
When Kevin Costner played Robin Hood at 36 in the 1991 movie Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, detractors said he was too old for the role. He was playing the British legendary figure in his familiar story after Sean Connery had played Robin as an old man at age 46 in the 1976 movie Robin and Marian (and Russell Crowe would do it again at age 46 in 2010’s Robin Hood movie). Widely viewed as the definitive version, the 1938 The Adventures of Robin Hood starred Errol Flynn at age 29. Now at 57 Hugh Jackman is wearing the quiver in the next version of Old Man Robin Hood. He looks like another well-known archer, Old Man Oliver Queen aka Green Arrow from the pages of Kevin Smith, Phil Hester, and Ande Parks’ Green Arrow comic book story arc “Quiver,” which featured an aged hero back from the dead.

What looks like a dark, moody story of a violent end for the man who stole from the rich to give to the poor, The Death of Robin Hood twists the narrative to see Robin as a lifelong villain, washed up and bitter in his final days. Written and directed by Michael Sarnoski, studio A24 featured an earlier trailer that attempted to set the stage of an upended fiction tale based on the Robin Hood tradition. But two new trailers seem to try to oversell the idea. We get it–Sarnoski is trying something new, and Old Man Logan himself makes for good casting. But these trailers seem to try too hard. See what you think. Co-starring Killing Eve’s Jodie Comer and Atomic Blonde and It’s Bill Skarsgärd, check out these unusual trailers for The Death of Robin Hood:
And one with a voiceover and … medieval-inspired font?
And here is the earlier trailer, more straightforward trailer for the movie:
Hugh Jackman fans will no doubt go for it regardless of the marketing plan. From A24, The Death of Robin Hood heads to theaters June 19, 2026.
C.J. Bunce / Editor / borg

