Wolfshead: The Legend of Robin Hood | |
Director: | John Hough |
Producer: | Bill Anderson |
Starring: | David Warbeck Ciaran Madden Kathleen Byron David Butler Kenneth Gilbert |
Music: | Bernie Sharp Jack Sprague |
Cinematography: | David Holmes |
Editing: | Robert C. Dearberg |
Distributor: | Anglo-EMI Film Distributors |
Runtime: | 56 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Wolfshead: The Legend of Robin Hood is an adventure film directed by John Hough and starring David Warbeck, Ciaran Madden, Kathleen Byron, David Butler and Kenneth Gilbert.[1] [2] The film was the debut movie of actor David Warbeck as Robin Hood.[3] The film was originally a 1969 television series pilot but was released in movie theatres in 1973, as a support feature to the musical Take Me High.[4] The film was also released on VHS under the title The Legend of Young Robin Hood.[5]
The film's title comes from the medieval term Caput lupinum or "Wolfshead", meaning an outlaw.
The film is set in the year 1190AD. Robert of Loxley, a simple farmer, is working his land when a fellow Saxon runs through their property attempting to escape Sir Jeffrey and the Royal Game Warden. Robert denies seeing the alleged poacher, and the fight, which ensues, is destined to seal his fate.
When Sir Jeffrey's brother, Roger of Doncaster, learns that Robert of Loxley was not killed for his insolence, he determines to use the incident to have him arrested and his lands confiscated. Sir Roger's ulterior motive is that his intended bride Lady Marian Fitzwater has had feelings for Robert from childhood and this stands in the way of his marriage to her. So he enlists the help of the Abbott to have Robert made a Wolfshead: an outlaw whose head is worth that of a wolf's, dead or alive.
Howard Maxford, in his book Hammer Complete praised Wolfshead as a "brisk and entertaining variation on an over-familiar tale." Maxford added that "the film's only drawback is its rather abrupt ending."
Writer Richard Carpenter later described Wolfshead as an influence on his own series, Robin of Sherwood. Carpenter stated "What [''Wolfshead''] did was to have a very realistic look at being an outlaw in the 13th century and I wanted to have that element as well as the occult and humor."[6]