Indiana Jones

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  • Posts: 12,513
    mtm wrote: »
    Conversely in CS he has absolutely no motivation: some kid he doesn't know turns up telling him a woman he doesn't remember is missing, whilst hunting for an artefact he doesn't believe is real. Also some guy he hasn't seen in years and thinks is incredibly boring has gone missing too. He spends the movie following in that guy's footsteps rather than discovering anything himself, and ends the movie magically no longer being suspected by the FBI of being a communist spy, despite nothing changing.
    It passes the time but it leaves you feeling pretty empty.

    DoD is more melancholy, but it ends on a happy note with Indy finally realising that he's loved and still has a place in the world, and it's an actually well-considered story which has something to say.

    Great points about the messy plot of KOTCS, especially pointing out the communist spy subplot and how it was never properly resolved. I have no problem with people enjoying KOTCS, but I do struggle seeing it as better than DOD in any meaningful way, at least for my tastes. I think they're both far behind the original trilogy, but KOTCS had more distracting issues and strained my interest a lot more. DOD is far from perfect, but I thought it was about as good of a product as we could have realistically expected at this point.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,823
    mtm wrote: »
    Conversely in CS he has absolutely no motivation: some kid he doesn't know turns up telling him a woman he doesn't remember is missing, whilst hunting for an artefact he doesn't believe is real. Also some guy he hasn't seen in years and thinks is incredibly boring has gone missing too. He spends the movie following in that guy's footsteps rather than discovering anything himself, and ends the movie magically no longer being suspected by the FBI of being a communist spy, despite nothing changing.
    It passes the time but it leaves you feeling pretty empty.

    DoD is more melancholy, but it ends on a happy note with Indy finally realising that he's loved and still has a place in the world, and it's an actually well-considered story which has something to say.

    A well-considered story with something to say.... is that in and of itself not a change in what these movies have been all about? Face it my friend, if KOTCS was the Never Say Never Again of the Jones franchise, DOD was the Steel Magnolias of it.
    Okay, I went for a laugh there. I'll cover my heart...
  • thedovethedove hiding in the Greek underworld
    Posts: 5,465
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    I wonder the choice of a science fiction element. Who drove that decision?
  • TheSkyfallen06TheSkyfallen06 Buenos Aires, Argentina.
    Posts: 1,121
    thedove wrote: »
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    I wonder the choice of a science fiction element. Who drove that decision?

    George Lucas suggested the idea of aliens being involved for CS because the 1950's were the boom of the sci-fi alien movies.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited December 12 Posts: 16,558
    chrisisall wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    Conversely in CS he has absolutely no motivation: some kid he doesn't know turns up telling him a woman he doesn't remember is missing, whilst hunting for an artefact he doesn't believe is real. Also some guy he hasn't seen in years and thinks is incredibly boring has gone missing too. He spends the movie following in that guy's footsteps rather than discovering anything himself, and ends the movie magically no longer being suspected by the FBI of being a communist spy, despite nothing changing.
    It passes the time but it leaves you feeling pretty empty.

    DoD is more melancholy, but it ends on a happy note with Indy finally realising that he's loved and still has a place in the world, and it's an actually well-considered story which has something to say.

    A well-considered story with something to say.... is that in and of itself not a change in what these movies have been all about?

    Not at all... ? Indy has a character and learning arc in every one of the first three movies. They're all stories with a point to them, they're not just about punching Nazis, fun though that is. Bond is the one who never changes, pre-2006 anyway. Indy is a character who grows: that's why Temple of Doom is a prequel.
    And Last Crusade has one of the most brilliant scripts around: the story is beautifully considered and has so many elements it ties up at the end, both plot and character story. It's more polished at this than DoD is.
    thedove wrote: »
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    Why would that be better? I don't want to see the same thing every time. Why does Indy have to deal in only one type of extraordinary situation?
    If the films had kept going in the 90s I'd have been quite happy to see him discover lost worlds of dinosaurs, visit the hollow Earth etc. like in the books. You can't have the same sense of wonder if he just sees the same thing over and over.
  • j_w_pepperj_w_pepper Born on the bayou, but I now hear a new dog barkin'
    Posts: 9,068
    thedove wrote: »
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    I wonder the choice of a science fiction element. Who drove that decision?

    For me, mystical equals supernatural, just as religious does. I really do not see any difference in credibility, or for that matter: value, between time travel in DOD, the "aliens" in CS, the voodoo in TOD, and the pseudo-biblical aspects in ROTL (spirits from the Ark melting Nazi faces etc.) and TLC (the entire Holy Grail BS including 1,000-year old knights). Either you choose to present something that, in terms of science, allows for some suspension of disbelief (like the Bond films), or you cross the line to where literally everything is allowed.

    And this is what all five IJ films have been doing to the same degree. They are all fantasy-enhanced adventures, and that's why we watch them. We may have our favourites among them, but not because one film is more credible or more close to reality than another. None of them are. And none of them are "science fiction" any more than any other.

    And I love DOD, and think it's a worthy conclusion to the franchise and Indy's life story.
  • Posts: 1,419
    thedove wrote: »
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    I wonder the choice of a science fiction element. Who drove that decision?

    I guess religion is a problem for international markets
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    Posts: 4,690
    thedove wrote: »
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    I wonder the choice of a science fiction element. Who drove that decision?

    George Lucas suggested the idea of aliens being involved for CS because the 1950's were the boom of the sci-fi alien movies.

    And it seems like he never dropped the idea. Even after Ford and Spielberg said no more than once. The one time Spielberg seemed interested in the idea was Frank Darabont’s screenplay. And of course Lucas said no, and wrote his own. Apparently, a number of Darabont’s ideas are used in CS, including the Nuke the Fridge scene.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,558
    MaxCasino wrote: »
    thedove wrote: »
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    I wonder the choice of a science fiction element. Who drove that decision?

    George Lucas suggested the idea of aliens being involved for CS because the 1950's were the boom of the sci-fi alien movies.

    And it seems like he never dropped the idea. Even after Ford and Spielberg said no more than once. The one time Spielberg seemed interested in the idea was Frank Darabont’s screenplay. And of course Lucas said no, and wrote his own. Apparently, a number of Darabont’s ideas are used in CS, including the Nuke the Fridge scene.

    I don't know if that started with Darabont: the fridge idea originally came from Back To The Future I think.
    Darabont's City of the Gods has lots of fun bits, it has more peril and does Indy-on-the-run better, but there's some pretty naff and overblown bits in there too; I wouldn't say for sure it would have been a better film.

    Personally I still think the aliens are a great idea. All the stuff about ancient astronauts building the pyramids and all that has been an idea around for a while, seems a perfect fit for a film about an adventuring archeologist to me.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,823
    mtm wrote: »
    MaxCasino wrote: »
    thedove wrote: »
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    I wonder the choice of a science fiction element. Who drove that decision?

    George Lucas suggested the idea of aliens being involved for CS because the 1950's were the boom of the sci-fi alien movies.

    And it seems like he never dropped the idea. Even after Ford and Spielberg said no more than once. The one time Spielberg seemed interested in the idea was Frank Darabont’s screenplay. And of course Lucas said no, and wrote his own. Apparently, a number of Darabont’s ideas are used in CS, including the Nuke the Fridge scene.

    I don't know if that started with Darabont: the fridge idea originally came from Back To The Future I think.
    Darabont's City of the Gods has lots of fun bits, it has more peril and does Indy-on-the-run better, but there's some pretty naff and overblown bits in there too; I wouldn't say for sure it would have been a better film.

    Personally I still think the aliens are a great idea. All the stuff about ancient astronauts building the pyramids and all that has been an idea around for a while, seems a perfect fit for a film about an adventuring archeologist to me.

    Agreed. I also loved the time-rift in DOD. If crazy adventure has a name, it is Indiana Jones!
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    Posts: 4,690
    chrisisall wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    MaxCasino wrote: »
    thedove wrote: »
    One features aliens and the other time travel. Why did they choose a supernatural route for both films? The mystical element of the earlier films would have been a better choice.

    I wonder the choice of a science fiction element. Who drove that decision?

    George Lucas suggested the idea of aliens being involved for CS because the 1950's were the boom of the sci-fi alien movies.

    And it seems like he never dropped the idea. Even after Ford and Spielberg said no more than once. The one time Spielberg seemed interested in the idea was Frank Darabont’s screenplay. And of course Lucas said no, and wrote his own. Apparently, a number of Darabont’s ideas are used in CS, including the Nuke the Fridge scene.

    I don't know if that started with Darabont: the fridge idea originally came from Back To The Future I think.
    Darabont's City of the Gods has lots of fun bits, it has more peril and does Indy-on-the-run better, but there's some pretty naff and overblown bits in there too; I wouldn't say for sure it would have been a better film.

    Personally I still think the aliens are a great idea. All the stuff about ancient astronauts building the pyramids and all that has been an idea around for a while, seems a perfect fit for a film about an adventuring archeologist to me.

    Agreed. I also loved the time-rift in DOD. If crazy adventure has a name, it is Indiana Jones!

    I think that's why Indy (as well as Bond at first), was a hard sell for movie studios at first. On paper, it looks like a budget disaster in the making. But the right people (namely on Raiders), proved that all 5 Indy movies work, in spite of their occasional flaws.
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    Posts: 25,351
    Indiana Jones meets Indiana Jones at #TheGameAwards #indianajones #harrisonford #troybaker #gaming
  • thedovethedove hiding in the Greek underworld
    edited December 14 Posts: 5,465

    I guess it is just my sensibilities. I can buy an Ark containing spirits, I can buy a set of stones bringing prosperity to a village, I can buy a chalice giving eternal life.

    I can't buy that aliens visited us and created a temple deep in the jungles, nor can I buy that back in history someone was able to time travel to a specific time in history. I guess I am more into the spiritual elements.

    Thanks for the context of Lucas being big on the alien theme. Not sure who decided to add the time travel to DOD.

  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,823
    thedove wrote: »
    I guess it is just my sensibilities. I can buy an Ark containing spirits, I can buy a set of stones bringing prosperity to a village, I can buy a chalice giving eternal life.

    I can't buy that aliens visited us and created a temple deep in the jungles, nor can I buy that back in history someone was able to time travel to a specific time in history. I guess I am more into the spiritual elements.

    Thanks for the context of Lucas being big on the alien theme. Not sure who decided to add the time travel to DOD.

    I have to say, back in the old days I had a REALLY hard time buying into the 'Indy being bad because he swallowed some blood' thing. Once I came to accept that, frankly nothing was completely off the table, even the dreaded fridge fly.
  • j_w_pepperj_w_pepper Born on the bayou, but I now hear a new dog barkin'
    Posts: 9,068
    chrisisall wrote: »
    thedove wrote: »
    I guess it is just my sensibilities. I can buy an Ark containing spirits, I can buy a set of stones bringing prosperity to a village, I can buy a chalice giving eternal life.

    I can't buy that aliens visited us and created a temple deep in the jungles, nor can I buy that back in history someone was able to time travel to a specific time in history. I guess I am more into the spiritual elements.

    Thanks for the context of Lucas being big on the alien theme. Not sure who decided to add the time travel to DOD.

    I have to say, back in the old days I had a REALLY hard time buying into the 'Indy being bad because he swallowed some blood' thing. Once I came to accept that, frankly nothing was completely off the table, even the dreaded fridge fly.

    I've always loved the "fridge fly". No more unrealistic than lots of other stuff in the franchise, but one of its funniest moments for me.
  • Posts: 9,853


    Interesting thoughts spoilers for the great circle and dial of destiny
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