Why the Extended Edition of Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves is the Ultimate 90s Fever Dream

Let’s be honest with ourselves: 1991’s Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves is a glorious mess of a movie. It is a film where Kevin Costner rocks a fantastic, flowing mullet and absolutely refuses to even attempt an English accent, while Morgan Freeman grounds the entire blockbusting spectacle with pure, unadulterated dignity.

But if you’ve only ever watched the theatrical cut that used to play on basic cable every Sunday afternoon, you’re missing out on the full experience. You need to track down the Extended Edition. By adding roughly 12 minutes of footage, this version takes a chaotic 90s action-adventure and transforms it into something far more bizarre, darker, and ultimately rewarding.

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Tequila, Toothpicks, and Two Guns: Hard Boiled Revisited

If you look up the word “cool” in the dictionary, you won’t find a definition. You’ll find a picture of Chow Yun-Fat sliding down a banister with a toothpick in his mouth and a Beretta in each hand.

Released in 1992 as director John Woo’s farewell love letter to Hong Kong cinema before his move to Hollywood, Hard Boiled is widely considered the peak of the “Heroic Bloodshed” genre. And standing tall at the center of this hurricane of bullets and broken glass is the incomparable Chow Yun-Fat.

Here is why his performance as Inspector “Tequila” Yuen remains the gold standard for action heroes.

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From Board Game to Big Screen: The 30th Anniversary of Jumanji

If the ‘90s taught us anything, it’s that family adventure movies knew how to deliver heart, humor, and just the right amount of nightmare fuel. Joe Johnston’s Jumanji, released in December 1995, is a prime example — a film that asked, What if a board game didn’t just entertain you, but rewrote your reality with every roll of the dice?

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