Trelkovsky
Anti-netflix
Respuesta: Mismo tema / título / personaje, distintas versiones
1900s–1940s
1908: Robin Hood and His Merry Men, a silent film directed by Percy Stow, and the first appearance of Robin Hood on the screen.
1912: Robin Hood, a silent film starring Robert Frazer as Robin Hood.
1913: Ivanhoe, featuring Walter Thomas as Robin Hood.
1922: Robin Hood, a silent film starring Douglas Fairbanks.
1938: The Adventures of Robin Hood, starring Errol Flynn in his most acclaimed role. Considered by many to be the best Robin Hood movie.[2]
1946: Bandit of Sherwood Forest a film starring Cornel Wilde as Robert of Nothingham, Robin Hood's son, Robin Hood was Russell Hicks.
1948: The Prince of Thieves a film starring Jon Hall as Robin Hood.
1950s
1950: Rogues of Sherwood Forest, a film starring John Derek as Robin Hood.
1951: Tales of Robin Hood
1952: The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men, a feature from the Disney Studios, starring Richard Todd, Joan Rice and Peter Finch. Also that year, Miss Robin Hood.
1952: Ivanhoe, a film featuring Harold Warrender as Locksley (Robin Hood).
1952: Miss Robin Hood, a British film starring Margaret Rutherford as a modern-day Robin Hood.
1953: Robin Hood a television series on BBC Television, featured Patrick Troughton, in the first representation of Robin Hood on television.
1954: The Men of Sherwood Forest, first colour production by Hammer Films starring Don Taylor as Robin.
1955–1960: The Adventures of Robin Hood, a long-running British series starring Richard Greene that is also remembered for its catchy theme tune.
1956: Robin Hood's Greatest Adventures (also starring Donald Pleasence as Prince John).
1958: Robin Hood, the Movie
1958: Robin Hood: The Quest for the Crown
1958-1959: Ivanhoe (1958 TV series), starring Roger Moore as Ivanhoe. Features Emerton Court[3] as "Sir Robert" in the episode "Arms and the Women".
1959: The Son of Robin Hood
1960s
1960 Sword of Sherwood Forest, a film with Richard Greene reprising his television role.
1964: Robin and the 7 Hoods, a musical film set in 1930s gangster Chicago, with Frank Sinatra as "Robbo".
1967: A Challenge for Robin Hood, a Hammer version, with Barrie Ingham as Robin.
1967: Rocket Robin Hood, a space-age version of the Robin Hood legend, where he and his band of Merry Spacemen live in the year 3000 on Sherwood Asteroid and fight the evil Sheriff who rules the space territory of N.O.T.T. (Trillium / Steve Krantz Production)
1969: Wolfshead: The Legend of Robin Hood
1970s
1970 : L'Arciere di Sherwood (known under the English-language titles Long live Robin Hood and The Scalawag Bunch), an Italian film starring Giuliano Gemma as Robin Hood.
1971: Up the Chastity Belt, starring Frankie Howerd, with Hugh Paddick as Robin Hood.
1973: Walt Disney's Robin Hood, perhaps the most famous animated version of the legend, which had the various characters depicted as anthropomorphic animal characters, including Robin Hood and Maid Marian as foxes.
1975: The Legend of Robin Hood, a six-episode BBC miniseries starring Martin Potter in the title role, Paul Darrow as the Sheriff of Nottingham and Diane Keen as Lady Marion. The adaptation was aired on public television in the USA later in the 1970s.
1975: When Things Were Rotten, a comedy TV series produced by Mel Brooks and starring Richard Gautier (as an imbecilic Robin Hood), Bernie Kopell and Misty Rowe.
1975: The Arrows of Robin Hood (Strely Robin Guda, Стрелы Робин Гуда), a Soviet adaptation in Russian by Sergey Tarasov, starring Boris Khmelnitsky as Robin Hood, with songs of Vladimir Vysotsky.
1975: Robin Hood Junior, starring Keith Chegwin as a young Robin.
1976: Robin and Marian, a film with a revisionist version of the story starring Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn as a married couple at the end of their lives.
1980s
1981: Time Bandits, starring John Cleese, Sean Connery, Shelley Duvall; written and directed by Terry Gilliam had a short spoof of the Robin Hood legend, with Robin (played by Cleese) being portrayed as an upper class twit and as a parody of Charles, Prince of Wales.
1982: Ivanhoe TV movie with Robin Hood played by David Robb.
1983: The Ballad of the Valiant Knight Ivanhoe (Ballada O Doblestnom Rytsare Ayvengo, Баллада о доблестном рыцаре Айвенго), a Russian adaptation of Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe by Sergey Tarasov, with songs of Vladimir Vysotsky, starring Boris Khmelnitsky as Robin Hood, who helps Ivanhoe to restore Richard's kingdom.
1984: The Zany Adventures of Robin Hood, a made-for-TV spoof starring George Segal (Robin), Morgan Fairchild (Marian) and Roddy McDowall (Prince John).
1984–1986: Robin of Sherwood, a fantasy-style British television series starring Michael Praed and later Jason Connery as Robin. The series set the template for many of the adaptations that followed, most notably the introduction of a Saracen (Muslim) outlaw and the move to a grittier tone.
1986: Ivanhoe Animated TV movie with Robert Coleby providing the voice of Robin Hood.
1988: Storybook Classics: Robin Hood. Animated
1989–1994: Maid Marian and her Merry Men, a British children's TV show, rewrote the legend somewhat, with Marian as the dynamic leader of the resistance against Prince John, Robin as her thick-headed, cowardly, buffoonish figurehead, and Nottingham as John's put-upon, sarcastic enforcer.
1990s
1990–1992: Robin Hood no Daibōken (Japanese: ロビンフッドの大冒険), a Japanese animated series developed by Tatsunoko Productions, tells a version of the story in which Robin and his men (and women), as well as Maid Marian, are — in majority — children. This version also incorporates several fantasy elements, mainly expressed in mystic powers of the nature and a powerful treasure protected by the forest Sherwood itself. The whole series contains strong environmental messages.
1991: Young Robin Hood, an animated series developed by Cinar and Hanna-Barbera, tells a version of the story in which Robin and his men, as well as Maid Marian, are teenagers. This version also incorporates several fantasy elements. For example, Robin is sometimes assisted by a forest-dwelling old woman who knows magic.
1991: Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, starring Kevin Costner and Morgan Freeman, with Sean Connery appearing as King Richard in the finale.
1991: Robin Hood, starring Patrick Bergin and Uma Thurman, is a reinvention of the story pitting Robin Hood against different antagonists.[4]
1993: Mel Brooks's Robin Hood: Men in Tights spoofs both the 1938 and the 1991 films and recycles bits from his short-lived late-1975 Robin Hood TV sitcom When Things Were Rotten. Cary Elwes plays Robin in the movie, and Patrick Stewart appears in the ending, spoofing Sean Connery's take on King Richard.
1996: Robin of Locksley was a made for TV movie starring Devon Sawa as a modern teenage Robin attending a prep school with the snobbish John Prince, played by Joshua Jackson.
1997–1998: The New Adventures of Robin Hood, a France–U.S. TV series, starred Matthew Porretta as a black-leather-clad Robin in the first two seasons and John Bradley taking over the lead role in the final two seasons. The tone of the series resembled its contemporaries Hercules: The Legendary Journeys and Xena: Warrior Princess. Porretta had appeared as Will Scarlet O'Hara in Men in Tights.
1997: Ivanhoe, a TV mini-series featuring Aden Gillett as Robin of Locksley.
1999: The children's series Back to Sherwood featured a teenage descendant of Robin ("Robyn Hood") who discovers she has the power to travel back in time, and joins with the children of her ancestor's band (Joan Little, Phil Scarlet, etc.).
1999: The adult pantomime Boobs in the Wood.
2000s
2001: Princess of Thieves, a Disney-produced American made-for-TV movie, starred Keira Knightley as Robin Hood's (Stuart Wilson) heroic adolescent daughter, Gwyn, who takes over her father's role and comes to his rescue.[5]
2004: Nottingham 2051. Year 2051. Robin Hood and Little John want to deliver "essential pharmacies" in the third world.[6] Robin Hood is played by Tiziano Scrocca.
2006–2009: Robin Hood, a BBC One television series, produced by Tiger Aspect. It was first broadcast as thirteen-episode series in the UK from October to December 2006, with a second series following in 2007, and third in 2009. Jonas Armstrong stars in the title role.
2007: Splitting the Arrow. Sometime in the 12th Century, a Documentary Crew entered Sherwood Forest in search of a legend. This is what followed.[7] Calvert Tooley plays Robin Hood.
2007: Robin Hood: Quest for the King. Animated Robin Hood tale
2008: Robin Hood: Prince of Sherwood starring Jason Braly as Robin Hood.
2009: Robinhood (2009 film), a Malayalam film starring Prithviraj.
2009: Beyond Sherwood Forest, a TV movie starring Robin Dunne as Robin Hood and Erica Durance as Maid Marian.[8]
2010s
2010: Robin Hood. Directed by Ridley Scott and starring Russell Crowe as Robin Longstride, who takes over the identity of Robert Locksley. This film serves as something of an origin story, explaining how Robin became an outlaw. Though he is never directly addressed as "Robin Hood" in the film, the Sheriff referred to him as "Robin of the Hood" at the film's end, officially registering him as an outlaw.
2012: Robin Good and His Not-So-Merry Men. A VeggieTales film released in spring 2012.
2012: Tom and Jerry: Robin Hood and His Merry Mouse. A film released in October 2012 starring Tom and Jerry.
2012: Robin Hood: Ghosts of Sherwood, an upcoming[9] film about Robin Hood.
Future
Lana and Andy Wachowski have confirmed that they have written and will direct the film Hood, a modern adaptation of the Robin Hood myths
En 1948 David Lean dirigió una adaptación de la novela, protagonizada por el niño John Howard Davies. Destacó la interpretación de Alec Guinness, en el papel de Fagin.
En 1968 Mark Lester dio vida al protagonista en la adaptación musical que realizó Carol Reed con el título de Oliver.
La película de Walt Disney Pictures de 1988 Oliver y su pandilla está basada en esta historia de Charles Dickens, siendo Oliver (basado en Oliver Twist) un gatito huérfano.
También Roman Polanski dirigió una nueva adaptación para la gran pantalla en 2005. Ben Kingsley interpretó en esta ocasión al avaro judío.
Oliver Twist (1916 film), a 1916 silent film adaptation, starring Marie Doro as Oliver and Tully Marshall as Fagin
Oliver Twist (1919 film), a silent Hungarian film adaptation
Oliver Twist (1948 film), a 1948 film adaptation by David Lean
Oliver Twist (1974 film), a 1974 animation movie starring Billy Simpson as the voice of Oliver and Davy Jones as the voice of the Artful Dodger
Oliver Twist (1982 film), a 1982 version starring Richard Charles as Oliver and George C. Scott as Fagin
Oliver Twist (1982 TV film), a 1982 television movie adaptation of Dickens' novel
Oliver Twist (1997 film), a 1997 television movie adaptation of Dickens' novel
La primera data de 1901. Su título: “Scrooge or Marley’s ghost”, realizada por Walter R. Booth.
En 1910 se estrenan “A Christmas Carol”. Es la versión muda más popular. Una producción norteamericana con buenos efectos especiales.
En 1928 se filmó la primera película hablada, realizada por Hugh Croise.
En 1935 Henry Edwards haría su “Scrooge”. Es la primera versión sonora del cuento y Seymour Hicks hace el papel de Scrooge.
En 1936 Hollywood a través de la Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer rodó “A Christmas Carol” (1938), realizada por Edwin L. Marin.
En 1947 tenemos la primera versión hecha en España: “Leyenda de Navidad”, de Manuel Tamayo.
De 1970 es el musical Scrooge, de Ronald Neame.
En 1983 “Una Navidad con Mickey” (1983), adaptación hecha por Disney.
En 1984 "A Christmas Carol", con George C. Scott en el rol de Scrooge y elenco de actores británicos (Una de las mejores adaptaciones de la novela).
En 1988 “Los fantasmas atacan al jefe” ("Los fantasmas contraatacan" en Argentina, "Scrooged" en el original) protagonizada por Bill Murray, es una adaptación en clave de comedia.
En 1992 “Los Teleñecos en cuentos de Navidad”. Los Muppets realizaron esta película sobre el libro.
En 1999 "A Christmas Carol" (1999). Dirigida por David Hugh Jones y protagonizada por Patrick Stewart, Richard E. Grant, Joel Grey.
En 2005 "A Christmas Carol: The Musical" de Arthur Allan Seidelman, en el que actuó Kelsey Grammer como Scrooge (Esta versión es una excelente adaptación musical en su idioma original, inglés).
En 2009 la animación “Cuento de Navidad” (España) / Los fantasmas de Scrooge (Latinoamérica), también de Disney.
Está usted muy trabajador Maese Atreyub