Robin Hood in popular culture

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Contents

[edit] Books

  • Robin Hood by Paul Creswick, 1917. Particularly noted for its illustrator, N.C. Wyeth.
  • The Last Unicorn by Peter S. Beagle. An outlaw chief, Captain Cully of Greenwood Forest, is an aspiring Robin Hood, who even writes ballads celebrating himself. After taking another character for Mr. Child, he tries to get them collected, and to be reassured that they are real ballads, even if he wrote them himself. The magician Schmendrick conjures up the legendary band in order to escape Cully, and Cully's band of outlaws dissolve, chasing after the fantastic outlaws before them.
  • The Outlaws of Sherwood by Robin McKinley, 1988, a retelling in which Robin Hood is, in fact, the worst archer in his band, but whose shrewdness leads them through their dangers
  • Sherwood by Parke Godwin, 1992, and Robin and the King, 1993
  • The Sherwood Game by Esther Friesner, 1995, features Robin Hood and his merry man as computer programs, who do not let their lack of flesh and blood interfere with their ways.
  • DC Comics published a Robin Hood comic book in the 1950s. The character of Robin, Batman's sidekick, was partly modelled on Robin Hood, as is explicitly stated in the prologue to the first appearance of the character in Detective Comics #38.
  • DC Comics Green Arrow is often compared (favorably and unfavorably) to Robin Hood.
  • The Big Bang Comics character Robo-Hood is a tribute to Robin Hood.
  • Spike Milligan parodied the legend of Robin Hood in Robin Hood According to Spike Milligan.
  • Hood by Stephen R. Lawhead, 2006, relocates the Robin Hood legends to Wales. First part of the King Raven Trilogy.

[edit] Films and television series

[edit] Music

"Einstein, disguised as Robin Hood
With his memories in a trunk
Passed this way an hour ago
With his friend, a jealous monk."
  • The 1973 Disney animated film included three original songs: "Whistle Stop", a mostly instrumental piece, and "Not in Nottingham", both written and performed by Roger Miller, and "The Phony King of England", performed by Phil Harris.

[edit] Video games

[edit] Strategy games

[edit] Comic books

As a public domain character with an established reputation, Robin Hood was an attractive feature for comic book publishers from the birth of the medium. The first continuing Robin Hood stories were written and drawn by Sven Elven and appeared in New Adventure Comics #23 through #30. There was also a Robin Hood back up story in Green Hornet #7 through #10, written by S. M. Iger.

A small renaissance of Robin Hood comics occurred in the late 1950s, starting with the little known "Rodger of Sherwood" stories in the Young Heroes anthology series #39 through #37 by American Comics Group That same year Robin got his first title comic book from Magazine Enterprises which ran for eight issues. Brown Shoe Co. followed suit in 1956 with The Adventures of Robin Hood in 1956 which ran for seven issues. Robin soon attracted attention from more established comic publishers such as Charlton Comics — who retitled Danger and Adventure to Robin Hood and His Merry Men starting with issue #28 — and Quality comics, whose Tales of Robin Hood was picked up by DC on issue #7, and eventually totalled 13 issues, the longest lasting English language Robin Hood series. DC also published Robin Hood stories in their Brave and the Bold anthology series from #5 to #15.

In the 1960s, Dell published a couple of Robin Hood one-shots, one a re-telling of the traditional legend, the other a Disney TV show tie-in. Then, in 1974, Gold Key Comics produced a 7 issue tie-in with the Disney animated film. Eclipse published a three-part miniseries in 1991, perhaps a tie in with the Kevin Costner film. Finally, there have been various one-shots produced by Moonstone Books, A-Plus Comics and Avalon Communications.

Robin Hood and his band appear in one issue of the Vertigo series Fables. Along with other folk heroes, they are part of a last-ditch effort to help folktale refugees escape an invading army and reach the mundane world.

Midnight Kiss, a comic written by UK writer Tony Lee for Markosia, uses the Robin Hood legend, specifically that Robin Hood's Silver Arrow is from Nuadha's silver hand — and is stolen by 'Maid MaryAnne' — one of the two main characters in a flashback sequence.

Tony Lee is currently writing a graphic novel called Robin Hood - Outlaw's Pride for Walker Books, due for release in late 2007.

Robin has fared far better in non-English comics. His most successful title series is a Mexican histoiretta that ran from 1963 to 1966 and included 23 issues. There were also some Swedish titles.

The Wizard of Id, a daily newspaper comic strip by American cartoonists Brant Parker and Johnny Hart, occasionally features Robbing Hood, a forest-dweller who steals from the rich and gives to the poor. His first appearance in the strip involves, of course, a hold-up, at the conclusion of which his victim yells, "You dirty robbing hood!" — hence the name.

Green Arrow is also considered very similarly to Robin Hood, if not directly based on him.