EMBLEMS Adventurer Patch, place on right sleeve Adventurer World, place on left sleeve Club Crescent, place on right sleeve above Adventurer patch Adventurer Awards, worn on the sash Class Pins, worn on shirt or blouse pocket Field Uniform (Type B) Field uniform for the Adventurers and staff is a T-shirt and blue jeans. Nature Camp - Adventurers Base Camp is just the beginning for our Nature Campers (ages 7-13)! Whether it’s their first introduction to the outdoors or they are a certified wild child, our Nature Camp sessions give campers opportunities to hike, build, create, explore, and adventure all in the fresh summer air.
Contents.Biography Tim Cope was born in 1978 in, in Australia, and raised in. He is the oldest of 4 children. His father was an outdoor educator who took his family on adventurous trips around south Australia including hiking, climbing, boating and skiing.Cope's expeditions include riding on horseback from to Hungary which spanned over three years (2004–2007) and 10,000 km; rowing a boat down the in to the in 2001 with adventurers, and Remy Quinter; and riding a 10,000 km across Russia to (2000) with fellow Australian Chris Hatherly. He has also traveled into North Korea, among other places. Books and films Cope has authored books about his journeys including Off the Rails: Moscow to Beijing by Bike (2003), and On the Trail of Genghis Khan: An Epic Journey Through the Land of the Nomads (2013).Cope has also made films about his journeys including as and of Off the Rails: On the Back Roads to Beijing (2002); and filmed The Yenisey Expedition co-produced. Cope directed and filmed a four-hour program for and channels in Europe titled On the Trail of Genghis Khan which received backing from Screen Australia.
This series was screened in Europe in February 2010 on German/French channel ARTE. Cope's 6-part documentary series premiered on Australian TV channel ABC2 on Wednesday 28 July 2010. Awards and honours. 2000 'Spirit of Adventure Award',. 2001 'Young Australian Adventurer of the Year',. 2002 'Best Adventure Film', for the film Off The Rails. Mountain and Adventure Film Festival, Graz, Austria.
2006 'Australian Adventurer of the Year',. 2008 'Adventurers of the Year', one of fifteen. 2010 'Special Prize of the Jury', for the film The Trail of Genghis Khan, Mountain and Adventure Film Festival, Graz, Austria.
2013 'Grand Prize', for The Trail of Genghis Khan. 2015 'Mongolian Tourism Excellency Medal' by the minister for tourism and environment.
Also officially inaugurated as tourism envoy for Mongolia.References. ^ Tricia Welsh (20 September 2013). Retrieved 6 April 2014. 23 September 2007. Retrieved 5 April 2014. The Independent. 16 September 2007.
Retrieved 5 April 2014. Australian Associated Press. 22 September 2007. Retrieved 5 April 2014. Exploreres Web. 6 September 2007.
Retrieved 5 April 2014. Tim Cope. Tim Cope's Journeys. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
Tim Cope. Tim Cope's Journeys. Retrieved 6 April 2014. Tim Cope.
Tim Cope's Journeys. Retrieved 6 April 2014. Tim Cope. Off the Rails: Moscow to Beijing by Bike. Penguin Books, 2003. Tim Cope. On the Trail of Genghis Khan: An Epic Journey Through the Land of the Nomads, Bloomsbury, 2013.
And Beyond Distribution, 2002. Screen Australia. 5 August 2009. Archived from on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
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Running time102 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget$2,033,000Box office$3,981,000The Adventures of Robin Hood is a 1938 American directed by and and starring,. It was distributed by and produced by and.Written by and, the film depicts the legendary as a Saxon knight who, in King Richard's absence in the during the, fights back as the outlaw leader of a rebel guerrilla band against Prince John and the Norman lords oppressing the Saxon commoners.The Adventures of Robin Hood has been acclaimed by critics since its release. In 1995, the film was deemed 'culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant' by the United States and selected for preservation by the., who plays Little John, had played the same character in the of the film and went on to play him again in, released by Columbia in 1950. This section needs expansion.
You can help. ( November 2016)The Adventures of Robin Hood was produced at an estimated cost of $2 million, the most expensive film had made up to that time. It was also the studio's first large budget color film utilizing the three-strip process. It was an unusually extravagant production for the Warner Bros. Studio, which had made a name for itself in producing socially-conscious, low-budget, but their adventure movies starring Flynn had generated hefty revenue and Robin Hood was created to capitalize on this. was originally cast as Robin Hood, but walked out on his Warner Bros. Contract, paving the way for the role to go to Flynn.
The filming was postponed three years, as a result.The Adventures of Robin Hood was shot on location in various areas of. In stood in for, although one major scene was filmed at the California locations 'Lake Sherwood' and 'Sherwood Forest', so named because they were the location sites for the earlier production of (1922). Several scenes were shot at the Warner Bros. Burbank Studios and the Warner Ranch in. The archery tournament was filmed at the former, now part of Park, in.and bit players, padded with balsa wood on protective metal plates, were paid $150 per arrow for being shot by professional archer Howard Hill.
Hill, although listed as the archer captain defeated by Robin, was cast as Elwen the Welshman, an archer seen shooting at Robin in his escape from Nottingham castle and, later, defeated by Robin at the archery tournament. To win, Robin splits the arrow of Philip of Arras, a captain of the guard under Gisbourne, who had struck the bullseye.
An examination of the film images in slow motion led to speculation that the arrow split may have been made of and had been previously split, the parts being held together with small rings. Stuntman Buster Wiles, close friend of Errol Flynn and his frequent on-set stand-in, maintained that the arrow-splitting stunt was carried out using an extra large arrow (for the target) and that the second arrow had a wide, flat arrowhead and was fired along a wire. Wiles discusses the scene in his autobiography,. The episode 'Myths Reopened' revisited the Robin Hood arrow-splitting stunt.
An Olympic-grade archer was unable to fully split a straight-grained cedar arrow from about 50 feet (the arrow only split along a third of its length), but split a hollow bamboo arrow from nock to arrowhead. This tends to support Wiles' statement.Hill can also be seen as one of the Merry Men in the scene where Robin is rescued from the gallows. Concealed in a wagon, he shoots a mounted man-at-arms, whose horse is instantly mounted by the bound Robin Hood and ridden to the city gate.Korngold's music score In 1938, Korngold was conducting opera in Austria when he was asked by Warner Bros. To return to Hollywood and compose a score for The Adventures of Robin Hood. The film is considered the finest of its kind, with a continuous series of romantic and adventurous sequences propelled by Korngold's dynamic score.: 27 Music historian Laurence E. MacDonald notes that there were many factors which made the film a success, including its cast, its Technicolor photography, and fast-paced direction by, but 'most of all, there is Korngold's glorious music'.: 49 And film historian describes Korngold's contribution to this and his other films:Korngold's score was a splendid added dimension. His style for the Flynn swashbucklers resembled that of the creators of late nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century German symphonic tone poems.
It incorporated chromatic harmonies, lush instrumental effects, passionate climaxes—all performed in a generally romantic manner. Korngold's original and distinctive style was influenced by the Wagnerian, the orchestral virtuosity of Richard Strauss, the delicacy and broad melodic sweep of, and the long-line development of Gustav Mahler.: 38In reply to Warmer Bros.’ request, Korngold told studio head of production Hal B. Wallis that he was a composer of drama and the heart, and felt little connection to what he perceived as “a 90% action picture.” Wallis was persistent, with Korngold finally agreeing to begin composing on the condition that he not have a contract, and work on a week-by-week basis so that he could withdraw if he were dissatisfied with the music he composed.Before Korngold began composing the score, Austria was, and his home in Vienna was confiscated.: 35 This meant that all Jews in Austria were now at risk, so Korngold stayed in America until the end of. He later said, 'We thought of ourselves as Viennese; made us Jewish'. Korngold noted that the opportunity to compose the score for Robin Hood saved his life.Korngold called his film scores “opern ohne singen,” (“operas without singing”), but otherwise approached their composition just as he would for the operatic stage. “The Adventures of Robin Hood” was, therefore, a large-scale symphonic work and, despite the studio music department’s providing a team of orchestrators, including future Oscar-winner Hugo Friedhofer, to assist Korngold, the amount of work was immense, especially for the limited time he was given to compose.
^ Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1–31 p 18 DOI: 10.10. ^ Glancy, H.
'Warner Bros film grosses, 1921–51.' Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. Retrieved 19 April 2016. December 28, 1995. Retrieved July 22, 2009. Retrieved 19 April 2016. Rowan, Terry M.
Retrieved March 11, 2018. ^ Higgins, Scott (2007). Harnessing the Technicolor Rainbow: Color Design in the 1930s. University of Texas Press. Pp. 138–139.
^ Ebert, Roger (August 17, 2003). Retrieved March 30, 2007. August 24, 2004. Retrieved July 9, 2008. ^ Thomas, Tony;; McCarty, Clifford (June 1969).
The Films of Errol Flynn.:. P. 62–67. The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations by Tony Reeves. The Titan Publishing Group. Archived from on 2015-06-25. Retrieved 2015-06-21.
CS1 maint: archived copy as title. (1984). Sisters: The Story of Olivia de Havilland and Joan Fontaine. Dell Publishing.
May 25, 2011. Archived from on November 1, 2014.
Retrieved April 4, 2015. Mythbusters Season 4, Episode 12, 'Myths Reopened.' Originally aired April 26, 2006.
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Thomas, Tony. Korngold: Vienna to Hollywood, Turner Entertainment (1996). ^ MacDonald, Laurence E. The Invisible Art of Film Music: A Comprehensive History, Scarecrow Press (1998).
^ Behlmer, Rudy. The Adventures of Robin Hood, Univ. Of Wisconsin Press (1979). Bernardi, Daniel. Hollywood's Chosen People: The Jewish Experience in American Cinema, (2013) p. 48. Hischak, Thomas S.
The Encyclopedia of Film Composers, Rowman & Littlefield (2015). (May 13, 1938). Retrieved September 13, 2015. December 31, 1937. Retrieved March 11, 2018. Daly, Phil M.
(April 29, 1938). Retrieved March 11, 2018. Retrieved March 11, 2018. (May 21, 1938). 'The Current Screen'.
The New Yorker. Retrieved June 30, 2019. Retrieved June 30, 2019. Weitzman, Elizabeth (February 6, 2009). Retrieved October 5, 2010.
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Levy, Emanuel (September 12, 2016). Emanuellevy.com. King, Susan (May 12, 2010). Retrieved October 2, 2010. American Film Institute. Retrieved 19 April 2016. (2011).
Game Developers Conference. San Francisco. Event occurs at 38:35. Retrieved 30 May 2013. David Ashford/John Allen-Clark/Steve Holland: Knockout Comic: An Illustrated Guide (CJ Publications, UK.
1997)External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to.Wikiquote has quotations related to:. on. at.
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