene, Maid Marian and Lady Kluck are playing badminton, which was invented in the 18th century. During the Archery Contest, balloons are shown being handed out to children while Hiss hides in one to use as transport to survey the scene. Rubber balloons weren't invented till 1824 and it would be many more years before they became commercialized. Nottingham Castle has a scaffold gallows, which was invented by the Scot Deacon William Brodie in 1787. Well, that's the story, anyway. In actuality, scaffolding is a very old invention, and was used in situations where there wasn't a tree handy. The trapdoor, however, is very firmly an anachronism, as gallows didn't use them much before the Nineteenth Century. Sir Hiss is able to spy on the crowd at the archery tournament by putting his head inside one of the balloons a merchant is selling to the children. Setting aside the whole issue of Balloonacy, rubber balloons weren't invented until the 17th century. While the Aztecs are believed to have made balloon sculptures from animal intestines as early as the 1300s, nothing of the sort is known to have existed in Europe before the time of Galileo. The (American) football segment when the game was invented in 1869 (rugby can be traced back to the 1400s, which is still after the events of the film). To take it further, "On, Wisconsin!" which plays in the background, was written in 1909 (originally written for archrival Minnesota and adapted). Granted, no one's actually playing football, it's just part of the preceding battle sequence. In the same sequence, Little John asks at one point, "Hey, who's driving this flying umbrella?!" While umbrellas (or similar devices) have existed since ancient times, the word itself wasn't coined until around the year 1610. Mother Rabbit and Toby Turtle both wear eyeglasses, which weren't invented until roughly a century after the film is set. The orthopedic cast that Otto wears on his leg wasn't invented until the 1850s, during the Crimean War.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_259d5879
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_259d5879
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_259d5879
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_26ac510e
type
Mythology Gag
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_26ac510e
comment
Mythology Gag: There are several call-backs to The Jungle Book, which was released six years earlier; Sir Hiss's hypnotic eyes use the exact same pattern of colors as Kaa's did, whilst amongst the Recycled Animation, the scenes of Baloo dancing with King Louie are clearly used as the basis for the shots of Little John dancing with Lady Kluck during the "Phony King of England" song sequence.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_26ac510e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_26ac510e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_26ac510e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_28cd01ca
type
Disappeared Dad
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_28cd01ca
comment
Disappeared Dad: Mother Rabbit (Skippy's mom) is said to be a widow, which is a big part of why she's having trouble feeding her large brood. It's actually completely unclear how her family is surviving at all, apart from what money Robin Hood is able to give them.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_28cd01ca
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_28cd01ca
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_28cd01ca
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a02e5c9
type
Guile Hero
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a02e5c9
comment
Guile Hero: Robin is Cunning Like a Fox and it shows. His thievery while disguised as a fortune teller and his castle break in are two great moments.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a02e5c9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a02e5c9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a02e5c9
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a090d00
type
Lampshade Hanging
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a090d00
comment
The Lampshade Hanging early in the film: "Forgive me a cruel chuckle: Eheheheheheh, power."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a090d00
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a090d00
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2a090d00
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2cad9f96
type
The Centerpiece Spectacular
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2cad9f96
comment
The Centerpiece Spectacular: The Tournament sequence is roughly in the middle of the film and is one of the most spectacular parts of the film.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2cad9f96
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2cad9f96
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2cad9f96
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d0b9eea
type
Beary Funny
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d0b9eea
comment
Beary Funny: Little John is a downplayed example; he's Robin's straight man.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d0b9eea
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d0b9eea
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d0b9eea
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d2e3275
type
Attack! Attack... Retreat! Retreat!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d2e3275
comment
Attack! Attack... Retreat! Retreat!: When the rhino soldiers that Prince John ordered to attack the jail come charging right at him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d2e3275
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d2e3275
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d2e3275
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d428543
type
Eyes Never Lie
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d428543
comment
Eyes Never Lie: At the tournament, Marian realizes it is Robin in disguise after she looks deeply into his eyes.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d428543
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d428543
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d428543
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d6c0bce
type
Talking in Your Sleep
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d6c0bce
comment
Talking in Your Sleep: Prince John while Robin takes the bags of tax money.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d6c0bce
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d6c0bce
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d6c0bce
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d92c43c
type
Little "No"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d92c43c
comment
Little "No": When Little John thinks Robin's dead.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d92c43c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d92c43c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2d92c43c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2e3ab929
type
Assumed Win
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2e3ab929
comment
Assumed Win: The disguised stork archer (Robin Hood) comes forward to receive his golden arrow prize, only for Prince John to use his sword and cut away Robin Hood's disguise.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2e3ab929
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2e3ab929
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2e3ab929
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2fa6b075
type
God Save Us from the Queen!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2fa6b075
comment
Prince John begins crying and sucking his thumb when his mother is mentioned, and grouses about how she always liked his brother better. John's mother in real life was the infamous Eleanor of Aquitaine, who really did favor her elder son, King Richard, over John. Richard and John’s father, King Henry II of England, on the other hand, favoured John.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2fa6b075
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_2fa6b075
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_2fa6b075
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_319e4a2f
type
Even Evil Has Standards
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_319e4a2f
comment
Even Evil Has Standards: Sir Hiss has no problem with Prince John's evil deeds until he decides to hang Friar Tuck. Hiss is genuinely disturbed by John executing a popular, respected holy man. Alternately, it may also just be Pragmatic Villainy; killing the Friar will not go over well with the Church and could cause them serious problems.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_319e4a2f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_319e4a2f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_319e4a2f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_32956961
type
Explosive Breeder
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_32956961
comment
Mother Rabbit has a horde of children.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_32956961
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_32956961
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_32956961
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_33d5b7f2
type
Adapted Out
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_33d5b7f2
comment
Adapted Out: No band of merry men here; just Robin, Little John, and Friar Tuck. During the "Phony King of England" musical number, Little John does make reference to the merry men as "Robin's wily pack". It does seem like he's just referring to himself and Friar Tuck, though...unless the rest of the outlaws are always conveniently off-screen. The text in the Storybook Opening of the film says "Robin Hood had a band [...] men which included a m[...] named Alan-a-Dale who..." This at least implies that there are other outlaws assisting Robin. Also, while Prince John and the Sheriff of Nottingham are present, Guy of Gisborne is nowhere to be seen; Canon Foreigner Sir Hiss more or less fills his role.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_33d5b7f2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_33d5b7f2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_33d5b7f2
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3403abfc
type
Mugged for Disguise
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3403abfc
comment
Mugged for Disguise: Little John ambushes the Sheriff of Nottingham and puts on his clothes during the jailbreak scene. The Sheriff spends the rest of the climax in his underwear.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3403abfc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3403abfc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3403abfc
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_34c3144b
type
Lured into a Trap
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_34c3144b
comment
Lured into a Trap: A disguised Robin Hood easily wins the archery tournament, and seemingly about to be praised by Prince John, but...
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_34c3144b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_34c3144b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_34c3144b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_35ae6a23
type
Lethal Chef
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_35ae6a23
comment
Lethal Chef: Don't leave Robin in charge of the stew. He'll start daydreaming about his beloved Marian, let the thing boil over, and the result will be - as Friar Tuck puts it - "well done."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_35ae6a23
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_35ae6a23
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_35ae6a23
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_361a1d26
type
Anguished Declaration of Love
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_361a1d26
comment
Anguished Declaration of Love: When Robin Hood is about to be executed, Marian tearfully begs for the life of the man she loves. John makes the situation even more emotionally charged by asking if Robin even feels the same way.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_361a1d26
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_361a1d26
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_361a1d26
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3700d6d8
type
Pinball Projectile
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3700d6d8
comment
Pinball Projectile: Sometimes arrows do this. Happens frequently with Trigger's crossbow bolts. Robin can do it because he's just that good.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3700d6d8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3700d6d8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3700d6d8
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_38d02d44
type
Batman Gambit
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_38d02d44
comment
Batman Gambit: Prince John's archery tournament. Knowing that Robin Hood is in love with Maid Marian, the prince offers a kiss from her as part of the winner's prize, certain that Robin wouldn't be able to resist that kind of bait. While the Sheriff and Prince John didn't actually see through Robin's "stork" disguise at first, all they needed to do was wait for the best archer to reveal himself and then have him arrested. As soon as Robin fired his first arrow, John's suspicions were raised, and Maid Marian favoring him didn't do Robin any favors. Prince John's final trap is an unplanned, accidental one in-universe. John obviously had no idea Friar Tuck would get caught up in the Sheriff's taxation arrests. But once he does, John realizes they've unwittingly set up a perfect Batman Gambit. John orders Tuck's public execution, knowing Robin will move Heaven and Earth to rescue his friend (no matter that it's almost certainly a trap intended for him). It nearly works, too and is only done in by dumb luck.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_38d02d44
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_38d02d44
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_38d02d44
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_392ecd12
type
Fake Aristocrat
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_392ecd12
comment
Fake Aristocrat: Little John masquerades as "Sir Reginald, Duke of Chutney" to get close to Prince John.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_392ecd12
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_392ecd12
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_392ecd12
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_393da8a1
type
Secret Message Wink
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_393da8a1
comment
Secret Message Wink: While disguised as the stork for the archery tournament, Robin gives a flower to Maid Marian and gushes about how it's an honor to be shooting "for the favor of a lovely lady like yourself." He adds that he hopes he'll win her kiss (part of the promised grand prize) and then winks, which tips her off as to his real identity.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_393da8a1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_393da8a1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_393da8a1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_39e7035b
type
Late to the Realization
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_39e7035b
comment
Also happens with Robin and Little John as they make off with the goods from Prince John's coach. The collision spills all the money everywhere, and the duo rush to hurriedly scrape it up again. The delay means that a suspicious Prince John, sticking his head out of the coach, catches them running off and realizes what's just happened.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_39e7035b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_39e7035b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_39e7035b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3a5b6da
type
All Balloons Have Helium
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3a5b6da
comment
All Balloons Have Helium: Sir Hiss sticks his head into a balloon and turns himself into a sort of impromptu dirigible, with his tail as a propeller.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3a5b6da
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3a5b6da
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3a5b6da
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3aec9e5e
type
Properly Paranoid
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3aec9e5e
comment
Properly Paranoid: Sir Hiss is the only one who thinks that "Sir Reginald, Duke of Chutney" might not be on the level, and tries repeatedly to warn his boss. But Prince John pays him no mind and finally kicks him out of the royal box. Trigger is the only one who even suspects Robin Hood's beggar disguise, and is insistent that there's going to be a jailbreak. Naturally, the Sheriff doesn't listen to him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3aec9e5e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3aec9e5e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3aec9e5e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3b4b7b79
type
Ass in a Lion Skin
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3b4b7b79
comment
Ass in a Lion Skin: Robin, a fox, disguises himself as "the spindle-legged stork from Devonshire" and as Nutsy, a vulture.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3b4b7b79
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3b4b7b79
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3b4b7b79
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3cf44d4b
type
High-Class Glass
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3cf44d4b
comment
High-Class Glass: Little John wears a monocle as part of his disguise as Sir Reginald, Duke of Chutney. (Yet another piece of the film's Anachronism Stew.)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3cf44d4b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3cf44d4b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3cf44d4b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d64d015
type
The Middle Ages
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d64d015
comment
The Middle Ages: Castles, kings, friars, and bows and arrows, and talking animals.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d64d015
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d64d015
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d64d015
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d699462
type
Curb-Stomp Battle
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d699462
comment
Curb-Stomp Battle: Little John effortlessly defeats the Sheriff, who is easily the most dangerous servant to Prince John. Lady Kluck against Prince John's guards at the archery tourney.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d699462
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d699462
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3d699462
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3e8d9cd3
type
Historical Hero Upgrade
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3e8d9cd3
comment
Historical Hero Upgrade: As always in the Robin Hood story, Richard looks much better than he did in real life because of his Big Good status.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3e8d9cd3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3e8d9cd3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3e8d9cd3
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3ed23024
type
Surprisingly Realistic Outcome
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3ed23024
comment
Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: At the archery tournament, Robin wears a convincing disguise that makes him look like a stork. It fools the Sheriff, but Prince John and the crocodile captain of the guard figure out it's him because only Robin Hood has the level of archery skill that the "stork" repeatedly demonstrates during the competition. Robin and Marian being childhood sweethearts, with the whole of Nottingham knowing about it. While everyone ships them, Prince John more than likely knows about their love as well, and is willing to exploit it.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3ed23024
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3ed23024
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3ed23024
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3eee0728
type
Captain Obvious
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3eee0728
comment
Captain Obvious:
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3eee0728
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3eee0728
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3eee0728
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3fca462c
type
Deus ex Machina
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3fca462c
comment
Deus ex Machina: The original planned ending, which can be seen in storyboard format on the DVD but was never animated; Robin Hood would have been wounded during the climactic escape from Nottingham Castle and dragged to a church to recover by Maid Marian and Little John. Prince John and Sir Hiss would have tracked Robin Hood down, but before Prince John could push Marian aside and stab the fox to death, King Richard would have returned at last and, having caught him red-handed, essentially shouted him into dropping the dagger, sitting down in a corner and surrendering.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3fca462c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_3fca462c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_3fca462c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_405f6f52
type
Recycled Soundtrack
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_405f6f52
comment
Recycled Soundtrack: When the church bells ring to announce Robin Hood and Maid Marian getting married, the tolling sequence is borrowed from Cinderella.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_405f6f52
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_405f6f52
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_405f6f52
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_41435fc2
type
Pie in the Face
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_41435fc2
comment
Pie in the Face: How Maid Marian takes down a mook during a brawl.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_41435fc2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_41435fc2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_41435fc2
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_43b154c9
type
Not Even Bothering with the Accent
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_43b154c9
comment
Not Even Bothering with the Accent: Some of the voice actors are real Brits, but some are Australians, and others are Americans best known for Westerns and rural sitcoms whose accents aren't at all what you'd expect to hear in a film set in medieval England. (However, it is worth noting that rural and Southern accents of American English are a lot more closely related to medieval English than we tend to think — those accents had to come from somewhere, after all.) The very well-spoken English Robin Hood for some reason adopts a Cockney (London) accent when disguised as a stork... from Devonshire! His lack of West Country burr should have blown his cover the moment he opened his beak!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_43b154c9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_43b154c9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_43b154c9
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_43dc74d0
type
Sensitive Guy and Manly Man
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_43dc74d0
comment
Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: King Richard and Prince John.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_43dc74d0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_43dc74d0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_43dc74d0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_44058f87
type
Sssssnaketalk
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_44058f87
comment
Sssssnake Talk: Sir Hiss, naturally, but this is downplayed.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_44058f87
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_44058f87
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_44058f87
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4435aa66
type
Attractive Bent-Gender
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4435aa66
comment
Attractive Bent-Gender: Little John uses stolen golden hubcaps and coins to give "herself" really exaggerated buttocks and breasts, attracting a wolf-whistle from one of John's guards. Robin's fortune teller getup isn't too shabby either.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4435aa66
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4435aa66
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4435aa66
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4508b16b
type
The Guards Must Be Crazy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4508b16b
comment
The Guards Must Be Crazy: Partly because it's a kid's movie and partly because of the lack of budget, Prince John's soldiers and henchmen are remarkably bad at their jobs. His rhino henchmen don't even notice Little John stealing from the treasure box right in front of them! Special mention goes to the crocodile captain, who swings an axe at Friar Tuck and still misses.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4508b16b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4508b16b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4508b16b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_470eb35a
type
Hand Puppet Mockery
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_470eb35a
comment
Hand Puppet Mockery: During "The Villain Sucks" Song "The Phony King of England", the Merry Men entertain Maid Marian with a puppet show featuring crude puppet versions of Prince John and Sir Hiss.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_470eb35a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_470eb35a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_470eb35a
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_48b9731f
type
Paper-Thin Disguise
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_48b9731f
comment
Paper-Thin Disguise: Played with. Prince John and his guards fail to see through Robin and Little John's fortune teller costumes, though it does make John more perceptive to catch on to Robin the second time around. Prince John figures out Robin's disguise as a stork (which itself is actually pretty convincing), while the Sheriff claims he can see through any disguise Robin could cook up - he can't, and proves it on four different occasions.note Twice in the beggar costume, the stork, and when Robin is disguised as Nutsy. However, Prince John figures out who Robin is because of his archery skill in the tournament, and the fact that he "amuses" Maid Marian; Marian was the only one who actually saw through the disguise. On the other hand, Prince John never sees through Little John's less convincing "Sir Reginald" disguise despite sitting right next to him. Hilariously, none of the bad guys ever see through Robin's blind beggar disguise, although Trigger suspects something.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_48b9731f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_48b9731f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_48b9731f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_48cffdb7
type
I Want My Mommy!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_48cffdb7
comment
I Want My Mommy!: A Running Gag with Prince John is him sucking his thumb and calling for his mother whenever someone mentions her.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_48cffdb7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_48cffdb7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_48cffdb7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_49cf2258
type
Hanging Around
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_49cf2258
comment
Hanging Around: After finding out that Friar Tuck had been arrested, Prince John gets the idea to hang him at dawn in order to lure Robin Hood into a trap, and then hang him as well.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_49cf2258
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_49cf2258
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_49cf2258
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4a852458
type
Big Good
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4a852458
comment
Big Good: King Richard is seen by his subjects as the paragon of The Good King. He fixes everything when he comes back. Robin Hood himself is this during King Richard's absence.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4a852458
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4a852458
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4a852458
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4bca5b2e
type
We Have Become Complacent
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4bca5b2e
comment
We Have Become Complacent: Throughout the film, Prince John and his enforcers seem to keep picking up the Smart Ball whenever the heroes start overestimating their incompetence. Things become downright bleak after they start a mocking song about the Prince.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4bca5b2e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4bca5b2e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4bca5b2e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4ce20451
type
Rhetorical Request Blunder
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4ce20451
comment
Rhetorical Request Blunder: Prince John, in a throne room full of taxes, laments how Robin Hood has eluded his grasp once again: Unfortunately, the "giving all his gold" statement backfires dreadfully when Robin takes all the gold from Prince John's palace.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4ce20451
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4ce20451
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4ce20451
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e6c80ca
type
Holy Pipe Organ
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e6c80ca
comment
Holy Pipe Organ: The Sexton Mouse is seen playing a pipe organ using his hands and feet in the church of Friar Tuck.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e6c80ca
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e6c80ca
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e6c80ca
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e7c4536
type
Wham Line
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e7c4536
comment
Wham Line: In the climax, Friar Tuck and Little John successfully load the escapees onto a wagon, and Robin Hood opens the gates. It seems to be smooth sailing... and then Skippy's mother cries out, "STOP! My baby!" Cut to Tagalong running a great distance behind the wagon in the middle of flying arrows, calling for her mother. Robin turns around, rescues the little bunny, and slips her through the bars when the crocodile guard traps them both in the castle. He then has to spend the rest of the night evading the guards and the Sheriff.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e7c4536
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e7c4536
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4e7c4536
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f3bf54e
type
Working on the Chain Gang
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f3bf54e
comment
Working on the Chain Gang: During the scenes where all of Nottingham's citizens are imprisoned, we see the Sheriff opening the door for a chain gang of raccoons coming back from the rock-breaking pit. The final fate of Prince John, Sir Hiss, and the Sheriff. However, if the notes for Decade are to be believed, they are pardoned eventually (granted, they had help).
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f3bf54e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f3bf54e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f3bf54e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f84cdef
type
Smug Snake
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f84cdef
comment
Smug Snake: All of the villains are pompous and nasty, though Sir Hiss is notable for being a literal example.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f84cdef
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f84cdef
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_4f84cdef
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5012cb5c
type
Blind People Wear Sunglasses
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5012cb5c
comment
Blind People Wear Sunglasses: Exploited by Robin Hood when he dons a tattered shawl and tinted glasses to pose as a blind beggar. Robin is able to fool the merciless Sheriff of Nottingham in this disguise when both are together at Skippy's birthday party, and again later when the gallows is being constructed.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5012cb5c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5012cb5c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5012cb5c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5017da77
type
Church of Saint Genericus
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5017da77
comment
Church of Saint Genericus: Several scenes are set in churches or chapels, the Crusades form an important part of the back story, and a major character (Friar Tuck) is "a man of the Church." As for the mice, lesser functions like sexton (a caretaker or janitor) probably don't require a vow of celibacy, unlike the main clerical figures. But beyond that, any specific trappings of religion are pretty ambiguous. Then again, the characters are all animals, so perhaps it's best not to press the theological question too far.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5017da77
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5017da77
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5017da77
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5057d559
type
Kid-Appeal Character
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5057d559
comment
Kid-Appeal Character: Skippy Rabbit is a young boy who admires Robin Hood, much like the audience.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5057d559
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5057d559
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5057d559
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_506ffa51
type
Tears of Joy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_506ffa51
comment
Tears of Joy: Lady Kluck, as the newlywed Robin and Marian exit the church, is seen weeping into a handkerchief and declaring, "I've never been so happy!"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_506ffa51
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_506ffa51
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_506ffa51
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_50b05d30
type
Disproportionate Retribution
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_50b05d30
comment
Disproportionate Retribution: When Prince John learns that the villagers have been making fun of him (and he really had it coming anyway), he triples the (already harsh) taxes, driving the town further into poverty and imprisoning most of the villagers who were unable to pay.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_50b05d30
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_50b05d30
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_50b05d30
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_51300dbf
type
Fat Bastard
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_51300dbf
comment
Fat Bastard: The Sheriff, with his big belly and crass demeanor, is the closest example.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_51300dbf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_51300dbf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_51300dbf
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5313c266
type
Bookends
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5313c266
comment
Book Ends: Robin Hood gets an arrow shot through his hat in the opening scene. His hat gets shot again in the climax while swimming away from arrow fire.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5313c266
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5313c266
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5313c266
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_53f5119f
type
The Dragon
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_53f5119f
comment
The Dragon: The Sheriff of Nottingham to Prince John. One of few Disney examples in plain sight, he's aggressive, takes orders from his (slightly) brighter boss, orders the Mooks around, and serves as the primary physical threat to Robin as demonstrated nicely during the final battle scene in the tower. It could be argued that he's actually Co-Dragons with Sir Hiss, who is bar none Prince John's most intelligent lackey (almost to the point of being the Only Sane Man). Friar Tuck and Alan make a point of neutralizing Hiss early in the archery tournament because they know how dangerous he can be. Unusually for the Co-Dragons trope, Hiss and the Sheriff seem to get along perfectly amiably, to judge by the only scene where they interact; it probably helps that their distinct roles mean they're never in competition with one another.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_53f5119f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_53f5119f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_53f5119f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_553c2ade
type
Sympathetic Villain, Despicable Villain
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_553c2ade
comment
Sympathetic Villain, Despicable Villain: Sir Hiss goes along with much of Prince John's evil scheming, but even he seems mortified that John would consider hanging Friar Tuck. Though not reformed by the end, Hiss is shown having a light-hearted laugh at the film's end when John and the former Sheriff of Nottingham are nearly skewered by Nutley's stray arrow (which, in fairness, Hiss himself barely dodged).
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_553c2ade
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_553c2ade
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_553c2ade
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_56515a39
type
Artistic License – History
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_56515a39
comment
Artistic License – History: To be expected, considering the Robin Hood genre (especially see Anachronism Stew). Lore commonly puts the outlaw as a contemporary of John and Richard rather than (more likely) Edward I. However, consider the following: The Church was very powerful in the 12th Century and would have made a serious fuss over the Sheriff helping himself to the contents of the church poor box. The Church didn't actually pay taxes, which was one of the things that they argued with the Crown over - up until Henry VIII broke from Rome in the 16th century. Could a civil authority arrest a clergyman? Possibly, but the Church would demand the right to try and sentence Friar Tuck, and they'd probably let him off (especially since the whole incident started over the Sheriff taking church alms money, which the local bishop might very well consider to be a crime in its own right, as discussed in the previous bullet point). To allow the Sheriff to do so would set too much of a precedent, as many members of the clergy had less than sterling morals, having no fear of the arm of the law. They would never allow Friar Tuck to hang. Prince John should have known that, after the major political mess caused by the death of Archbishop Thomas Becket during his father's reign. Sir Hiss is shocked that Prince John would hang a "man of the Church", but this was more to show John as a bad person, rather than the strength of the Church. (The hanging was intended as bait for Robin Hood.) Prince John certainly had aspirations to seize the throne while his brother was away, but the taxes weren't for his benefit but mostly to fund the ongoing Crusades and then later as Richard's ransom. Also, the money for his ransom was raised by a special collection largely overseen by Eleanor of Aquitaine, Richard and John's mother, by taxing the church. Prince John's plan involved raising money to persuade the Emperor to continue to hold him prisoner for a while longer - which ironically probably would have saved his life. Speaking of Eleanor of Aquitaine, you'd be forgiven for believing she's dead by how Prince John refers to her. Except she wasn't — she outlived almost all of her children, including Richard. She even lived many years into John's reign as the legitimate King of England once Richard died. (The deleted alternate ending does have Richard mention that she'd be upset if he exiled John, but nothing that remains in the film proper establishes she's still around.) The bit about how she always liked Richard better is accurate, at least. What did Richard do when, against all odds, he got back to England alive? Start ruling? Get an heir ready to continue the empire he had built up? No, he poured all his resources into the military and rekindled his war in France, and then died of gangrene at 41 after he was shot by a young man within his own castle walls in Limousin. King Richard didn't imprison John or the Sheriff of Nottingham (though the sheriff did lose his jobnote Robin Hood getting associated with King Richard likely started because someone noticed that both he and Richard the Lionheart both fought against a Sheriff of Nottingham at some point in their lives, and decided it would make a good story if they both fought the same Sheriff, turning the popular outlaw from a mere criminal to a supporter of the true king, and then it caught on) when he got back. He completely forgave his brother, and then named him as his heir, because he never sired any legitimate children. John was not accepted as heir by Richard's French territories, who much preferred Richard's nephew Arthur of Brittany (who admittedly had a better claim to the throne, his father being older than John). This lack of direct heirs was the first step in the dissolution of the Angevin Empire. The line "too late to be known as John the First" in "The Villain Sucks" Song is strange, since he is (so far) the only King John of England. Presumably it's because at the time, he was not yet officially the king - being the younger brother (i.e. born "too late"), he had no right to call himself John the Anything. One historical point the film actually got right was that, while it's unlikely that John ever whined and sucked his thumb about it (especially as a grown man), Richard was their mother's favorite child. John himself was their father's favourite child, so Richard also was very jealous of John for their father’s affections. And, of course, John wasn't the first regent Richard left in power, nor the least popular. That "honor" goes to William de Longchamp, a Norman, who so alienated the English that John was more popular. Most significantly, the movie ends with John convicted and Working on the Chain Gang and Richard back on the throne. Anyone with a passing knowledge of English history knows that Richard died young while he was king and was succeeded by John because of a lack of legitimate heirs. (Though, given that they're all talking animals here and any sense of history is loose to begin with, things might turn out differently.)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_56515a39
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_56515a39
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_56515a39
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_56b8b4f1
type
Lean and Mean
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_56b8b4f1
comment
Lean and Mean: Prince John is quite skinny, compared to the benevolent Richard, who is tall and muscular. Richard also has a mane, while John doesn’t. However, the reason for John lacking a mane and muscles could be because he’s still young.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_56b8b4f1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_56b8b4f1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_56b8b4f1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_58e43f17
type
Cats Are Mean
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_58e43f17
comment
Cats Are Mean: Played straight and inverted with Prince John and King Richard (who are both lions), respectively.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_58e43f17
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_58e43f17
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_58e43f17
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5a65ba8c
type
Flirting Under Fire
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5a65ba8c
comment
Flirting Under Fire: Robin Hood proposes to Marian during a battle, and they start making plans for the honeymoon and starting a family.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5a65ba8c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5a65ba8c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5a65ba8c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5af55436
type
Forced to Watch
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5af55436
comment
Forced to Watch: In the climax, all Skippy and his family can do is watch with horror as his little sister is running behind the giant escape wagon. Their mother in particular looks aghast and terrified. Robin Hood rescues her barely in time from a slew of arrows.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5af55436
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5af55436
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5af55436
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5c219298
type
Phony Psychic
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5c219298
comment
Phony Psychic: In the opening scene, Robin Hood and Little John disguise in drag as fortune tellers with the intent of robbing Prince John's coach. Sir Hiss is skeptical and points out that they may be bandits, but Prince John is taken in and quickly fleeced of everything but his crown and underwear.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5c219298
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5c219298
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5c219298
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ca80293
type
Pragmatic Villainy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ca80293
comment
Pragmatic Villainy: While Sir Hiss seems genuinely shocked that Friar Tuck is going to be hanged, he might just be afraid that doing so would get them excommunicated from the Catholic Church. This was a pretty big deal at the time of the Divine Right of Kings; it was essentially The Pope declaring a ruler to be illegitimate. This actually happened to the historical (by then king) John in 1209, and only ended when he pledged England as a feudal domain of the Pope.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ca80293
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ca80293
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ca80293
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ce2c9c6
type
Suddenly Shouting
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ce2c9c6
comment
Suddenly Shouting: Reversed. During Prince John's outburst after hearing about the mocking sing-song about him, he angrily screams to the Sheriff "Double the taxes! Triple the taxes! SQUEEZE EVERY LAST DROP FROM THOSE INSOLENT..." though suddenly finishes in a calm, outright amused tone "...er, musical peasants".
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ce2c9c6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ce2c9c6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ce2c9c6
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5d5fb8e2
type
Clueless Deputy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5d5fb8e2
comment
Clueless Deputy: Nutsy and Trigger; the former is a ditz and the latter can't keep his crossbow under control. (Not that the Sheriff is much better, but he looks like it in comparison.)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5d5fb8e2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5d5fb8e2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5d5fb8e2
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5dc016f
type
Anthropomorphic Animal Adaptation
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5dc016f
comment
Anthropomorphic Animal Adaptation: As Alan-a-Dale puts it, this is how the animals tell the story of Robin Hood.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5dc016f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5dc016f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5dc016f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ee26f31
type
Adaptation Amalgamation
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ee26f31
comment
Adaptation Amalgamation: One of both the story of Robin Hood and the legend of Reynard the Fox, taking the animal characters from the latter and placing them in the roles of Robin Hood and his associated characters. For example, Reynard the fox became Robin Hood, Bruin the bear became Little John, Grimbeert the badger became Friar Tuck, Chanticleer the rooster became Alan-a-Dale, Ysengrim the wolf became the Sheriff of Nottingham, and King Nobel the lion became Prince John.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ee26f31
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ee26f31
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5ee26f31
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5f173ee4
type
I Kiss Your Hand
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5f173ee4
comment
I Kiss Your Hand: Robin and Little John use this trope to steal PJ's finger rings at the beginning. Robin stealthily slips off the ring before kissing the hand while Little John actually sucks the jewels off the rings. He gets wise to this trick by the time Little John tries it again later.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5f173ee4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_5f173ee4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_5f173ee4
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_603b77ec
type
Savage Wolves
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_603b77ec
comment
Savage Wolves: The Sheriff of Nottingham, one of the main antagonists of the series, is portrayed as a wolf. So are his Mooks, although they're scraggly enough to be mistaken for Wicked Weasels at a casual glance.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_603b77ec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_603b77ec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_603b77ec
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_616c4844
type
Getting the Boot
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_616c4844
comment
Getting the Boot: Friar Tuck starts fighting back against the Sheriff and kicking him out of the chapel when he takes the last farthing from the poor box; subverted when Trigger pulls the cowl over Tuck's face, and the Sheriff arrests him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_616c4844
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_616c4844
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_616c4844
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_61c3ca7b
type
Panthera Awesome
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_61c3ca7b
comment
Panthera Awesome: Prince John and King Richard are lions but only the latter is awesome.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_61c3ca7b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_61c3ca7b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_61c3ca7b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_61d054a0
type
Animal Stereotypes
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_61d054a0
comment
Animal Stereotypes: Mother Rabbit has a horde of children. Toby, the timid turtle. Prince John and King Richard as lions (one with a mane; one without), though Prince John may not have a mane due to being a young man and may develop one in the future. Our hero is a cunning fox and his Love Interest a vixen. Lady Kluck, a hen, is very nurturing to the little kids, and also to Maid Marian, whom she serves as a lady-in-waiting. The animators were open to playing with the trope at the concept stage, such as making the Sheriff a goat, but the director couldn't be bothered to deviate from stereotypes and overruled them.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_61d054a0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_61d054a0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_61d054a0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_628da1d4
type
Species Subversives
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_628da1d4
comment
Species Subversives: King Richard may be representative of the typical brave and noble lion, but his brother Prince John definitely isn't.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_628da1d4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_628da1d4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_628da1d4
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_62b72e
type
Perilous Marriage Proposal
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_62b72e
comment
Perilous Marriage Proposal: Robin proposes to Maid Marian while fighting off Prince John's army after chaos breaks loose at the archery tournament. Doubles as Casual Danger Dialogue, and naturally overlaps with Wacky Marriage Proposal.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_62b72e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_62b72e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_62b72e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_62f9d08e
type
Freeze-Frame Bonus
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_62f9d08e
comment
As a Freeze-Frame Bonus, "Forgive them all" is carved into the wall of Friar Tuck's cell. It may have been put there by a prior tenant, but it would be a characteristic statement for him to write.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_62f9d08e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_62f9d08e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_62f9d08e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_64e975cf
type
Manly Tears
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_64e975cf
comment
Manly Tears: Big, tough Little John's eyes fill with tears when he and Skippy momentarily think Robin has been shot by Prince John's archers.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_64e975cf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_64e975cf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_64e975cf
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_655d406a
type
Instrument of Murder
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_655d406a
comment
Instrument of Murder: Friar Tuck and Alan-a-Dale use Alan's lute as a bow, to prevent Sir Hiss from blowing Robin's cover during the archery tournament. In this case though, it's more to pop a balloon than to kill someone.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_655d406a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_655d406a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_655d406a
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_66f59ad
type
Balloonacy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_66f59ad
comment
Balloonacy: Everything having to do with Sir Hiss in the balloon is nonsense. First of all, for the balloon to float, it would need to be full of Helium or Hydrogen or some other gas lighter than air. If that were the case, Sir Hiss would choke to death in a few seconds with no oxygen. Secondly, he would not be able to inflate the balloon any further by gasping and blowing into it. He's already fully inside it, so any air he's inhaling is coming from inside the balloon already. He'll only be filling it with more carbon dioxide (which also doesn't float) so even if he somehow did manage to fill it even more, it would only float lower, not higher. Not to mention the fact that a single balloon would not be enough to get a snake the size of Sir Hiss afloat. Balloonacy is present on so many levels.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_66f59ad
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_66f59ad
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_66f59ad
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6787588e
type
The Pardon
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6787588e
comment
The Pardon: The epilogue shows a "Pardoned by Order of King Richard" sign covering Robin Hood's wanted poster.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6787588e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6787588e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6787588e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_68068108
type
Evil Laugh
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_68068108
comment
Evil Laugh: Prince John both plays this straight and lampshades it at different points in the film: His standard "Ah-ha! AH-HA!" The Lampshade Hanging early in the film: "Forgive me a cruel chuckle: Eheheheheheh, power." Robin has one of his own when he's disguised as a fortune teller; while running away with Prince John's gold, jewels, and robe, "she" waves a cheery goodbye, cackling with glee Wicked Witch style.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_68068108
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_68068108
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_68068108
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_68923ef0
type
Fur Is Clothing
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_68923ef0
comment
Fur Is Clothing: It's only there for a second, but during the first big fight scene, this◊ happens to Lady Kluck.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_68923ef0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_68923ef0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_68923ef0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_69681e01
type
Big Brother Instinct
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_69681e01
comment
Big Brother Instinct: Robin Hood demonstrates this for Skippy and the other kids. He goes to Skippy's birthday party with gifts and everything. Later, in the climax, he shoots a bunch of guards when Skippy briefly stays behind to fire at them, letting the rabbit think he was making the winning shot.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_69681e01
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_69681e01
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_69681e01
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6a2ae11f
type
Improbable Weapon User
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6a2ae11f
comment
Improbable Weapon User: Friar Tuck uses Alan-A-Dale's lute as a makeshift bow to shoot down Sir Hiss.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6a2ae11f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6a2ae11f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6a2ae11f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6b0a284f
type
Awesome Ego
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6b0a284f
comment
Awesome Ego: In-Universe, Robin is an unparalleled archer, a great improv actor, and a master of disguise - and he knows it. This ego in no way prevents him from being a Nice Guy, but he is extremely confident, as indicated in his earliest conversation with Little John. Unfortunately, this confidence draws him straight into the trap at the archery contest; not only can he not resist the chance to win a kiss from the woman he loves, but he just can't tone down his archery skills enough to hide his true identity. Prince John was counting on him to show off and thus give himself away.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6b0a284f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6b0a284f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6b0a284f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c51e9e1
type
Fisher King
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c51e9e1
comment
Fisher King: While under the rule of Prince John, Nottingham is drab and miserable, with its ragged peasants barely scraping by. After King Richard's return, the town looks more pristine and everyone's wearing nicer clothes.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c51e9e1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c51e9e1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c51e9e1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c75e0e4
type
Beware the Silly Ones
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c75e0e4
comment
Beware the Silly Ones: Prince John can be very comical, but if you mock him badly enough, he will not let you get away with it.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c75e0e4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c75e0e4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6c75e0e4
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d871385
type
Villainous BSoD
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d871385
comment
Villainous BSoD: A mild form. Mention Prince John's mother around him, and he grabs his ear and begins to suck his thumb. Even while covered in mud:
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d871385
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d871385
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d871385
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d8ccba7
type
Fantastic Foxes
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d8ccba7
comment
Fantastic Foxes: The cunning and anthropomorphic fox Robin, who uses a combination of skill and trickery to outwit his enemies.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d8ccba7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d8ccba7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d8ccba7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d9bc945
type
Babies Ever After
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d9bc945
comment
Babies Ever After: Discussed when Robin proposes to Marian.note They are foxes, which produce litters in reality, and that many kids wasn't unusual for human families in that time period either. Skippy's explanation for why he tags along on the wedding coach is that "Robin Hood's gonna have kids. So somebody has to keep their eye on things."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d9bc945
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d9bc945
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6d9bc945
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6ef6417b
type
Disney Death
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6ef6417b
comment
Disney Death: During the climactic battle, Robin escapes from the burning castle by jumping into the moat and starting to swim away, but the soldiers shoot arrows after him until he sinks out of sight. He is briefly presumed to have been shot, due to his hat floating on the moat's surface, with an arrow through it, but it turns out he was just hiding underwater. The Sheriff manages to escape from the burning castle along with Prince John and Sir Hiss. If the final scene had been omitted, you could've easily assumed all the villains burnt to death or, at the very least, had their fur and scales burnt off.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6ef6417b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6ef6417b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6ef6417b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6fbe3154
type
Shot in the Ass
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6fbe3154
comment
Shot in the Ass: The little rabbit Skippy shoots Prince John in the rear with an arrow (it bounces off) during the big battle at the archery tournament. (Luckily for Skippy, it goes unnoticed as to just where the arrow came from, in part because Lady Kluck bashes the prince over the head shortly after; otherwise, he would have been in serious trouble considering Prince John's general attitude at that point.)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6fbe3154
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_6fbe3154
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_6fbe3154
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_702bebaf
type
Un-Evil Laugh
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_702bebaf
comment
Un Evil Laugh: Prince John has one of these, suitably for a silly villain like him. (You can hear it at about 1:35 into the video, among other spots.)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_702bebaf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_702bebaf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_702bebaf
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7286e96d
type
Idiot Ball
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7286e96d
comment
Idiot Ball: Even though it was most likely because love was blinding him, one would expect that someone as smart as Robin would have thought to Do Well, But Not Perfect in order to not be spotted during the archery tournament.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7286e96d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7286e96d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7286e96d
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_72d30083
type
Cheaters Never Prosper
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_72d30083
comment
Cheaters Never Prosper: Despite the Sheriff's attempts to cheat during the archery tournament by having one of his Mooks hide inside the target and move it into place and hitting his opponent (Robin Hood) between the legs, the opponent still manages to win.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_72d30083
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_72d30083
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_72d30083
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_75538142
type
Friend to All Children
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_75538142
comment
Friend to All Children: Robin Hood gets along well with his prepubescent fans, and both Maid Marian and Lady Kluck are all too happy to play with the children who "trespass" on Prince John's castle grounds.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_75538142
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_75538142
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_75538142
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_762b9223
type
Played for Laughs
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_762b9223
comment
There is also a near-miss in the first scene that gets Played for Laughs; Robin finds an arrow stuck through his hat after he and Little John narrowly escape the Sheriff's archers.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_762b9223
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_762b9223
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_762b9223
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_772e049b
type
Maid and Maiden
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_772e049b
comment
Maid and Maiden: Lady Kluck and Marian respectively. They fit the archetype as the former is the older and spunkier one who takes care of her, and the latter is the beautiful and romantic young lady who is Robin's love interest.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_772e049b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_772e049b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_772e049b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_777429c6
type
Mutual Pining
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_777429c6
comment
Mutual Pining: In back-to-back scenes, Robin and Marian are shown thinking about each other and wondering if they still love each other, since they haven't been together in years. While Marian wonders whether Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder, Robin is distressed because he's Unable to Support a Wife as an outlaw, and a Proper Lady like Marian deserves better than he can provide.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_777429c6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_777429c6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_777429c6
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_781c70a3
type
Rascally Raccoon
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_781c70a3
comment
Rascally Raccoon: While the raccoons are probably honest townsfolk arrested for not paying extortionate taxes, the scenes where they are depicted in prison stripes deliberately invoke this trope. It's especially noticeable because they are the only imprisoned townsfolk dressed that way.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_781c70a3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_781c70a3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_781c70a3
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_782fdff
type
Storybook Opening
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_782fdff
comment
The text in the Storybook Opening of the film says "Robin Hood had a band [...] men which included a m[...] named Alan-a-Dale who..." This at least implies that there are other outlaws assisting Robin.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_782fdff
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_782fdff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_782fdff
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_78848a7b
type
Harmless Lady Disguise
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_78848a7b
comment
Harmless Lady Disguise: "Oh, poppycock! Female bandits? What next? Rubbish!"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_78848a7b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_78848a7b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_78848a7b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_79503ae9
type
Stout Strength
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_79503ae9
comment
Stout Strength: Little John, Friar Tuck, and the Sheriff of Nottingham are all grossly fat (though to be fair to John, he is a bear). They're also among the most physically powerful of the named characters in the film (although the Sheriff only really gets to show it in the climax). On the distaff side, we have Lady Kluck. Just look at the way she took down those rhino guards!!!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_79503ae9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_79503ae9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_79503ae9
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_79eb1e2e
type
Neutral Female
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_79eb1e2e
comment
Neutral Female: Marian. She's lovely and graceful but almost completely helpless, even when her love is about to be executed before her eyes. However, she almost manages to convince Prince John to spare Robin through The Power of Love and hits a guard aiming for Robin with a pie, which just goes to show how helpful she can be when she tries. Arguably justified, since as a high-ranking lady of the court, she was almost certainly never given any kind of combat training.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_79eb1e2e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_79eb1e2e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_79eb1e2e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7a5bc682
type
White Bunny
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7a5bc682
comment
White Bunny: The members of the rabbit family are all light gray.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7a5bc682
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7a5bc682
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7a5bc682
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7bc076de
type
Hartman Hips
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7bc076de
comment
Hartman Hips: Maid Marian mainly has a slight and slender figure throughout the film, except for when she shakes her butt during the "Phony King of England" song, in which her bottom half appears much peachier than usual.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7bc076de
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7bc076de
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7bc076de
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c889239
type
Fully-Dressed Cartoon Animal
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c889239
comment
Fully-Dressed Cartoon Animal: Several characters, including: Maid Marian (a lovely pink and purple dress and headscarf). Prince John (royal robes and long underwear underneath).note Oddly enough, at the tournament, he's shown to be wearing nothing under his robes, whereas in his first scene, he still was wearing something after Robin stole his robes. Friar Tuck (brown habit). The Sheriff of Nottingham (a red tunic and purple doublet like some lesser noble).
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c889239
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c889239
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c889239
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c9dcc1
type
THeUnfavorite
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c9dcc1
comment
The Unfavorite: "Mother always did like Richard best!" Doubly funny because there is historical evidence that she did. However, their father Henry II favored John, thinking he hadn't rebelled like his three elder brothers; when they showed Henry John's name and seal on a list of those subscribed to the conspiracy, his spirit was broken and he died shortly thereafter.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c9dcc1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c9dcc1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7c9dcc1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7dfdcfa1
type
Hail to the Thief
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7dfdcfa1
comment
Hail to the Thief: "The Phony King of England"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7dfdcfa1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7dfdcfa1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7dfdcfa1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7e6c0522
type
Off with His Head!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7e6c0522
comment
Off with His Head!: What nearly happens to Robin—by order of Prince John, who even quotes the trope verbatim.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7e6c0522
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7e6c0522
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7e6c0522
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7f9b4510
type
Human Knot
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7f9b4510
comment
Human Knot: Happens to Sir Hiss. It helps that he's a rope-like snake.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7f9b4510
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7f9b4510
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7f9b4510
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7fbb2a3
type
Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7fbb2a3
comment
Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: The townspeople's appraisals of John as the "Phony King of England" do not sit well with the Prince, and in retaliation, he enforces even more aggressive taxes and the arrest of all those who fail to pay. The good people of Nottingham were most certainly not singing by the time he was done. Well, except for Alan-a-Dale, but it's much more melancholy ("Not in Nottingham"), to describe the depths to which Nottingham has sunk as a result of Prince John's tyranny. During Robin's looting of the Prince's chamber, he can’t resist taking all the money bags, including those under Prince John's pillow and that he’s holding. Doing so doesn’t wake him up, but agitates him in his sleep, causing him to suck his thumb. This wakes up Hiss, who sees Robin getting away with the gold and causes a commotion, alerting Prince John and starting the final battle.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7fbb2a3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7fbb2a3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7fbb2a3
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7feed01b
type
Stepping-Stone Sword
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7feed01b
comment
Stepping-Stone Sword: When guards hurl spears at Robin Hood when he's clinging to a wall, one embeds itself in a gap between the blocks. Robin uses it to hoist himself up to the top.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7feed01b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_7feed01b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_7feed01b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8042e814
type
Actually Pretty Funny
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8042e814
comment
Actually Pretty Funny: Marian gets wistful and sad when talking with Skippy, his friend Toby and his sisters about Robin Hood, saying Robin has probably forgotten all about her. When Skippy proposes that Robin Hood would come to save her and storm the castle if Prince John did anything, Klucky pretends to be Prince John and mock-fights him to cheer him and Marian up. While they circle and playfight, Marian starts laughing and calling for "Robin Hood" to save her. (Becomes heartwarming when Robin does a rescue for real during the tournament—and proposes to her to boot!)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8042e814
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8042e814
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_8042e814
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_805b13e
type
Wacky Marriage Proposal
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_805b13e
comment
Wacky Marriage Proposal: Robin proposes to Maid Marian in the midst of a serious battle. She happily accepts and jokingly comments how he could've used a more romantic setting.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_805b13e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_805b13e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_805b13e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_823c6e3e
type
Large Ham
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_823c6e3e
comment
Large Ham: Prince John (Peter Ustinov): When Robin Hood says the crown rightfully belongs to King Richard, Prince John stamps on his throne shouting "I am King! KING! KING!" He's even hammier when things go wrong - he cries for mom and sucks his thumb... and doesn't want to play.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_823c6e3e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_823c6e3e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_823c6e3e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_82d28aa8
type
Cover-Blowing Superpower
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_82d28aa8
comment
Cover-Blowing Superpower: Robin Hood gives himself away at the archery tournament with his Improbable Aiming Skills.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_82d28aa8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_82d28aa8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_82d28aa8
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8341ccb1
type
World of Funny Animals
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8341ccb1
comment
World of Funny Animals: This is the animal kingdom as designed for pre-teens.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8341ccb1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8341ccb1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_8341ccb1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_835d1cd2
type
Satellite Love Interest
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_835d1cd2
comment
Satellite Love Interest: Maid Marian has an interesting backstory due to being the niece of the evil Prince John and the good King Richard but her actual role in the movie is little else but "be happy and lovey-dovey around Robin".
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_835d1cd2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_835d1cd2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_835d1cd2
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_85ce4a76
type
Scooby-Dooby Doors
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_85ce4a76
comment
Scooby-Dooby Doors: Done without doors, but otherwise true to the trope, when the tent stuffed with rhino guards (and the Sheriff and Little John) races back and forth between the other rows of tents. (Recycled Animation from Alice in Wonderland.)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_85ce4a76
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_85ce4a76
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_85ce4a76
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_863fa679
type
What Happened to the Mouse?
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: It's never made clear what happened to Captain Crocodile after the castle fire at the end of the film.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_863fa679
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_863fa679
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_863fa679
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8721181a
type
Bowled Over
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8721181a
comment
Bowled Over: Robin Hood and Little John release a cart of wine barrels on Prince John's guards. The guards are knocked over to bowling pin sound effects.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8721181a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_8721181a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_8721181a
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_87c62ade
type
Deadly Dodging
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_87c62ade
comment
Deadly Dodging: Robin uses this tactic against the mook archers, causing them to almost hit each other. Of course, they both duck in time.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_87c62ade
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_87c62ade
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_87c62ade
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_88933ad4
type
Parental Favoritism
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_88933ad4
comment
Parental Favoritism: Prince John bitterly remarks, "Mother always did love Richard best." (Hilariously, this counts as a Historical In-Joke as it was apparently Truth in Television for the real Eleanor Of Aquitaine.)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_88933ad4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_88933ad4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_88933ad4
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_88e5066d
type
Trigger-Happy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_88e5066d
comment
Trigger-Happy: The aptly named Trigger has trouble with his crossbow.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_88e5066d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_88e5066d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_88e5066d
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_890d4ef2
type
Humiliation Conga
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_890d4ef2
comment
Humiliation Conga: The entire film could be seen as this for Prince John. In the first heist that Robin and Little John perform, he is scammed, robbed and stripped of his royal robes, his carriage gets destroyed and he falls in a muddy puddle, getting run over by his guards who are chasing the scammers (under John’s orders) and is left without guards, cold and muddy, wearing nothing but his underwear. During the archery tournament, his plan backfires, he's shot in the backside by a child, beaten by a chicken and dubbed "The Phony King of England". Finally, his second plan to capture Robin ends with him being thrown out of his bed chamber, charged at by his own guards, then chasing Sir Hiss with a stick while sucking his thumb. And to add the cherry on top, he ends up in prison in the epilogue.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_890d4ef2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_890d4ef2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_890d4ef2
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_89499ccf
type
Dolled-Up Installment
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_89499ccf
comment
Dolled-Up Installment: Ever wonder why it's Robin Hood with funny animals? That's because Disney had previously been trying to make a movie about Reynard the Fox but abandoned the idea. Since they had tried to make the character more appealing by giving him Robin Hood-like qualities, it wasn't too hard to take what they had and turn it into a Robin Hood the fox story instead.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_89499ccf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_89499ccf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_89499ccf
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_89f623b4
type
Green Gators
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_89f623b4
comment
Green Gators: Captain Croc is a green crocodile.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_89f623b4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_89f623b4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_89f623b4
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_916c72b3
type
Rule of Symbolism
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_916c72b3
comment
Rule of Symbolism: King Richard's crown is too big for Ki- Prince John's head, and his trying to wear it keeps making him look foolish. Why not get it adjusted/padded? 'Cause it's a metaphor. (That and it doesn't really belong to him yet...) As the lyrics of "Phony King of England" say, "King Richard's crown keeps slippin' down around that pointed head."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_916c72b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_916c72b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_916c72b3
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_92b9e234
type
Accessory-Wearing Cartoon Animal
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_92b9e234
comment
Accessory-Wearing Cartoon Animal: Sir Hiss wears only a hat, and occasionally a matching cape. The crocodile military captain and the vulture mooks similarly only wear hats/helmets and capes. Also, Toby the turtle wears only a hat and glasses, while his father wears only a hat.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_92b9e234
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_92b9e234
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_92b9e234
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9303d6d1
type
Battle Amongst the Flames
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9303d6d1
comment
Battle Amongst the Flames: Robin Hood has to fend off the Sheriff and his torch after said torch sets curtains on fire and immediately spreads to burn the tower around them. Robin jumps back through the burning curtains to escape the Sheriff, who somehow gets out since he's seen at the end of the film.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9303d6d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9303d6d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9303d6d1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_94680696
type
Shaped Like Itself
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_94680696
comment
Shaped Like Itself: The Sheriff's observation of Friar Tuck: "Well, looky there! Friar Tuck, the old do-gooder. He's out doing good again." The oath used by the kids: "If I tattletale, I'll die 'til I'm dead."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_94680696
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_94680696
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_94680696
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_957e5fc2
type
Villainous Breakdown
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_957e5fc2
comment
Villainous Breakdown: Unfortunately, once the "Phony King of England" himself hears the aforementioned song, it leads to him screaming new decrees about tripling the taxes right at the scared-witless Sheriff's face while strangling Sir Hiss. After Robin frees all his prisoners, steals all his gold, causes part of his mother's castle to be burned up and escapes with his life, John goes berserk and chases Sir Hiss around with a stick, blaming him for everything:
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_957e5fc2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_957e5fc2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_957e5fc2
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95aded7e
type
WildWest
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95aded7e
comment
Many of the voices were filled by actors known for working in Westerns; as a result, some of the characters display mannerisms more akin to a Western (in particular the actors for Sheriff and his men play their roles as if they were a sheriff and his deputies from the Wild West or Deep South).
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95aded7e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95aded7e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_95aded7e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95b7c400
type
Faux Affably Evil
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95b7c400
comment
Faux Affably Evil: The Sheriff; he's always cheerful and polite while doing sadistic things.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95b7c400
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95b7c400
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_95b7c400
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95d67d24
type
Get Thee to a Nunnery
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95d67d24
comment
Get Thee to a Nunnery: "A pox on you" (in this case, on the phony king of England) is a Shakespearean-era insult meaning, "I hope you get a disfiguring and potentially deadly disease, like smallpox or syphilis." It did also have a more general meaning along the lines of "To heck with you," so it might be a milder case of Gosh Dang It to Heck!.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95d67d24
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_95d67d24
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_95d67d24
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9600368d
type
Behind the Black
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9600368d
comment
During the "Phony King of England" musical number, Little John does make reference to the merry men as "Robin's wily pack". It does seem like he's just referring to himself and Friar Tuck, though...unless the rest of the outlaws are always conveniently off-screen.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9600368d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9600368d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9600368d
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_96251156
type
Deer in the Headlights
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_96251156
comment
Deer in the Headlights: Prince John tears through Robin's disguise and reveals him to the crowd. Instead of immediately attempting to escape, the outlaw just stands atop his stilts with a dumbfounded expression. To be fair, he wouldn’t have had much luck trying to scarper: he was surrounded by rhino guards.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_96251156
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_96251156
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_96251156
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_966da803
type
Defiant to the End
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_966da803
comment
Defiant to the End: As Prince John prepares to sentence Robin to death as a "traitor to the Crown," Robin yells back, "That crown belongs to King Richard! LONG LIVE KING RICHARD!" When the townspeople join in, Prince John becomes infuriated.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_966da803
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_966da803
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_966da803
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_96b89043
type
Not So Above It All
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_96b89043
comment
Not So Above It All: The calm mouse sexton is very eager to fight the Sheriff when the latter storms into church. He doesn't move from the piano but he has a Death Glare. When Friar Tuck starts knocking the Sheriff around with a stick, the sexton is shouting, "Give it to him! Give it to him! Give it to him, Friar!"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_96b89043
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_96b89043
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_96b89043
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_970c790a
type
Big Bad
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_970c790a
comment
Big Bad: Prince John is the source of the story's conflict. Robin's hiding out, his inability to marry Marian, the heavy taxes - it's all him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_970c790a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_970c790a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_970c790a
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_973d220f
type
Never My Fault
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_973d220f
comment
After Robin frees all his prisoners, steals all his gold, causes part of his mother's castle to be burned up and escapes with his life, John goes berserk and chases Sir Hiss around with a stick, blaming him for everything:
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_973d220f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_973d220f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_973d220f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_97928805
type
Barefoot Cartoon Animal
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_97928805
comment
Barefoot Cartoon Animal: A few of the characters, most notably Lady Kluck, Alan-a-Dale, the church mice, and the rabbit family (for whom this trope might overlap with Barefoot Poverty).
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_97928805
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_97928805
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_97928805
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_97fa0a10
type
Mass "Oh, Crap!"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_97fa0a10
comment
Mass "Oh, Crap!": When Robin is exposed by Prince John, at the end of the archery tournament, Marian, Lady Kluck and the entire crowd gasp in shock and horror.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_97fa0a10
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_97fa0a10
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_97fa0a10
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9843be73
type
As You Know
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9843be73
comment
As You Know: Prince John and Sir Hiss remind each other in John's coach how they got rid of King Richard by sending him to the Crusades.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9843be73
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9843be73
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9843be73
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9bcd82c0
type
Took a Level in Badass
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9bcd82c0
comment
Took a Level in Badass: Skippy. He goes from nearly wetting himself over Prince John conceivably executing him to firing an arrow at Prince John's butt, and later helping Robin stop some guards.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9bcd82c0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9bcd82c0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9bcd82c0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9c1f758a
type
Kill It with Fire
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9c1f758a
comment
Kill It with Fire: The Sheriff's plan for dealing with Robin during the tower fight scene. It takes the castle with them but nobody dies; no one we see, anyway...
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9c1f758a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9c1f758a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9c1f758a
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9cbf01d6
type
Stay in the Kitchen
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9cbf01d6
comment
In a dangerous situation, Lady Kluck tells Marian, "Run for it, lassie! This is no place for a lady!" She probably means "Lady" as in "aristocratic Proper Lady"; Kluck's own title is presumably a courtesy one, as she's a Lady-In-Waiting.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9cbf01d6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9cbf01d6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9cbf01d6
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: If the original ending under What Might Have Been had been used, Robin's comment about "That one almost had my name on it" would have been a lot more significant in the beginning. During the "The Villain Sucks" Song "The Phony King of England", Little John sings the lyrics "we'll find a way to make him pay and steal our money back". That's exactly what happens during the jailbreak - Robin Hood steals Prince John's taxes and sends them over to Little John and Friar Tuck as they bust the townspeople out of prison. The kids worry when Skippy shoots an arrow into Prince John's territory, worrying about how the prince may react about them trespassing. Marian and Lady Kluck reassure them they're not going to tell anyone about the children sneaking inside. Prince John later shows he'll lock up children if their parents can't pay taxes, and orders his archers to fire on them when they escape.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9d12bbc1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9d12bbc1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9d12bbc1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9edbda07
type
Elite Mooks
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9edbda07
comment
Elite Mooks: The crocodile guard captain and the executioner rhino, who at least looks slightly less moronic than the regular kind.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9edbda07
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9edbda07
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9edbda07
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9f62723d
type
Get Out!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9f62723d
comment
Get Out!: In response to the Sheriff telling him that he's gonna preach his neck into a hangman's noose, Friar Tuck yells, "Get outta my church!!!!" Unfortunately, Trigger pulls Tuck's cowl over his head, allowing the Sheriff to seize him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9f62723d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9f62723d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9f62723d
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fb11776
type
Non-Lethal Warfare
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fb11776
comment
Non-Lethal Warfare: Zigzagged. Robin fights to incapacite, not kill, but Prince John, the Sheriff, and the soldiers clearly want him dead. The film also averts Never Say "Die", with Prince John explicitly pronouncing a sentence of death or ordering his men to kill Robin.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fb11776
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fb11776
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fb11776
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fe35833
type
Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fe35833
comment
Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas: Prince John's relationship with his mother is complicated. He seems to react with a huge amount of remorse when he ends up either wrecking her things (i.e., her mirror and her castle) or is reminded of her in some way and childishly sucks his thumb. However, he also disparagingly states that his mother liked Richard much better than him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fe35833
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fe35833
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_9fe35833
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a0b0840c
type
More Expendable Than You
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a0b0840c
comment
More Expendable Than You: When the tournament fight starts, Kluck orders Marian to run, saying, "This is no place for a lady!" Meanwhile, she steals the golden arrow and uses it as a weapon on some guards and the Sheriff, to buy Marian a window of time to escape.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a0b0840c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a0b0840c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_a0b0840c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a1d70162
type
I Just Shot Marvin in the Face
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a1d70162
comment
No Gun Safety: The guards are dangerously reckless with their crossbows, one of which has a very unreliable trigger mechanism. Even though "Old Betsy" explicitly does have a safety, and Trigger frequently assures the Sheriff that it's on, it doesn't seem to work very well.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a1d70162
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a1d70162
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a1d70162
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a22ae9a5
type
Hat Damage
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a22ae9a5
comment
Hat Damage: The movie opens with a chase that leaves an arrow stuck through Robin's hat (triggering the Stock Phrase "That one almost had my name on it!"). Later, after a climactic fall into a castle moat, the hat bobs up, with another arrow through it, but with no Robin, and the onlookers assume he's dead.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a22ae9a5
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a22ae9a5
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a22ae9a5
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a236dd4c
type
Half-Dressed Cartoon Animal
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a236dd4c
comment
Half-Dressed Cartoon Animal: Robin and Little John, among others. Really, this applies to most characters, except those listed under Fully-Dressed Cartoon Animal.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a236dd4c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a236dd4c
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a236dd4c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a27c0c2c
type
Artistic License – Religion
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a27c0c2c
comment
Artistic License – Religion: Friar Tuck. In addition to friars not being invented yet (see Anachronism Stew above), he apparently has charge of the local church like a parish priest.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a27c0c2c
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a27c0c2c
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a27c0c2c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2b998a0
type
Wouldn't Hurt a Child
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2b998a0
comment
Wouldn't Hurt a Child: During the melee that ensued after the archery tournament, seven-year-old rabbit Skippy shoots an arrow at Prince John, which bounces off his rear end. Despite the result, he's guilty of assaulting royalty with a deadly weapon. Yet when he and his family are thrown in jail because they didn't pay their taxes, Skippy isn't singled out for punishment for that. Is it an example of this trope, the censors stepping in, or an oversight? You decide.note That, or it just might be that no one saw Skippy shoot the arrow in the chaos. Prince John was brained by Lady Kluck immediately afterwards, so his attention was on her. This is debatable anyway, as Skippy and his siblings are put in prison, and when they go off during the jailbreak, the soldiers don't hesitate about trying to shoot his baby sister while she is running.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2b998a0
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2b998a0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2b998a0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2ff4e6f
type
Single Tear
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2ff4e6f
comment
Single Tear: When Robin is exposed and facing execution, Maid Marian pleads for his life. Prince John sneers and asks if he even loves her back. A tear runs down Marian's face as she waits for Robin's answer.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2ff4e6f
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2ff4e6f
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a2ff4e6f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a3b161
type
All-Knowing Singing Narrator
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a3b161
comment
All-Knowing Singing Narrator: Alan-a-Dale is the one telling this story, but he also takes part in it. For instance, when he's arrested and thrown in jail, he already knows what's happening outside.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a3b161
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a3b161
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a3b161
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a545e2a4
type
Money Fetish
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a545e2a4
comment
Money Fetish: Prince John sleeps with bags of taxes.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a545e2a4
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a545e2a4
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a545e2a4
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a5a60f30
type
Still Sucks Thumb
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a5a60f30
comment
Still Sucks Thumb: Played for Laughs when the villainous Prince John still sucks his thumb when things don't go his way.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a5a60f30
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a5a60f30
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a5a60f30
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a70223
type
Karma Houdini
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a70223
comment
Karma Houdini: Trigger and Nutsy are the only named villains who aren't arrested at the end of the film. Given that they weren't abusing their power like John, Hiss, and the Sheriff were, this shouldn't be a surprise. They're seen guarding the imprisoned John, Hiss, and the Sheriff for King Richard at the end, so it's clear they just do their job no matter who's on the throne. Either that or they did a Heel–Face Turn. In the original planned ending, all three of the established baddies — Prince John, Sir Hiss, and the Sheriff of Nottingham — would have more or less gotten a smack on the wrist for their misdeeds; the Sheriff would have even been a guest at Robin & Marian's wedding! Presumably because of the Sheriff's sheer cruelty in the film, he instead joins Prince John and Sir Hiss in the rock-breaking pit in the finalized ending. In fact, this is a result of making the Sheriff a more active antagonist. A deleted scene had him collecting taxes at a pavilion in the middle of town. This would have been more historically accurate than walking around to the houses, but rather passive, making him look less villainous. Changing it to his more active role, as seen in the finished film, makes him much nastier.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a70223
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a70223
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a70223
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a796d2a6
type
Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a796d2a6
comment
Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy: None of Prince John's archers can ever hit the heroes for squat. And the ones that do make their mark end up getting blocked or deflected. At least actual Stormtroopers have hit their targets occasionally.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a796d2a6
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a796d2a6
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a796d2a6
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a8982539
type
Gray Rain of Depression
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a8982539
comment
Gray Rain of Depression: The "Not in Nottingham" scene, where all the townspeople are shown languishing in jail, is accompanied by a gloomy rain.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a8982539
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a8982539
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a8982539
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a98abeda
type
Roguish Romani
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a98abeda
comment
Roguish Romani: At the beginning of the film, Robin and Little John disguise themselves as female fortune tellers in order to rob Prince John.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a98abeda
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_a98abeda
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_a98abeda
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_aba8065b
type
Fatal Flaw
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_aba8065b
comment
Fatal Flaw: Robin is cocky, sometimes to the point of picking up the Idiot Ball. This nearly gets him beheaded when he can't resist showing off his Improbable Aiming Skills while in disguise.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_aba8065b
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_aba8065b
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_aba8065b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ac6ea68c
type
Near-Villain Victory
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ac6ea68c
comment
Near-Villain Victory: Prince John orders the guards to tie up Robin Hood and orders the executioner to behead him after finding out he's disguised as a stork. The only reason Robin Hood is spared is Little John tricked Prince John by poking him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ac6ea68c
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ac6ea68c
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ac6ea68c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ae372576
type
I Warned You
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ae372576
comment
I Warned You: "I tried to warn you. But no, no, no, you wouldn't listen..."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ae372576
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ae372576
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ae372576
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_aedf28fe
type
Falling-in-Love Montage
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_aedf28fe
comment
Falling-in-Love Montage: "Love goes on and on...", although, in this case, they were already in love, and this is an affirmation of that love as opposed to an epiphany.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_aedf28fe
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_aedf28fe
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_aedf28fe
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b02f21f
type
Digital Destruction
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b02f21f
comment
Digital Destruction: While most Disney films avoid using the DVNR process, the Most Wanted Edition DVD release of the film was an exception to the rule. While Disney is usually careful even when using the infamous process, the issue was that the film was made when Disney was using Xeroxing in place of hand-inked cels, and the itchy, hairy lines combined with a restoration process that is specifically designed to remove things it detects as scratches and dirt was a recipe for trouble. There are many obvious instances of linework and art erasing throughout this release. It's most noticeable in the opening (when Robin is chatting with Little John) and during the archery scenes, where the artwork of the arrows is frequently eaten away at into nothing due to DVNR art erasing.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b02f21f
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b02f21f
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b02f21f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b09c818
type
"Blackmail" Is Such an Ugly Word
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b09c818
comment
"Blackmail" Is Such an Ugly Word: When Little John questions the morality of robbing the rich to feed the poor:
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b09c818
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b09c818
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b09c818
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b0b8970e
type
Recycled Animation
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b0b8970e
comment
Recycled Animation: The most infamous example in the Disney Animated Canon, as Disney was strapped for cash after Phase One of Walt Disney World opened two years prior. Much of the dancing in "The Villain Sucks" Song is recycled from earlier Disney films — including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs! Notable examples include Little John and Lady Kluck dancing like Baloo and King Louie from The Jungle Book, then Maid Marian and Robin Hood dancing like Duchess and O'Malley from The Aristocats - Marian also at one point does the twist and afterwards wiggles her butt in the same manner as Duchess. Later during the song, she dances with some other characters just like Snow White dances with the dwarves. The shots of marching rhino soldiers are the same shot each time. Likewise with most of the shots of them running and the shots of the trumpet announcers during the tournament (with matching recycled sound clip). The same animation of the Sheriff of Nottingham often appears more than once, just with the lip sync changed to match with whatever he's saying in a shot, along with his distinct walk cycle. The Sheriff's animator, Milt Kahl, was reportedly not amused at how his animation was being reused more than once. More an example of Limited Animation: After loading all the civilians onto the cart (although as it turns out, missing the baby rabbit), Friar Tuck exclaims "On to Sherwood Forest!" Look at the people on the cart. None of them are moving, not even breathing. The exact same shot of the children rabbits laughing is used when they first meet Maid Marian and during "The Phony King of England." Speaking of children rabbits, the exact same shot of the dancing rabbits at Skippy's birthday party is reused during the archery tournament. Even more, the multiple dancing rabbits in both scenes are just one couple of rabbits with multiple palette swaps copy/pasted four times across the screen in a looped animation. Much of Sir Hiss's animation is borrowed from Kaa, most particularly his eyes.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b0b8970e
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b0b8970e
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b0b8970e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b2d56
type
Arson, Murder, and Admiration
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b2d56
comment
Arson, Murder, and Admiration: When Prince John reacts to "The Phony King of England" becoming a hit even among his subordinates:
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b2d56
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b2d56
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b2d56
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3595485
type
Pantsless Males, Fully-Dressed Females
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3595485
comment
Pantsless Males, Fully-Dressed Females: Most of the female characters are fully dressed and most of the male characters are pantsless. For instance, Robin is wearing a tunic and a hat, while Marian is wearing a floor-length dress and a headscarf.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3595485
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3595485
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3595485
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3968d99
type
Righteous Rabbit
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3968d99
comment
Righteous Rabbit: The rabbit family are all good-natured. Their family is solid and loving, though given to bickering as families do.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3968d99
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3968d99
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b3968d99
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b5b4b077
type
The Ace
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b5b4b077
comment
The Ace: Robin is an expert archer, master of disguise, champion of the people, etc.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b5b4b077
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b5b4b077
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b5b4b077
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b707726f
type
Hypocritical Humor
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b707726f
comment
Hypocritical Humor: In a dangerous situation, Lady Kluck tells Marian, "Run for it, lassie! This is no place for a lady!" She probably means "Lady" as in "aristocratic Proper Lady"; Kluck's own title is presumably a courtesy one, as she's a Lady-In-Waiting. The corpulent Sheriff of Nottingham saying that "that fat friar is gonna hang."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b707726f
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b707726f
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b707726f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b7f832ec
type
Slippery as an Eel
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b7f832ec
comment
Slippery as an Eel: "You eel in snake's clothing!"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b7f832ec
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b7f832ec
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b7f832ec
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b8dbbc07
type
Ink-Suit Actor
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b8dbbc07
comment
Ink-Suit Actor: Terry-Thomas as Sir Hiss. Complete with Thomas's gap in his teeth, perfect for having his tongue flicker out.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b8dbbc07
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b8dbbc07
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b8dbbc07
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b9fc31d3
type
Victoria's Secret Compartment
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b9fc31d3
comment
Victoria's Secret Compartment: Happens accidentally. During the scene where Skippy sneaks into the castle to get his lost arrow, Lady Kluck quite clearly loses the shuttlecock down her bodice and spends several hilarious seconds dancing around, trying to get it out.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b9fc31d3
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_b9fc31d3
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_b9fc31d3
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bc74ef27
type
Berserk Button
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bc74ef27
comment
Berserk Button: Mentioning King Richard in front of Prince John. Mentioning his mother is probably okay, as it just causes him to bluescreen and start sucking his thumb. For Friar Tuck, dismissing his 'sermons' is one thing, but outright disrespecting him, a man of the church, by telling him that his 'preachiness' is gonna soon land him in a hangman's noose while stealing out of the poor box is another thing entirely.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bc74ef27
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bc74ef27
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_bc74ef27
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcd27e37
type
Improbable Aiming Skills
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcd27e37
comment
Improbable Aiming Skills: In the archery contest, Robin still manages to score perfect bull's-eyes even though the arrows he's using are made of two twigs tied loosely together with cord. When a cheap shot causes him to aim high, he fires a second arrow at the first one to redirect it back to the bulls-eye, even knocking out the Sheriff's arrow in the process. He's friggin' Robin Hood! Accept no substitutes. Of course, this inimitable prowess comes back to bite him in the tail, because Prince John knows that no one else could have done such a thing.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcd27e37
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcd27e37
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcd27e37
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcf135d7
type
Curb-Stomp Cushion
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcf135d7
comment
Curb-Stomp Cushion: In his fight with Friar Tuck, the Sheriff mostly gets shoved around and whacked stupid by the livid Friar. Before Trigger intervenes however, the Sheriff recovers and handily slashes Tuck's club clean in half. Though Tuck still doesn't lose footing until Trigger distracts him, he is clearly panicking and fighting much more desperately.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcf135d7
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcf135d7
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_bcf135d7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bdffd1cf
type
Alliterative List
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bdffd1cf
comment
Alliterative List: At the start, Sir Hiss is called "silly serpent", a "suspicious snake", and "reluctant reptile" while Friar Tuck is a "fat friar", and a "corpulent cleric". At the end, when Prince John chases Sir Hiss and tries to hit him with his stick, he calls him a "cowardly cobra," "procrastinating python," and an "aggravating asp." All of these could also count as Alliterative Nicknames. The Sexton also at one point refers to the Sheriff as a "big bellied bully".
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bdffd1cf
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bdffd1cf
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_bdffd1cf
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf414570
type
Cunning Like a Fox
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf414570
comment
Cunning Like a Fox: Robin Hood is a fox in this version because of his cunning.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf414570
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf414570
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf414570
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf5a5757
type
Crisis Catch-and-Carry
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf5a5757
comment
Crisis Catch And Carry: While he and Little John break everyone out of jail and try to make a getaway for Sherwood Forest, Robin notices Skippy's baby sister trying to catch up to them with guards close behind. He runs back in to get her, but the portcullis is lowered before he can get out, so he slips her to Little John through the bars before attempting to escape.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf5a5757
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf5a5757
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_bf5a5757
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d1d6ad
type
Who Names Their Kid "Dude"?
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d1d6ad
comment
Who Names Their Kid "Dude"?: Referenced:
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d1d6ad
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d1d6ad
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d1d6ad
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d57cf7
type
"The Villain Sucks" Song
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d57cf7
comment
"The Villain Sucks" Song: "The Phony King of England". Unfortunately, this song getting popular ruins things for everyone. When a Manchild with a lot of power hears the song, he increases the taxes so much, everyone gets arrested.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d57cf7
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d57cf7
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_c1d57cf7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c2c80ef
type
Neck Lift
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c2c80ef
comment
Neck Lift: Prince John to Sir Hiss. Of course, being a snake, he's pretty much all neck. When Trigger realizes that Little John mugged the Sheriff for his disguise, the outlaw grabs Trigger by the throat, keeping him from attacking while the townsfolk flee the jail.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c2c80ef
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c2c80ef
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_c2c80ef
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3191ad7
type
Smooch of Victory
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3191ad7
comment
Smooch of Victory: Marian expects one from Skippy during their roleplay game, and when he refuses she smooches him, much to his embarrassment.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3191ad7
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3191ad7
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3191ad7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b301
type
Cute Little Fangs
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b301
comment
Cute Little Fangs: Being heroic foxes, both Robin and Marian have these.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b301
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b301
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b301
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b9ec
type
Irony
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b9ec
comment
Irony: Little John's Establishing Character Moment is telling Robin off for acting too recklessly. He's shown to go along with Robin's schemes, albeit reluctantly, and is quick to stop Robin from taking risks. After Little John saves Robin from being executed by intimidating the prince, he becomes cocky and composes an insulting song about “the Phony King of England�. When Prince John hears about the song, he triples the taxes as retribution. It’s not Robin Hood who is at fault for things getting worse, but Little John.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b9ec
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b9ec
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_c335b9ec
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3c18143
type
Hope Spot
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3c18143
comment
Hope Spot: Halfway through the climax, Robin and his band managed to bring the villagers across the courtyard to the drawbridge, Robin lowers it, the villagers all pile onto a cart, and they're all about to escape, right? Don't Celebrate Just Yet: one of Mother Rabbit's children fell behind and Robin has to double back to help her.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3c18143
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3c18143
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_c3c18143
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c4105ca6
type
Bespectacled Cutie
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c4105ca6
comment
Bespectacled Cutie: Mother Rabbit, who wears glasses and whose gentle personality accentuates the sense of cuteness associated with them.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c4105ca6
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c4105ca6
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_c4105ca6
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c691d3f4
type
Offscreen Teleportation
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c691d3f4
comment
Offscreen Teleportation: The turtle when the children climb through the back gate. He is clearly too large to fit through, so when the scene switches, he has suddenly appeared on the other side.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c691d3f4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c691d3f4
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_c691d3f4
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c6a83b97
type
Rapid-Fire Descriptors
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c6a83b97
comment
Rapid-Fire Descriptors: The song "The Phony King of England" describes Prince John as "sniveling, groveling, measly, weaselly, blabbering, jabbering, gibbering, jabbering, plundering, plotting, wheeling, dealing".
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c6a83b97
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c6a83b97
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_c6a83b97
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: Lady Kluck's attack on the guards bears a strong resemblance to a football player's charge. She even has her arm curled, as if holding a ball. Plus the angle and perspective of the rhinos who leap to catch her. The music played in this scene is in fact the University of Wisconsin Badgers fight song. Notice the pan to Friar Tuck. To top it off, the sequence ends as Lady Kluck goes flying through the air and a rhino guard tries to catch her, looking exactly as if he's running to catch a football out of the air. Fans refer to this part of the movie as the 'Football Chicken' scene. Prince John often mentioning that his mother always liked Richard best is a reference to the well-known Smothers Brothers bit "Mom always liked you best", 'you' referring to Dick (aka Richard) Smothers. Prince John and King Richard are lions. What film came out five years earlier - and included both of them in its cast to boot?
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c75df49a
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c75df49a
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_c75df49a
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c868a42a
type
Freudian Excuse
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c868a42a
comment
Freudian Excuse: Prince John has serious maternal issues. It's implied that he's always been The Unfavorite compared to Richard.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c868a42a
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c868a42a
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 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_c868a42a
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c93ae7fc
type
High-Dive Escape
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c93ae7fc
comment
High-Dive Escape: Robin leaps from the roof of the burning castle into the moat.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c93ae7fc
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_c93ae7fc
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_c93ae7fc
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ca87e3ec
type
No Name Given
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ca87e3ec
comment
No Name Given: We don't know the names of any of Mother Rabbit's children, except for Skippy.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ca87e3ec
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ca87e3ec
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ca87e3ec
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cba91068
type
Heli-Critter
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cba91068
comment
Heli-Critter: Sir Hiss, kept aloft by a balloon and propelling himself with his tail.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cba91068
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cba91068
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cba91068
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cc3c365f
type
Goofy Print Underwear
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cc3c365f
comment
Goofy Print Underwear: Lady Kluck, despite being a Half-Dressed Cartoon Animal, has these on under her feathers.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cc3c365f
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cc3c365f
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cc3c365f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ccbb4ff1
type
Combat and Support
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ccbb4ff1
comment
Combat and Support: The two varieties of Mooks: there's the rhino guards who attack with halberds and the wolf archers who are employed by the Sheriff of Nottingham.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ccbb4ff1
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ccbb4ff1
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ccbb4ff1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cd336741
type
"Wanted!" Poster
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cd336741
comment
"Wanted!" Poster: There are wanted posters for Robin Hood plastered all over Nottingham. Maid Marian has one pinned up inside her wardrobe, and moons over it like a poster of a rock star.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cd336741
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cd336741
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cd336741
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda0c781
type
Revealing Skill
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda0c781
comment
Revealing Skill: The "spindle-legged stork" is just a little too good at archery when a kiss from Marian is on the line.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda0c781
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda0c781
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda0c781
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda501da
type
Killed Off for Real
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda501da
comment
Killed Off for Real: Averted, but this is what's intended for Friar Tuck at the movie's climax. Robin and Little John are both distraught at the prospect, and realize that a jailbreak in the dead of night is his only hope of survival.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda501da
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda501da
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cda501da
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cdd676a3
type
Hyper-Competent Sidekick
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cdd676a3
comment
Hypercompetent Sidekick: As Prince John is quite lacking in both brawn and brains for a Big Bad, he has his two most important followers make up for it, the Sheriff in brawn and Sir Hiss in brains specifically.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cdd676a3
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cdd676a3
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cdd676a3
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce6555f0
type
Lighter and Softer
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: Considering it's an adaptation of the legend, it's very comedic and only has some cute cuddly animals.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce6555f0
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce6555f0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce6555f0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce767e6f
type
Co-Dragons
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce767e6f
comment
It could be argued that he's actually Co-Dragons with Sir Hiss, who is bar none Prince John's most intelligent lackey (almost to the point of being the Only Sane Man). Friar Tuck and Alan make a point of neutralizing Hiss early in the archery tournament because they know how dangerous he can be. Unusually for the Co-Dragons trope, Hiss and the Sheriff seem to get along perfectly amiably, to judge by the only scene where they interact; it probably helps that their distinct roles mean they're never in competition with one another.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce767e6f
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce767e6f
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ce767e6f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ceee5c14
type
Actually Quite Catchy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ceee5c14
comment
Actually Quite Catchy: Even though its whole purpose is to make fun of their boss, both Sir Hiss and the Sheriff take a liking to "The Phony King of England" and cheerfully sing it while on the job...and while Prince John is in earshot. (Prince John himself, however, does not find it amusing at all.)
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ceee5c14
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ceee5c14
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ceee5c14
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf36f69d
type
Reed Snorkel
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf36f69d
comment
Reed Snorkel: This is how Robin escapes the moat at the end. When Little John leans over to investigate, Robin spits water in his face.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf36f69d
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf36f69d
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf36f69d
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf92fea8
type
Cassandra Truth
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf92fea8
comment
Cassandra Truth: Sir Hiss sees through every single disguise. While he might not know who it is, he knows they aren't who they claim to be. Yet every time, Prince John assumes he's just jealous of the attention they're getting. If Prince John had listened to Hiss now and then (don't trust the strange fortune teller women, for one), he'd have been spared some of his humiliations.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf92fea8
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf92fea8
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cf92fea8
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfc52d52
type
Spoiled Brat
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfc52d52
comment
Spoiled Brat: Prince John, immensely. When the Nottingham citizens shout out their loyalty to King Richard, John's response is whining while jumping up and down on his throne.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfc52d52
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfc52d52
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfc52d52
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfdb9e17
type
Cerebus Syndrome
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfdb9e17
comment
Cerebus Syndrome: The overall film is light-hearted and comedic... until the third act of the film, where the Sheriff arrests the Nottingham villagers. Also, there are some violent moments particularly with Prince John, such as planning to hang Friar Tuck by using him as bait to capture Robin Hood.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfdb9e17
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfdb9e17
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfdb9e17
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfe72499
type
Shoot the Bullet
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfe72499
comment
Shoot the Bullet: In the archery competition, the Sheriff has just scored a bullseye (by cheating). To make sure Robin (in disguise) can't win, the sheriff taps Robin's bow as he releases. The arrow goes in a high arc. Undaunted, Robin nocks another arrow and fires at the first arrow. It hits, changing its direction such that it too hits a perfect bullseye, right through the sheriff's arrow.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfe72499
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfe72499
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_cfe72499
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d03fc3f1
type
Good Shepherd
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d03fc3f1
comment
Good Shepherd: As usual, Friar Tuck is a devout and admirable man. A couple of notable examples in which he demonstrates this trait: When the Sheriff helps himself to the poor box, he flies into a rage - not because it cuts into his bottom line but because that money is supposed to help the poor. As a Freeze-Frame Bonus, "Forgive them all" is carved into the wall of Friar Tuck's cell. It may have been put there by a prior tenant, but it would be a characteristic statement for him to write. When Little John gets into the cell and starts releasing Tuck from his bonds, explaining that they're getting him out of there, the relieved friar declares, "Thank God! My prayers have been answered."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d03fc3f1
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d03fc3f1
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d03fc3f1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d19469d
type
Character’s Most Hated Song
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d19469d
comment
Character’s Most Hated Song: Prince John becomes very angry when he hears "The Phony King of England," which the residents of Nottingham have started singing - even his own Co-Dragons, Sir Hiss and the Sheriff, admit they find it catchy and entertaining. It's a justified example, since the song is about Prince John, but his reaction is what puts it in this trope; his response is to triple the already-punishing taxes, which soon results in the entire town being locked in prison because they can't pay them.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d19469d
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d19469d
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d19469d
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1a2a4c7
type
Musical Exposition
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1a2a4c7
comment
Musical Exposition: "Oo-De-Lally" introduces Robin Hood and Little John as a pair of Lovable Rogues, and shows how they have to keep running from the Sheriff's mooks.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1a2a4c7
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1a2a4c7
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1a2a4c7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1fc4a16
type
Please Spare Him, My Liege!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1fc4a16
comment
Please Spare Him, My Liege!: Marian to Prince John after Robin is captured. It might have worked if Robin hadn't taken offense to being called a traitor to the crown. Then again, since Prince John was interrupted after saying "but traitors to the crown must die..." Robin would probably have been executed anyway, just not "suddenly, instantly, and immediately."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1fc4a16
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1fc4a16
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d1fc4a16
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d397657d
type
Hoist by His Own Petard
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d397657d
comment
Hoist by His Own Petard: While Robin get exposed during the Tournament, he's not done in by his disguise (which was actually convincing enough to fool most of the authorities). Instead, Robin exposes himself because of his archery skills. John knew Robin would not be able to resist attending the Tournament and was specifically watching for any archers who displayed the same level of skill with the bow and arrow as the infamous outlaw. Robin flirting with Marian didn't help his disguise much either.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d397657d
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d397657d
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d397657d
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d52d28b6
type
Hypocrite
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d52d28b6
comment
Hypocrite: After he is captured at the archery contest, Prince John calls Robin a traitor to the crown, despite the fact that he unlawfully seized the throne while Richard was off on the Crusades. Robin calls him out on it in the most awesome way possible.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d52d28b6
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d52d28b6
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d52d28b6
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d5eed41c
type
Cry into Chest
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d5eed41c
comment
Cry into Chest: After pleading for Robin's life, Maid Marian hides her face in Lady Kluck's arms as Prince John orders Robin to be beheaded.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d5eed41c
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d5eed41c
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d5eed41c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d7b34c31
type
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d7b34c31
comment
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": The Sheriff of Nottingham. He's only ever called "Sheriff", even by his close associates. We have no idea what his real name is.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d7b34c31
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d7b34c31
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d7b34c31
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d8afec40
type
…But He Sounds Handsome
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d8afec40
comment
…But He Sounds Handsome: During the archery tournament, Robin, disguised as a stork, praises himself and taunts the Sheriff of Nottingham about his failure catching him. He also claims Robin is a better archer than he is, while landing a perfect bullseye.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d8afec40
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_d8afec40
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_d8afec40
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_da2b1604
type
Foe-Tossing Charge
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_da2b1604
comment
Foe-Tossing Charge: In one of the funniest and most awesome parts of the entire movie, Lady Kluck does this while inventing football several centuries early.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_da2b1604
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_da2b1604
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_da2b1604
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dae5c997
type
Action Girl
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dae5c997
comment
On the distaff side, we have Lady Kluck. Just look at the way she took down those rhino guards!!!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dae5c997
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dae5c997
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_dae5c997
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_db2f3581
type
All Girls Want Bad Boys
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_db2f3581
comment
All Girls Want Bad Boys: Sis Rabbit makes it sound like some bad boy attraction when Robin shows up at her brother's birthday party. Of course, in truth, he is wanted because he is good to the people.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_db2f3581
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_db2f3581
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_db2f3581
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_db912a80
type
The Good King
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_db912a80
comment
King Richard is seen by his subjects as the paragon of The Good King. He fixes everything when he comes back.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_db912a80
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_db912a80
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_db912a80
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dbd2c15e
type
Everyone Can See It
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dbd2c15e
comment
Everyone Can See It: All of Nottingham ships Robin/Marian, though the pair are initially uncertain of each other's feelings because they haven't met for several years. Little John goes further and tries to make it happen via royal decree (at knifepoint).
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dbd2c15e
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dbd2c15e
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_dbd2c15e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dc335a04
type
Ear Worm
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dc335a04
comment
Ear Worm: "The Phony King Of England" is so catchy, even Hiss and the Sheriff enjoy it. The Sheriff especially seems surprised that John himself doesn't enjoy it because "it's a big hit".
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dc335a04
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dc335a04
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_dc335a04
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dca97045
type
Just Following Orders
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dca97045
comment
Trigger and Nutsy are the only named villains who aren't arrested at the end of the film. Given that they weren't abusing their power like John, Hiss, and the Sheriff were, this shouldn't be a surprise. They're seen guarding the imprisoned John, Hiss, and the Sheriff for King Richard at the end, so it's clear they just do their job no matter who's on the throne. Either that or they did a Heel–Face Turn.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dca97045
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dca97045
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_dca97045
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dd3d1f69
type
Wicked Witch
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dd3d1f69
comment
Robin has one of his own when he's disguised as a fortune teller; while running away with Prince John's gold, jewels, and robe, "she" waves a cheery goodbye, cackling with glee Wicked Witch style.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dd3d1f69
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dd3d1f69
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_dd3d1f69
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_df41acb
type
Casual Danger Dialogue
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_df41acb
comment
Casual Danger Dialogue: Overlaps with Flirting Under Fire; Robin proposes to Marian and the two of them plan their honeymoon and future family while dodging through a chaotic open brawl. Marian finds it Actually Pretty Funny.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_df41acb
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_df41acb
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1.0
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_df41acb
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_df7154e0
type
Nice Mice
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_df7154e0
comment
Nice Mice: The Sexton and his wife. They gave their last farthing to the poor box.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_df7154e0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_df7154e0
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_df7154e0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfb71617
type
Male Gaze
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfb71617
comment
Male Gaze: One of PJ's rhino soldiers wolf-whistles with a flutter of his ears at Little John in drag after checking out "her" butt, enlarged by smuggling solid gold hubcaps.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfb71617
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfb71617
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfb71617
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfbb1685
type
"Pan Up to the Sky" Ending
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfbb1685
comment
"Pan Up to the Sky" Ending: The movie closes with a pan up from the carriage into the sky.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfbb1685
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfbb1685
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfbb1685
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfe57573
type
Historical In-Joke
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfe57573
comment
Historical In-Joke: Prince John begins crying and sucking his thumb when his mother is mentioned, and grouses about how she always liked his brother better. John's mother in real life was the infamous Eleanor of Aquitaine, who really did favor her elder son, King Richard, over John. Richard and John’s father, King Henry II of England, on the other hand, favoured John. Richard and John being lions references lions being on the coat of arms of the House of Plantagenet (and which is actually seen in the background in a few shots, such as John's carriage in the beginning).
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfe57573
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfe57573
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_dfe57573
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e034faef
type
Limited Animation
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e034faef
comment
More an example of Limited Animation: After loading all the civilians onto the cart (although as it turns out, missing the baby rabbit), Friar Tuck exclaims "On to Sherwood Forest!" Look at the people on the cart. None of them are moving, not even breathing.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e034faef
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e034faef
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_e034faef
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e12c23fb
type
Splitting the Arrow
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e12c23fb
comment
Splitting the Arrow: Wouldn't be a Robin Hood film without it. Unfortunately, Prince John was expecting Robin to reveal himself through his archery skill and cannily arrests the 'winner' of the tournament.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e12c23fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e12c23fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_e12c23fb
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e150c4c7
type
Manchild
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e150c4c7
comment
Manchild: Prince John, who's very whiny, often throws temper tantrums, constantly sucks his thumb and cries very easily.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e150c4c7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e150c4c7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_e150c4c7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e16217f8
type
Historical Villain Upgrade
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e16217f8
comment
Historical Villain Upgrade: Prince John, in this story, taxes people out of sheer greed and is even responsible for Richard's crusades, via his hypnotic Evil Chancellor. As noted in Artistic License – History above, the heavy taxes were raised in order to finance Richard's wars and his ransom when he was captured by the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. John was a pretty lousy king, but he wasn't quite as bad as he's depicted here.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e16217f8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e16217f8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_e16217f8
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e1c796e9
type
Diegetic Switch
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e1c796e9
comment
Diegetic Switch: "Not In Nottingham" is played and sung by Alan-a-Dale, and when he finishes singing, the scene moves to the church, where Friar Tuck is ringing the church bell and the sexton is playing the organ to the tune, as Alan-a-Dale's lute fades out.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e1c796e9
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e1c796e9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_e1c796e9
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e24d2d5c
type
Reptiles Are Abhorrent
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e24d2d5c
comment
Reptiles Are Abhorrent: Sir Hiss the snake, Prince John's Evil Chancellor. There's also the crocodile Elite Mook, although like Trigger and Nutsy he's probably Just Following Orders.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e24d2d5c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e24d2d5c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_e24d2d5c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e34400ab
type
Ambiguously Gay
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e34400ab
comment
Ambiguously Gay: Prince John, who has a very campy inflection to his voice, behaves very childishly and effeminately and is very quick to cry. As if all said wasn't obvious, he also lacks a mane (which, in lions, usually means low levels of testosterone). He's also very receptive to "Sir Reginald's" compliments.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e34400ab
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e34400ab
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_e34400ab
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e37f19
type
Disguised in Drag
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e37f19
comment
Disguised in Drag: Robin Hood and Little John both pull this trick at the beginning, stealing everything valuable that's not nailed down after Prince John dismisses the notion of female bandits as "rubbish". Robin is good at it, but Little John's cover would have been blown if he spoke to anyone up close.Useless triviaRobin's voice actor, Brian Bedford, performed in drag after Robin Hood's theatrical release. He probably did so before the film too, given that his female voice is fairly convincing.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e37f19
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e37f19
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_e37f19
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4965307
type
Composite Character
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4965307
comment
Composite Character: Almost every character is a mashup of one from Robin Hood and another set of medieval folktales starring Reynard the Fox.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4965307
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4965307
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4965307
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4d079c1
type
Greek Chorus
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4d079c1
comment
Greek Chorus: Alan-a-Dale sings the story in which he's also participating.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4d079c1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4d079c1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_e4d079c1
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e5421161
type
Expy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e5421161
comment
Expy: Little John could be Baloo's long lost twin brother (bonus for both characters being voiced by Phil Harris); ditto Sir Hiss for Kaa of The Jungle Book, although his voice actor is different. Also, Nutsy and Trigger (and another one of Little John's identical twins) got smaller roles in Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Nutsy and Trigger also share animation models with the Beatles-esque vultures from The Jungle Book. Many other characters are drawn similarly to other Disney characters. The elephants look like the elephants from The Jungle Book, the crocodiles and hippos look like the ones from Fantasia, the owls look similar to Archimedes from The Sword in the Stone. Robin Hood and Maid Marian may be the inspiration for Tod and Vixie of The Fox and the Hound.note Curiously enough in the Mexican Spanish dub, Marian's voice actress (Diana Santos) voiced both Marian and Vixie respectively. Robin Hood, of Reynard the Fox. In 1937, Walt Disney showed some interest in adapting the 12th-century legend of Reynard, but the project stalled due to Walt's concerns that Reynard was an unsuitable choice for a hero. He commented, "I see swell possibilities in 'Reynard', but is it smart to make it? We have such a terrific kid audience... parents and kids together. That's the trouble – too sophisticated. We'll take a nosedive doing it with animals." A proposed film about Reynard and Chanticleer was scrapped in the early 1960s in favor of The Sword in the Stone. Later on, in 1970, while 'The Aristocats'' was in production, Ken Anderson began exploring possibilities for the next film, commenting that "As director of story and character concepts, I knew right off that sly Robin Hood must be a fox. From there it was logical that Maid Marian should be a pretty vixen."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e5421161
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 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e5421161
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_e5421161
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e67ff203
type
Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e67ff203
comment
Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder: Marian worries that this is what happened to Robin, since they haven't seen each other in years. However, the very next scene proves that her fears are unfounded, as Robin is shown daydreaming about her and worrying that his status as an outlaw makes him Unable to Support a Wife.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e67ff203
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e67ff203
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_e67ff203
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e699f77e
type
Borrowed Without Permission
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e699f77e
comment
Borrowed Without Permission: Robin Hood claim they're just borrowing from those who can afford it. Little John scoffs at this, saying they're seriously in debt.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e699f77e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e699f77e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_e699f77e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e8e3807
type
Aside Glance
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e8e3807
comment
Aside Glance: Hiss stares into the camera in disbelief after the two Johns laugh off his complaints about having his seat stolen.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e8e3807
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_e8e3807
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_e8e3807
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0d7317
type
Men of Sherwood
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0d7317
comment
Men of Sherwood: This being Robin Hood, it's expected (though there aren't quite so many of them as in other versions). At the start of the film, the Sheriff's soldiers prove to be an evil example of this. One manages to get an arrow right through Robin's hat!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0d7317
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0d7317
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0d7317
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0df85e
type
Ham-to-Ham Combat
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0df85e
comment
Ham-to-Ham Combat: Prince John vs. Sir Hiss. You can practically see the flecks of scenery flying from their mouths.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0df85e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0df85e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb0df85e
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb8ec7c8
type
Jerkass
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb8ec7c8
comment
Jerkass: Both Prince John and the Sheriff are rude, power-tripping jerks. They are also the villains and get their comeuppance in the end.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb8ec7c8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb8ec7c8
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb8ec7c8
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb99df21
type
Funny Animal
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb99df21
comment
Any raccoon that shows up in this movie fits this trope because raccoons are native only to the Americas. This may be a Funny Animal movie, but this movie takes place in Medieval England, and people in Europe back in the Middle Ages would have not even heard of raccoons, so this counts as Anachronism Stew as well.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb99df21
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb99df21
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_eb99df21
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ecf22444
type
ShurFineGuns
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ecf22444
comment
Shur Fine Guns: Trigger's crossbow Old Betsy is notoriously unsafe. There's a reason the Sheriff is terrified of it.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ecf22444
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ecf22444
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_ecf22444
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee0d29b6
type
Coin-on-a-String Trick
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee0d29b6
comment
Coin-on-a-String Trick: The Sheriff of Nottingham pulls a variation on this when Robin is disguised as a blind bigger: flipping a coin into Robin's cup with so much force that it bounces itself and the two coins already in the cup out, where he snatches them in mid-air.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee0d29b6
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee0d29b6
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee0d29b6
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee7a60e9
type
One-Steve Limit
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee7a60e9
comment
One-Steve Limit: Averted; Prince John and Little John.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee7a60e9
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-1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee7a60e9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_ee7a60e9
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_efdce8d0
type
A Truce While We Gawk
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_efdce8d0
comment
A Truce While We Gawk: A brief one, but Little John and the Sheriff exchange terrified looks when they see the rabble they've got caught in is about to run straight into a tower.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_efdce8d0
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_efdce8d0
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_efdce8d0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f005700f
type
Conspicuous Consumption
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f005700f
comment
Conspicuous Consumption: One of the expenses we see Prince John spend the money he gets from taxes is outfitting his carriage with solid gold hubcaps. It just goes to show what a bastard he is considering many of the ordinary folk are struggling just to feed themselves.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f005700f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f005700f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_f005700f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f165cf2c
type
Last-Second Word Swap
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f165cf2c
comment
Last-Second Word Swap: Hiss does one of these in "The Phony King of England" when Prince John walks in, swapping in complimentary adjectives. Unfortunately for him, the Sheriff is unaware that John is there and corrects Hiss, singing the insulting version.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f165cf2c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f165cf2c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_f165cf2c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f1c3907
type
Jingle the Coins
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f1c3907
comment
Jingle the Coins: The Sheriff of Nottingham loves to shake the money inside his purse and hear it jingle. He's also made aware that the blacksmith is hiding spare coins in his leg cast by their jingling, so he "helps" him put his foot up and get the remaining coins.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f1c3907
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f1c3907
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_f1c3907
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f2d8e3c2
type
Evil Plan
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f2d8e3c2
comment
Evil Plan: Prince John is on a power trip. After sending his brother off "on that crazy Crusade," he plunders the kingdom in the name of taxes.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f2d8e3c2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f2d8e3c2
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_f2d8e3c2
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f3fd818b
type
Dark Reprise
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f3fd818b
comment
Dark Reprise: The earlier parade music plays with a more ominous sound as Robin, having just won the archery tournament in disguise as a stork, struts to the pavilion, blissfully unaware that he's been found out and oblivious to the guards trailing behind him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f3fd818b
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f3fd818b
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 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_f3fd818b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f47bdd2a
type
Violent Glaswegian
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f47bdd2a
comment
Violent Glaswegian: Lady Kluck, with her thick Scottish accent and Boisterous Bruiser attitude, fits this to a T. This is a hen who tackles rhinos... and wins!
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f47bdd2a
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f47bdd2a
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_f47bdd2a
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f48540c7
type
King of Beasts
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f48540c7
comment
King of Beasts: King Richard (a straight example) and Prince John (an inversion) are both anthropomorphic lions.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f48540c7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f48540c7
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_f48540c7
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f5289c99
type
Shaking the Rump
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f5289c99
comment
Shaking the Rump: During the "Phony King of England" song, Marian at one point shakes her rear end enthusiastically.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f5289c99
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f5289c99
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_f5289c99
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f9f2c33
comment
Running Gag: The unreliable safety on "Old Betsy".
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f9f2c33
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_f9f2c33
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_f9f2c33
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa1d0606
type
Interactive Narrator
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa1d0606
comment
Interactive Narrator: Alan-a-Dale sometimes chats to the audience, sometimes sings a song about what's going on just then, and sometimes gets into the fighting. The sheriff even arrests him.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa1d0606
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa1d0606
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa1d0606
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa74c41c
type
Distant Duet
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa74c41c
comment
Distant Duet: Variation—in her room at the castle, Marian wonders if Robin still loves her or even remembers her, while humming to herself the tune of their love song. Cut to Robin, who not only remembers her (and is daydreaming about her), but is humming the same tune. Also acts as a form of musical Foreshadowing, since at that point the audience hasn't heard the love song yet.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa74c41c
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa74c41c
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Robin Hood (1973) / int_fa74c41c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_faf5732b
type
I Call It "Vera"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_faf5732b
comment
I Call It "Vera": Trigger and his 'trusty' crossbow "Betsy".
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_faf5732b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_faf5732b
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_faf5732b
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fb2136ec
type
Big, Thin, Short Trio
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fb2136ec
comment
Big, Thin, Short Trio: The three main antagonists. The Sheriff of Notthingham is a Fat Bastard (Big), Prince John is a skinny lion (Thin), and Sir Hiss is a small snake who can be concealed in a basket (Short).
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fb2136ec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fb2136ec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fb2136ec
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fc151e9d
type
Department of Redundancy Department
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fc151e9d
comment
Department of Redundancy Department: Prince John is prone to this. Also, the oath the animal kids swear when Skippy shoots his arrow into the castle grounds. "If I tattletale, I'll die 'til I'm dead."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fc151e9d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fc151e9d
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fc151e9d
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fccd06b6
type
Beware the Nice Ones
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fccd06b6
comment
Beware the Nice Ones: It's not a good idea to steal from the poor in front of Friar Tuck. It's an even worse idea to take from the poor box in his own church while he's watching, especially if you threaten to hang him afterwards. He won't take it well. At all. Seriously, don't fuck with him. Just don't. Even Father Sexton gets this; when the Friar attacks the Sheriff, he starts shouting, "Give it to him! Give it to him! Give it to him, Friar!" Little John is generally a happy-go-lucky kind of guy until Robin's in trouble. He'll threaten lives if it means saving his buddy.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fccd06b6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fccd06b6
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1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fccd06b6
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fcd9b657
type
Gallows Humor
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fcd9b657
comment
Gallows Humor: Conversed by Robin and Little John; when an arrow goes through Robin's hat, he jests that the archers' aim is improving:
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fcd9b657
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fcd9b657
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fcd9b657
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fd412292
type
Wise Serpent
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fd412292
comment
Wise Serpent: Sir Hiss serves as Prince John's chief advisor, and is far smarter than his foolish boss. He generally spends the movie trying to give John sound advice, in particular managing to see through every single disguise the heroes employ (he doesn't always know who they are, but he can tell that they're not who they pretend to be). However, John continually ignores his suggestions, leading to more humiliation.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fd412292
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fd412292
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fd412292
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdc83c2c
type
Dead Hat Shot
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdc83c2c
comment
During the climactic battle, Robin escapes from the burning castle by jumping into the moat and starting to swim away, but the soldiers shoot arrows after him until he sinks out of sight. He is briefly presumed to have been shot, due to his hat floating on the moat's surface, with an arrow through it, but it turns out he was just hiding underwater.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdc83c2c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdc83c2c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdc83c2c
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdf22cfd
type
Evil Is Hammy
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdf22cfd
comment
Evil Is Hammy: Prince John chews the scenery with abandon, such as his "DOUBLE THE TAXES!" scene. Sir Hiss and the Sheriff also have their moments, but their evil boss is still hammier.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdf22cfd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdf22cfd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fdf22cfd
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fe0330fb
type
Brick Joke
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fe0330fb
comment
Brick Joke: In an early scene, Lady Kluck jokes that when Maid Marian marries Robin, that will mean King Richard will have "an outlaw for an in-law". In the end, when Robin and Marian do get married, King Richard himself makes the same remark to Friar Tuck.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fe0330fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fe0330fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fe0330fb
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fea42091
type
Badass Preacher
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fea42091
comment
It's not a good idea to steal from the poor in front of Friar Tuck. It's an even worse idea to take from the poor box in his own church while he's watching, especially if you threaten to hang him afterwards. He won't take it well. At all. Seriously, don't fuck with him. Just don't. Even Father Sexton gets this; when the Friar attacks the Sheriff, he starts shouting, "Give it to him! Give it to him! Give it to him, Friar!"
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fea42091
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_fea42091
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_fea42091
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ff6f943f
type
Verbal Business Card
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ff6f943f
comment
Verbal Business Card: "I'm Alan-a-Dale, a minstrel." "I am Sir Reginald, Duke of Chutney."
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ff6f943f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ff6f943f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_ff6f943f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ffad4e9f
type
Shown Their Work
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ffad4e9f
comment
Shown Their Work: Of course Robin would suggest Normandy as part of his honeymoon with Marian. That is where the English nobility of the setting originates from.
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ffad4e9f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_ffad4e9f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_ffad4e9f
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_name
comment
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Robin Hood (1973) / int_name
 Robin Hood (1973) / int_name
itemName
Robin Hood (1973)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
A Boy, a Girl, and a Baby Family / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
A Lizard Named "Liz" / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Accent Slip-Up / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Accessory-Wearing Cartoon Animal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Actually Quite Catchy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Again with Feeling / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Alcohol Hic / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
All-Knowing Singing Narrator / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Alliterative Name / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Ambiguously Christian / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Animal Occupation Stereotypes / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Animal Stereotypes / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Animated Musical / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Anthropomorphic Animal Adaptation / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Artistic License – Gun Safety / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Ass in a Lion Skin / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Assumed Win / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Attack! Attack... Retreat! Retreat! / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Attractive Bent-Gender / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Award-Bait Song / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Awesome Ego / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Babies Ever After / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Bad Ol' Badger / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Badass Preacher / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Baddie Flattery / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Balloonacy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Barefoot Cartoon Animal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Barely-Changed Dub Name / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Battle Amongst the Flames / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Battle in the Rain / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Beary Funny / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Beleaguered Assistant / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Beware the Nice Ones / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Big Creepy-Crawlies / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Big Guy, Little Guy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Big, Thin, Short Trio / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Big Word Shout / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
"Blackmail" Is Such an Ugly Word / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Blind People Wear Sunglasses / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Borrowed Without Permission / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Bowled Over / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Brawn Hilda / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Breaking News Interruption / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Buffoonish Tomcat / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Bumbling Henchmen Duo / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
…But He Sounds Handsome / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Canine Fiction / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Cartoony Eyes / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Casual Danger Dialog / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Casual Danger Dialogue / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Cave Behind the Falls / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Childish Villain, Mature Hero / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Children Voicing Children / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Christianity Is Catholic / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Climbing Climax / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Clueless Deputy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Co-Dragons / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Coin-on-a-String Trick / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Comic Trio / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Conservation of Competence / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Cool Crown / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Cover-Blowing Superpower / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Cunning Like a Fox / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Damsel in Distress / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Dead Hat Shot / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Deadly Dodging / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Death by Adaptation / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
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Defeat Means Menial Labor / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Description Cut / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Digital Destruction / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Dirty Coward / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Disguised in Drag / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Distinction Without a Difference / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Diurnal Nocturnal Animal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Dog Pile of Doom / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Dressing as the Enemy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Dueling Dubs / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Ears as Hair / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Enigmatic Minion / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Even the Loving Hero Has Hated Ones / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Evil Chancellor / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Evil Debt Collector / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Evil Genius / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Evil Is Petty / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Exactly What It Says on the Tin / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
External Retcon / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Extreme Close-Up / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Eyes Never Lie / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Fake Aristocrat / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Falling-in-Love Montage / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Fat and Skinny / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Feline Fiction / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Flirting Under Fire / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Foe-Tossing Charge / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Football Fight Song / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Four-Fingered Hands / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Fully-Dressed Cartoon Animal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Funny Animal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Fur Is Clothing / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Furry Baldness / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Furry Female Mane / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Gallows Humor / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Gateway Series / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Get Out! / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Good Animals, Evil Animals / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Good Shepherd / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Grappling-Hook Pistol / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Greek Chorus / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Green Gators / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Hail to the Thief / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Hair-Trigger Temper / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Half-Dressed Cartoon Animal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Ham-to-Ham Combat / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Hand Puppet Mockery / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Hanging Around / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Hartman Hips / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Heli-Critter / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Heroic Canines, Villainous Felines / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
High-Class Glass / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
High-Dive Escape / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Historical In-Joke / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Historical Villain Upgrade / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Hollywood Cop Uniform / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Holy Pipe Organ / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Humanoid Female Animal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Hypnotic Eyes / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
I Call It "Vera" / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
I Can Still Fight! / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
I Just Shot Marvin in the Face / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
I Kiss Your Hand / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
I Want My Mommy! / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
I Warned You / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
I Will Show You X! / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Impossible Theft / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Inexplicably Tailless / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Insecure Love Interest / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Institutional Apparel / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Insufferable Imbecile / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Interactive Narrator / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Intimidating Revenue Service / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Introductory Opening Credits / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Jingle the Coins / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Just Following Orders / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
King Bob the Nth / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
King of Beasts / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Knotty Tentacles / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Lady-In-Waiting / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Last-Second Word Swap / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Laughably Evil / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Lean and Mean / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Lighting Bug / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Limited Animation / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Love Confessor / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Loved by All / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Loves Only Gold / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Lured into a Trap / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Maid and Maiden / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Manly Tears / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Massive Numbered Siblings / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Men of Sherwood / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Misplaced Wildlife / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Modest Royalty / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Money Fetish / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Mugged for Disguise / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Multiple Languages, Same Voice Actor / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
National Animal Stereotypes / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Never Bareheaded / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Never Smile at a Crocodile / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
New Old Flame / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Nice Mice / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Nobody Likes a Tattletale / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Non-Action Big Bad / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Non-Mammalian Hair / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Not-So-Harmless Villain / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Off-into-the-Distance Ending / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
One-Steve Limit / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Open Secret / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Outrun the Fireball / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Overly Polite Pals / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Palette Swap / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Panthera Awesome / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Pantsless Males, Fully-Dressed Females / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Perilous Marriage Proposal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Phony Psychic / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Pie in the Face / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Pinball Projectile / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Pink Means Feminine / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Please Spare Him, My Liege! / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Point That Somewhere Else / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Pop-Star Composer / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Princeling Rivalry / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Princesses Prefer Pink / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Prisoner's Work / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Protagonist Title / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Rapid-Fire Descriptors / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Rascally Raccoon / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Real Song Theme Tune / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Recycled Animation / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Redhead in Green / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Reed Snorkel / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Regal Ruff / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Reliably Unreliable Guns / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Removable Shell / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Reptiles Are Abhorrent / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Retronym / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Reused Character Design / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Revealing Skill / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Right Behind Me / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Roguish Romani / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Rule of Personification Conservation / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Satellite Love Interest / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Scooby-Dooby Doors / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Sealed with a Kiss / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Secret Message Wink / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Seize Them! / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Self-Plagiarism / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Servile Snarker / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Shaped Like Itself / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
She's a Man in Japan / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Shoot the Bullet / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Shooting At Your Own Projectiles / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Shot in the Ass / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Shy Shelled Animal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Sissy Villain / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Sleep Squashing / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Slippery as an Eel / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Slouch of Villainy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Smooch of Victory / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Snakes Are Sinister / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Species Subversives / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Speedy Techno Remake / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Splitting the Arrow / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Spoiled Brat / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Spoiler Opening / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Spooky Séance / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Standard Evil Empire Hierarchy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Stepping-Stone Sword / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Stick 'em Up / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Stock Punishment / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Storybook Opening / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Stout Strength / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Sympathetic Villain, Despicable Villain / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Tagalong Kid / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Tears of Joy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Tender Tomboyishness, Foul Femininity / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Artifact / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Brute / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Evil Prince / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Fourth Wall Will Not Protect You / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Good King / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Kids Are American / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Pardon / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Runt at the End / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Tourney / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
The Un-Reveal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
"The Villain Sucks" Song / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
This Is the Part Where... / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Token Competent Minion / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Trap Is the Only Option / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Tribute to Fido / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Trigger-Happy / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Turtle Power / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Un-Evil Laugh / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Uncertain Doom / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Uncredited Role / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Unexplained Accent / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Unseen No More / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Uptown Girl / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Verbal Business Card / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Victorious Chorus / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Video Credits / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Vile Villain, Laughable Lackey / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Vile Vulture / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Wacky Marriage Proposal / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Wandering Minstrel / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
"Wanted!" Poster / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Watch It for the Meme / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Watch Where You're Going! / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
We Have Become Complacent / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Wedding Finale / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
White Bunny / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Who Names Their Kid "Dude"? / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Wise Serpent / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
With This Ring / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Wolf Whistle / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
Working on the Chain Gang / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
World of Funny Animals / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
World of Mammals / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
You Are Better Than You Think You Are / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
You Are Fat / int_4efed37e
 Robin Hood (1973)
hasFeature
You're Insane! / int_4efed37e