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    Movie Time

    Errol Flynn's underage sex scandal movie manages to be forgettable: This Robin Hood needs to rob a new script

    Alex Bentley
    Sep 6, 2014 | 8:38 pm
    Errol Flynn's underage sex scandal movie manages to be forgettable: This Robin Hood needs to rob a new script
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    Anyone making a movie set more than 50 years in the past needs to have one of two things: A subject with its own innate appeal, or the ability to make their subject appealing through great filmmaking techniques.

    Neither of those is present in The Last of Robin Hood, a film that tackles the relationship between actor Errol Flynn (Kevin Kline) and his underage girlfriend, Beverly Aadland (Dakota Fanning), during the last two years of his life. Hovering over their affair is Beverly’s mom, Florence (Susan Sarandon), the classic stage mom who narrates the story throughout. (Robin Hood is playing at Sundance Cinemas.)

    Writers/directors Richard Glatzer and Wash Westmoreland overestimate a number of things with this film. First is the name recognition that Flynn still holds. Though he was well known for playing Robin Hood — hence the title — Flynn has not maintained the lasting popularity of other actors of his era.

    Fanning, now 20, is doing her best to be taken seriously as an adult actress, but she just isn’t quite there yet.

    And because many people have no idea who he was, ginning up interest about a long-ago scandal is that much harder. Glatzer and Westmoreland never go the extra mile in this respect. They seem to assume that the story is interesting merely because it involves Flynn rather than trying to prove its worth.

    With Florence essentially telling the story, it also gives the impression that everything that is put on screen may not be exactly as it happened. Florence is shown to be both the ultimate protector and ultimate exploiter of her daughter, so you have to take anything she says with an extra large grain of salt.

    Despite the movie’s faults, though, playing Flynn fits Kline like a glove. He imbues Flynn with cocky yet vulnerable demeanor that reminds you of what he can do when he’s at his best. The fact that he’s almost a dead ringer for Flynn doesn’t hurt, either.

    Fanning, now 20, is doing her best to be taken seriously as an adult actress, but she just isn’t quite there yet. The part of Beverly requires her to be alternately innocent and worldly, only one of which she portrays convincingly.

    The details in The Last of Robin Hood should make it a story to remember for a long time. The way they’re presented, however, make the film as forgettable as they come.

    Kevin Kline makes for an effective Errol Flynn in the ineffective The Last of Robin Hood.

    Crisp & Green
    Photo courtesy of Crisp & Green
    Kevin Kline makes for an effective Errol Flynn in the ineffective The Last of Robin Hood.
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    Movie review

    Adam Scott explores creepy Irish hotel in moody horror movie Hokum

    Alex Bentley
    May 1, 2026 | 4:30 pm
    Adam Scott in Hokum
    Photo courtesy of Neon
    Adam Scott in Hokum.

    There are relatively few actors who can switch back and forth between comedy and drama easily, but Adam Scott is the rare exception. He’s equally as well known for starring in comedy projects like Parks & Recreation, Party Down, and Step Brothers as he is for dramas like Big Little Lies and Severance. He’s going the latter route again in the new horror film, Hokum.

    Scott plays author Ohm Bauman, who’s trying to finish his latest book. In an effort to avoid distractions and also pay tribute to his parents, he retreats to an Irish hotel where his mom and dad spent their honeymoon. Bauman, who is about as stand-offish as you can get, and the staff of the hotel are at odds almost right away, although Bauman finds a kind of kinship with Jerry (David Wilmot), a seemingly-homeless man he meets in a nearby forest.

    Bauman becomes intrigued with the story of the hotel’s closed-off honeymoon suite, which is said to be haunted. His curiosity, though, seems to trigger a variety of strange things, one of which ends with him in an extended stay at the hospital. He returns to the hotel determined more than ever to discover what’s really happening in the honeymoon suite, with things both normal and supernatural blocking his way at every turn.

    Written and directed by Irish filmmaker Damian McCarthy, the film’s approach to horror is both subtle and overt. On the good side is Bauman’s story, which gradually gets deeper as more is revealed about his past, especially the premature death of his mother. Bauman’s trauma over her loss influences his thinking and actions, and a possible connection between his current situation and his personal history broadens the scope of the plot.

    There is plenty of creepiness to be found in the film, starting with the dark and decrepit nature of the hotel itself. Any building where a particular room is off-limits naturally inspires intrigue, and McCarthy does a solid job of building tension. That’s why it’s strange and disappointing that he gives in to the lamest of horror tropes - a sudden appearance by an odd-looking person accompanied by a big screeching noise - on multiple occasions.

    The film is at its best when it features weird moments that are never or only slightly explained. A dead body in a rabbit suit is echoed by the unexplained broadcast from Bauman’s youth featuring a terrifying TV host with bulging eyes and rabbit ears. Bauman’s explorations take him into the hotel’s basement via a dumbwaiter, where he encounters all manner of strange things, including what seem to be witches. Because most of these things are left to the audience’s imagination, they hit harder in the moment.

    Scott is known to be understated in his acting, and that skill works well in this particular role. Although he clearly plays Bauman as freaked out, he never indicates panic, and that level-headedness makes his character someone you want to follow no matter how dark the path might be. The mostly-Irish supporting cast is not well-known, but Wilmot and Florence Ordesh make the most of their short time on screen.

    Hokum — a title that is also not explained — is a horror film that earns its bona fides through mood more than action. Even though not much of consequence happens throughout the film, it still keeps you on the edge of your seat trying to figure out what will happen next.

    ---

    Hokum is now playing in theaters.

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