bigpern23
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2004
- Messages
- 20,711
... And couldn't believe some of the observations I picked up that I never noticed in the 25 years the films have been out.
1. Temple of Doom IS A PREQUEL! I had no idea. Never even noticed that they showed the year at the start of each movie. Raiders takes place in 1936 and Temple takes place in 1935.
2. Noticing that, in turn, helped explain one thing that always bugged me about Temple. The opening scene of Temple has Indy, who we know always wants the artifacts he finds to go to a museum, selling off a rare artifact to Lao Che for a diamond. This goes against what we know of him from the other two films. That always bugged me. But now, knowing that it takes place before the other two, and seeing him at the end tell the village elders that he now knows what the Shankara Stone means to the villagers (and, by extension, all other ancient artifacts), it makes perfect sense why he's so bent on sending the Ark and the Cross of Coronado to museums.
3. Dan Akroyd is in Temple of Doom. Never noticed it before until seeing him usher Indy onto Lao Che's plane. An odd cameo for Akroyd, considering he was still a star back then.
4. At the end of Raiders, Indy and Marion stand apart and hold hands, mimicking the touching eagle's wings atop the Ark.
5. Indy's love interests get progressively hotter and he goes progressively further with them. He gets a kiss from Marion. He almost beds Willie. He gets it on with Elsa. I shiver about what might happen with a now 57-year-old Karen Allen in the new one.
6. The club where Indy sits down with Lao Che in Temple is named "Club Obi Wan."
7. Spielberg makes great used of silhouettes throughout the series.
8. All three opened with a shot of the Paramount Logo fading into another mountain (two real, one a relief on a gong).
9. Michael Moore (not THAT Michael Moore) was the second-unit director on all three films and directed the classic truck chase in Raiders (when Indy falls off the front, slides under and gets dragged behind the truck). I now officially have a favorite second-unit director.
10. I need a life.
1. Temple of Doom IS A PREQUEL! I had no idea. Never even noticed that they showed the year at the start of each movie. Raiders takes place in 1936 and Temple takes place in 1935.
2. Noticing that, in turn, helped explain one thing that always bugged me about Temple. The opening scene of Temple has Indy, who we know always wants the artifacts he finds to go to a museum, selling off a rare artifact to Lao Che for a diamond. This goes against what we know of him from the other two films. That always bugged me. But now, knowing that it takes place before the other two, and seeing him at the end tell the village elders that he now knows what the Shankara Stone means to the villagers (and, by extension, all other ancient artifacts), it makes perfect sense why he's so bent on sending the Ark and the Cross of Coronado to museums.
3. Dan Akroyd is in Temple of Doom. Never noticed it before until seeing him usher Indy onto Lao Che's plane. An odd cameo for Akroyd, considering he was still a star back then.
4. At the end of Raiders, Indy and Marion stand apart and hold hands, mimicking the touching eagle's wings atop the Ark.
5. Indy's love interests get progressively hotter and he goes progressively further with them. He gets a kiss from Marion. He almost beds Willie. He gets it on with Elsa. I shiver about what might happen with a now 57-year-old Karen Allen in the new one.
6. The club where Indy sits down with Lao Che in Temple is named "Club Obi Wan."
7. Spielberg makes great used of silhouettes throughout the series.
8. All three opened with a shot of the Paramount Logo fading into another mountain (two real, one a relief on a gong).
9. Michael Moore (not THAT Michael Moore) was the second-unit director on all three films and directed the classic truck chase in Raiders (when Indy falls off the front, slides under and gets dragged behind the truck). I now officially have a favorite second-unit director.
10. I need a life.