Robin Hood
- TV-14
- Year:
- 1991
- 104 min
- 395 Views
Poacher!
Stop the poacher!
There he goes!
Catch the poacher!
Ten marks for the man who catches the beast.
After him! Get him!
Get him!
Get him!
- It's Much the miller, come flying out of the forest.
- What's the hurry?
Sir Robert, save me.
Save me.
Straight ahead!
Come on!
We got him! Come on!
Go on! Go on!
Whoa. Whoa.
Whoa, there.
Steady. Steady.
Steady.
What have we here,
Mr. Miter?
Much here is the local miller, but he's been
grinding more than corn for his living.
That's the poacher,
Sir Miles.
Ah. Not so new at
the poaching game either.
Do you know the punishment
for poaching the king's deer twice?
- They can put my eyes out.
- Do something.
- Leave him.
- Who do you think you are?
- This man is a poacher.
- On my land.
I have no objection
to this man hunting on my land.
He's a useful member
of our community.
Who exactly are you?
I am Sir Miles Folcanet...
...and I'm the guest of the Baron Daguerre
to whom this land belongs...
...and certainly not
to some scruffy Saxon.
You and your people may have
stolen every decent acre of my country...
...and built your
mighty castles on them...
...but I am still
Sir Robert Hode.
I am still
the Earl of Huntingdon...
...and this land you are on
still belongs to me.
Only as a vassal
to your feudal overlord...
...and my host,
the Baron Daguerre.
But you're Sir Robert Hode,
of course.
I hear you're
Baron Daguerre's friend.
What was the phrase,
"his little pet"?
I order you
to leave this man be...
...and to get off my land.
Well, well.
Leave him be.
Yes, of course.
We could do as you suggest...
...but the poacher would still have his eyes
to help him poach again, would he not?
And you, kind lady?
Is it your pleasure
that the miller should lose his eyes?
My pleasures are my secret,
Sir Robert.
I do not reveal them to just
any knight who crosses my path.
Enough. There's a law.
Miter!
Let him go.
Why don't you and your men
hunt down some little children...
...that have been sniffing
the king's flowers?
You can pluck their
noses off one by one.
And you,
you can watch.
Much, walk away.
Very well.
I shall let him go.
Thank you, Sir Robert,
for your lesson in Saxon justice.
On Monday morning
at 7:
00......you will stand before
Baron Daguerre...
...and I'll make sure you'll taste
our Norman justice.
You have insulted his guest.
He will not
treat you lightly.
Maybe you shouldn't
have said anything.
That's what he called you?
- My pet?
- The Baron Daguerre's little pet.
What's so funny?
was the next wench and the next drink.
And you defied Miles
for a half-dead Saxon poacher.
I'd love to have
seen his face.
He was lusting to put the poor man's
eyes out personally on the spot.
Norman justice,
he called it.
I have to order you to be flogged
next Monday morning.
You can't do that.
I am an earl.
Climb down from
your high horse, Robert.
- I'll try to avoid it.
- Try?
Folcanet wants
his entertainment.
- You made him look a fool.
- You will never have me flogged.
Need I remind you that while your grandfather's
father was no more than a pirate...
...my great-grandfather
was chancellor to our king?
Did I tell you that?
It's true. A pirate.
But that was
in confidence, Robert.
You will never say that
in public.
Never.
Your throw.
I, too, have my pride.
Hello, Marian.
- Who's winning, Uncle?
- Robert, of course.
Have you met?
I believe Sir Robert
never loses...
...so he tells me.
- Uncle?
- She's my brother's daughter.
He died in Cyprus.
I've become her guardian.
Will she be living here?
She's here for a wedding.
- Whose wedding?
- Hers... And Miles's.
Folcanet?
She's heir to
a great fortune, Robert.
It becomes her dowry.
If she marries Miles, he's offered
to show his gratitude to me.
Money, money, money,
money, money, money.
Just who are they
practicing to kill, Rob?
Who do they see when
they thrust the lance?
It's me and you, Rob,
that's who. You and me.
Well, on this occasion,
it's more me than you.
Next time you feel righteous indignation,
you do the heroic bit.
You'll have no trouble of Daguerre.
No trouble at all.
Something interesting
outside?
Go on.
Take a proper look.
But don't let him
see you looking.
Sir Robert Hode,
Earl of Huntingdon.
The charges?
Insulting a knight of the Realm
and obstructing the king's laws.
Obstructing the king's laws.
Sir Robert, please.
Baron Daguerre...
I ask the court's forgiveness
for any offense I have brought...
...to the throne
or to Sir Miles Folcanet...
...and I apologize
with all sincerity and humility.
Very well.
The court is a witness to your humility
and accepts your apology...
...as I'm sure
Sir Miles will.
You may rise, Sir Robert.
A moment, please.
If I may remind
the first baron of the Realm...
Norman law calls
for separate justice...
...for separate issues,
Sir Roger.
There were two offenses.
As for Sir Robert's insulting me,
certainly I'm a forgiving man.
I have forgiven.
But, uh...
...eager as I am to be done
with this unfortunate incident...
the letter of the law...
which states
separate justice...
...for separate issues.
This man attempted to stop
agents of the king...
...from carrying out
their sworn duty!
- That's a dreadful offense.
- Concentrate.
And what punishment does the law demand?
The punishment
is a public beating.
To be flogged.
I suggest at
the castle gate at noon.
My lord, I am not to be treated
like a common thief.
You may be a Saxon earl, Hode,
but the Saxons no longer rule England.
I demand the right of trial by combat.
I challenge
Sir Miles Folcanet.
- I'll kill him.
- Silence!
Sir Miles,
Robert Hode shall be flogged...
...but one lash only.
That's my judgment.
You treacherous,
lying, cheating...
- That's enough, Hode! Silence!
- That's not nearly enough!
- This man should be hanged!
- Five lashes, and I shall have the honor.
- What would you know about honor?
- Twenty lashes from the Sergeant-at-Arms!
- Why not 50? A hundred?
- No, 20! You're too wild, Sir Robert.
Wild?
Much worse than that.
I'm a fool.
I thought you were noble.
Behold the glorious Normans.
The noble
baron of the Realm...
whose great-grandfather
was no more than a pirate.
From cutthroat tojudge
in the blink of an eye.
Once they raped
and pillaged.
Now they collect taxes.
Norman taxes
on Saxon land.
Norman taxes
on Saxon grain.
Norman taxes
on Saxon liberty.
Let us bow to
the miracle of change.
From pirate to leech
in the blink of a bloody Norman eye!
Release him!
Robert Hode,
fourth earl of Huntingdon...
with the powers of the king
which are vested in me...
...it's decreed that
you forfeit to the throne...
...your lands and title
and all things in your possession.
As of this day,
you are cast outside the law.
And as an outlaw,
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