Ridley Scott Gives Up "Nottingham" Details
Ridley Scott Gives Up "Nottingham" Details
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SexiVixxEN
748 days ago
Producer Brian Grazer and director Ridley Scott spoke to MTV News about "Nottingham," which would re-unite Scott with Russell Crowe for the fourth time (plus one more project on the way).
"'Nottingham' is the 'Gladiator' version of Robin Hood," explained Grazer. "I think it will have the same propulsion that 'Gladiator' had - the same adrenaline hits."
Told from the Sheriff's (Crowe) point of view, the new movie centers around a familiar - yet very different - set of characters, director Ridley Scott said, revealing that his story begins when a legend first walks into history.
"Richard the Lionheart is on his return from the Crusades [when] he took an arrow in his neck and died," Scott said of the flick's set-up. "His brother, John, [becomes king.]"
John, known in his own life as John Lackland (because as the youngest son he didn't get any inheritance) "was actually pretty smart," Scott insisted. "[But] he got a bad rap because he introduced taxation. So he's the bad guy in this."
Meanwhile, "You've got the returning Nottingham who is the right hand man of Richard and witnesses Richard taking the arrow," Scott revealed. "And so he comes back to England to carry forward Richard's dream about England."
The Sheriff, then, strives to do right while caught in the middle of two wrongs – on one side a corrupt and unpopular King who orders him to arrest outlaws, on the other the outlaw himself who threatens to rouse the public in popular anarchy.
"[Caught between] the minority of haves and the majority of have nots," Scott said.
"'Nottingham' is the 'Gladiator' version of Robin Hood," explained Grazer. "I think it will have the same propulsion that 'Gladiator' had - the same adrenaline hits."
Told from the Sheriff's (Crowe) point of view, the new movie centers around a familiar - yet very different - set of characters, director Ridley Scott said, revealing that his story begins when a legend first walks into history.
"Richard the Lionheart is on his return from the Crusades [when] he took an arrow in his neck and died," Scott said of the flick's set-up. "His brother, John, [becomes king.]"
John, known in his own life as John Lackland (because as the youngest son he didn't get any inheritance) "was actually pretty smart," Scott insisted. "[But] he got a bad rap because he introduced taxation. So he's the bad guy in this."
Meanwhile, "You've got the returning Nottingham who is the right hand man of Richard and witnesses Richard taking the arrow," Scott revealed. "And so he comes back to England to carry forward Richard's dream about England."
The Sheriff, then, strives to do right while caught in the middle of two wrongs – on one side a corrupt and unpopular King who orders him to arrest outlaws, on the other the outlaw himself who threatens to rouse the public in popular anarchy.
"[Caught between] the minority of haves and the majority of have nots," Scott said.
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