Friday, 1 February 2013

From Adventure to Austerity and Back Again: On ‘The Adventures of Robin Hood’


I have lately been reminded of something.

A film, and its importance.

I was feeling down earlier this evening, caught up in one of my far-too-frequent recent melancholy moods. Musing on fiscal matters, as it happens. Which, when one is a writer, is never the smartest of plays.  

Anyhow, I got it into my head that what was needed to rectify this joy-rot was a good, solid, movie-going experience. I felt certain that, should I be able to find the right film, I’d be lifted clear of the doldrums.

Only, an actual movie-going experience was, by the time I hit on this idea, not going to be feasible. Not only was it too late, too cold, and too wet to be travelling anywhere to see one; but going out to see one would only have compounded my aforementioned monetary woes.

So, instead, I plumped for watching something on demand. I wheeled through the action/adventure selection, considering everything from Blood Simple to Snatch to The Hurt Locker to The Outlaw Josey Wales. I spent a good few minutes mulling each option over, but, in the end, I didn’t quite fancy any of them.

In fact, I was beginning to go off the idea altogether. It seemed as though bedtime was approaching, a good couple of hours faster than usual.

Until, that is, I noticed – shunted in and amongst a bunch of wholly dissimilar titles – the 1938 classic, The Adventures of Robin Hood. The kind of film about which it is often said: ‘They don’t make them like this anymore.’ – which seemed as fitting a recipe as any other for a late evening’s reality-break. Indeed, though I hadn’t seen it for a long while, I recalled how I always used to enjoy it when I was younger, and decided to give it a go. At the very least, I was sure it couldn’t make me feel any worse.

After only a handful of minutes, I noted down the following thought: There are few films so excellently and effortlessly entertaining as this early Technicolor marvel.

And then added: There are few films as effortlessly rebellious either.

Already, it was beginning to do what I wanted it to. Furthermore, it was also helping me recall the way I felt when watching such films as a kid.

At the age of six or seven, I felt a kinship with The Adventures of Robin Hood because it seemed to mirror the medieval mischief I got up to with my elder brother and our friends out in our garden or in the neighbouring field. Running around with plastic bows and arrows, or with ones that we’d fashion from sycamore branches and tightly-tied string.

As an adult, I found I was revelling not only in the memories of such times, but also in the newly-noticed anarchic angle, the rebel tone, which I didn’t have to think to understand when I was young. The outlaw aspects of the story and of Flynn’s performance were much clearer. The socio-political underpinnings of that standpoint, I mean.

Indeed, as a child, there is a sense in which outlawry is one’s natural state. Only you don’t notice it so much, because few people bother to clamp down on you so hard with the rules. They do not really apply, as the assumption has long since been made by grown-ups that you’re too young to understand most of the mistakes you might be making. There was a healthy degree of discipline in my upbringing, I should admit, but I was still are free, by and large, to indulge my playfulness, my imagination; I was free to give full heed to my (then) innate sense of adventure.

Such actions do not represent a side, a political/philosophical ethos you have chosen. They are simply actions, tied to goals at once far smaller and far larger than any you’ll encounter in your adult life. You give yourself quests to fulfil in your makebelieve, and then forget them, and so are free and able to repeat them at your leisure. The questing itself is the joy, and it hardly matters, at that age, against whom or what, or for whom or what, you are doing it.

At the age of about six or seven, I understood, I think, The Adventures of Robin Hood on those terms. That is to say, as an extension of my own early adventuring. I knew some of the episodes contained within it from picture books, and probably from the Disney version also, but at the same time they felt fresh; I couldn’t help but take them on their own terms. There was none of this lengthy, rambling analysis. I knew Robin Hood was an outlaw simply because people called him an outlaw. Because he called himself an outlaw. I knew he was a good guy because he was the focus of the film and played by Errol Flynn. I knew he was the good guy because he wins at the end.

Watching it as an adult, such simplicity is, largely, stripped. And yet it remains tremendously escapist and entertaining, despite, or possibly even because, I can now detect layers of discourse I previously was unaware of having overlooked.

Perhaps I have even retained a kinship with it because I, and my social situation, has changed so much. I am no longer free to do exactly as I wish. I am expected, as a full-grown man, to be obedient to the rules and dictums of the society within which I find myself surrounded. To be upstanding, as best I can. To be sensible. And, when the government says something, passes some new law, rolls out some new policy, even though this is a democracy, I am not really expected to say anything in response, to answer back.

Furthermore, I am, difficult and shameful as it can be at times to admit, not in the finest position financially. Which is to say I’m on the dole. And have been for some time. Not for want of trying to find work, nor for want of trying to make money off my writing; but that is, regardless, the way things have gone. There’s a line in Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five, in which a character propounds: ‘Many novelties have come from America. The most startling of these, a thing without precedent, is a mass of undignified poor. They do not love one another because they do not love themselves.’ And, being in the position I felt locked in last night, I could fully see where that sentiment came from. It seemed, as I thought on it, to have grown out, spread across the Atlantic, taken hold here. And elsewhere, judging by the global nature of the Occupy protests against that quasi-mythological entity, the ‘One Percent’.

However, as I watched the opening scenes of The Adventures of Robin Hood, I began to reflect instead on the tendency of each generation to assume they’ve experienced the first instance of everything.

It having been so long since I last watched the film, coupled with my fuzziness over what exactly the Hays censorship code prohibited, meant I was unprepared for the way in which it actually begins. Within those first couple of minutes, we see the harsh actions of Prince John’s knights towards the ‘Saxon’ villagers and peasants in Nottingham. They are denied extra food, leniency, comfort. As I watched this, I understood these scenes as austerity measures. Austerity Britain: The Middle Ages Edition.

Rather than Robin Hood, who I always was (even if my brother was Robin Hood as well), I found myself feeling closer, identifying more, at this stage, with them. In particular with a figure in pale blue robes who, after being denied a fairly basic demand by a soldier, waits for the soldier to leave the frame before looking him daggers and spitting into the mud. I watched that and clicked with the sense of curiously impotent anger that figure projected, the vague notion of their being a wrongness he could do nothing to right.

But then, moments later, Robin Hood himself bounds into view, jumping a low-hanging tree branch on his horse, looking every inch the ultimate badass. A feat made all the more impressive given that at least a third of his inches are taken up by bright green tights. And it is the introduction of Robin, in such a way, which ensures that the film stays entertaining. Which lets you know that things will be alright. That the preceding injustices will be addressed, rectified.

As soon as I see him, I can’t help but grin. I grin wildly and my breath is taken a little, because not only does this image return me to the aforementioned simpler, less rule-stricken times. But, having associated myself with the downtrodden, I understand and feel his presence as more heroic also. I understand that heroes are not only heroes because they tend, in films like this, to win, but because they represent a moral/ideological position that people suddenly, desperately need to witness being upheld.

There’s a long line of similar folk-heroic figures peppered like buckshot through the arse cheeks of history. Rebels, poachers, bank robbers, ne’er-do-wells who nevertheless are felt to have done well by a great many people, all in the name of sticking it to The Man. Most of these, however, do seem fairly stuck in their own historical context. Their heroism is defined by the era they were in. As Sam Elliott intones in his introductory monologue in The Big Lebowski, ‘Sometimes, there's a man, well, he's the man for his time and place.’ This seems to be a fit description of such folk-heroes as Bonnie and Clyde, the kind of bank robbers most often linked to ideas of Robin Hood-like aspirations.

Indeed, though films have been made about them, and figures like them, decades after their era, these, especially Arthur Penn’s masterful Bonnie and Clyde, come laden with an elegiac tone. The audience is aware of most of the actual facts (not ‘stories’, mind you) about such figures, and so these facts undercut the escapist mythologizing such films might otherwise aim for. The audience knows the era of these characters has passed, and so they will be able to embrace them only fleetingly before their inevitable end. And, when it comes, that end will come with the implicit moral that crime doesn’t pay, and it’ll be back to reality for everyone.

This is not so much the case with The Adventures of Robin Hood. For a few reasons. First off, though, within the film, he is clearly presented as ‘the man for his time and place’, the historical sketchiness, of both film-makers, audience, and, let’s face it, historians themselves, as regards that time and place means that Errol Flynn’s characterisation much more readily transcends such boundaries. Indeed, rather than being an elegiac evocation of a bygone age, and focusing its attentions on mourning the demise of such values as chivalry, etc., the film concentrates on creating a platform through which modern-day grievances can be simultaneously considered, and, through Robin’s eventual triumph, escaped from.

I’ve talked about how I found myself drawing parallels with the ‘Saxon’ situation as laid out in the film and my own, and associating myself with the downtrodden, as it were. But mention should also be made of the actual release date of the film, 1938, which is right at/just after the tail-end of the Great Depression. It is possible that, aside from it being a darn good entertainment and starring Flynn, this timing played a part in its initial success.

Because there is so much more distance between now and the era in which the (hi)story of Robin Hood is set, than there is between now and the 1930’s, say, the former era (at least as it has become enshrined in Western myth and folklore) has become timeless. And, as a result, can return to being timely, well, whenever it pleases.  

Which may go some way towards explaining why it affected me the way it did on latest watching.

The fact that I’d not previously considered the film verdant grounds for criticism may go some way towards explaining why that impact surprised me.

I chose to watch it on a whim, because I fancied a complete diversion from my current personal climate. I had not considered that, in Flynn’s performance, I would find evoked on screen my poorness-pressured person’s patron saint.

And yet, the more I watched, the more I came to think of him as exactly that. He is defiant, courageous in all the ways I want to be but currently aren’t. He carries on as though the rules that are so stringently and virulently enforced are not really there, and, in so doing, overcomes them. He is a slave only to his ideals.

Indeed, he feel like the right man for this moment – for the moment I was having last night, anyhow – precisely because he has been able to not only hang onto those ideals, but act on them, flying in the face of austerity and the tyranny of being told what to do. At one point, he speaks to Maid Marian of being able to offer his men ‘silks for rags, kindness instead of riches, limitless food instead of hunger’, and, whilst in the real world I may be willing to dismiss such promises as empty rhetoric, in the world of this film, it is clear that they are not lies. So I succumb to the sentiment, allow it to lift me.

I was buoyed as well, watching the film, by the fact that Robin has retained an important aspect of one’s childhood makeup. He has hung onto outlawry as a natural state.

As the character progresses on his eponymous adventures, he therefore graduates from peer to inspiration. The trade-off is that I accept my own downgrading, the prohibition of my own adventuring; that I acknowledge the areas in which I lack. But I would still be lacking, even without Flynn’s Robin Hood there to make that jump. Which is why the fact that he is at least there to entertain me makes my position more tolerable.

Performances such as that, and films such as this, facilitate, for ninety-odd minutes, a return to the freedom one used to take for granted. As you grow older, they cease (unless you yourself have taken to wearing bright green tights) to act as a mirror, but become instead a looking glass, a window into the possibility of a better world.

Of course, there is a level on which such films are purely frivolous – the historical content is, as afore-alluded-to, damn-near utterly bunk – designed and intended as nothing more than eye-catching entertainment. But there is another level, both beneath and above that, in which that entertainment serves a deep and gratifying purpose. A purpose made clear when, at the end, you watch the court and the merry men cheer in unison, and feel something inside of you cheer along too.

It is a shame, therefore, that The Adventures of Robin Hood is, indeed, the type of film about which it is often said: ‘They don’t make them like this anymore.’

Because films like this feel important. Not least because they make the watcher, whatever their age, feel important as well.   

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