Lounge of Tomorrow

Lounge of Tomorrow (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/index.php)
-   Beatnik (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/forumdisplay.php?f=9)
-   -   Indy Marathon - Sunday 5/18 (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=7901)

mousepod 05-19-2008 12:33 PM

iSm... you can "balderdash" me all you like, but the truth of the matter is that the Indy series (and especially the first two) are a series of setpieces strung together... in fact, several setpieces were written for the first movie (the raft, the mine car) and were ditched for time and budget constraints, and were put into the second movie. The actual plot came second.

... and as a Hitchcock fan, I dispute your use of "macguffin" - I think the Ark, the Stone and the Grail all serve a purpose other than to move the story along...

I see your Balderdash and raise you a Shenanigans.

innerSpaceman 05-19-2008 12:46 PM

As Hitch rightly pointed out, the Maguffin is the object which the characters care greatly about, and the audience not at all. But the bargain between the film and the audience is made only when the characters care about the Maguffin ... and the movie is improved to the extent the characters demonstrate their concern for it.


Temple of Doom had zero Maguffin and Last Crusade had a boring one.



Also, as Jen pointed out yesterday, Raiders of the Lost Ark has a decidedly more adult tone than its sequels. I hated the dumming-down for kids that started with Temple of Doom. Short Round may be a great character, but he's a symptom of that slide.

The sickly sweet ForGod'sSake Save-The-Children stuff, the replacement of snappy 30's banter dialogue with stupid kid-stuff talk, the trading of twisted comic-style gore for retardedly juvenile gross-outs, the substitution of gritty outdoor shooting for glossy no-scuff set-boundness, and switching a girl you'd like Indy to sleep with for one you'd like Indy to kill are but others.


Indy 3 had some adult themes, but played them out childish ways. With some exceptions, most of the dialogue was dumbed down.

Also, the humor in Raiders was just keener and sharper than in the other films. Shooting the simitar dude, the Nazi coat hanger, and leaving Marion tied up to a pole were big laughs, and really rather witty ... especially when compared with the type of laughs in the other two films (and there are laughs, I'll admit.)



After seeing all the films back-to-back, it's harder to remember when each came out years apart ... and I expected each to stand on their own. They did not. They're much better now as part of a series, where I can just enjoy this or that setpiece or bit of business without expecting a begining, middle, end, resolution, climax or (lost) arc.

mousepod 05-19-2008 12:51 PM

Dumb fact I learned while watching the "making of" last night. The nazi coat hanger gag was originally meant to be used by Christopher Lee in 1941, but Spielberg couldn't get it to work...

Alex 05-19-2008 12:57 PM

Not being able to leave with the cup doesn't to me imply that it has no value for immortality. If all drinking from it does is heal you, couldn't you return every 10 years for a rejuvenating sip? And if you do have to stay there, is it necessary for the dingy cave to remain a dingy cave? Tear down the mountain, build a fortress, and particularly in another 30 years start living a fully connected if admittedly physical restrained life.

innerSpaceman 05-19-2008 01:16 PM

Yes, couldn't you have a swanky cave all decked out with potato chip chairs in a sunken living room with a full bar? Couldn't you get the hottest babes in the world to come there and remain hot forever with a drink of grail water before drinking your cumloads on a daily basis for the rest of eternity?


The mythology was very poorly set out. But, as it exists, there's no requirement to stay in that room to be immortal. For all we know, the two other Brothers Templar were found impure for all the incestuous gay sex they had with each other on the long road back to France from the Crusades ... where their butchery of the Muslim hoards would not have counted against them in the eyes of the Christian God. They blew their shots at immortality when they blew each other.

Gemini Cricket 05-19-2008 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by innerSpaceman (Post 211713)
They blew their shots at immortality when they blew each other.

Stop trying to derail this thread with sex talk.
:D

katiesue 05-19-2008 01:21 PM

I may be wrong, but don't they find out about the you can't take the grail out of the cave part after they actually get there?? So coudn't the nazi's have wanted it for it's imortality qualities not knowing that you couldn't get it out of the cave?

Ghoulish Delight 05-19-2008 01:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by katiesue (Post 211717)
I may be wrong, but don't they find out about the you can't take the grail out of the cave part after they actually get there?? So coudn't the nazi's have wanted it for it's imortality qualities not knowing that you couldn't get it out of the cave?

That may have been the goal of the top brass, but while it'll bring them some personal glory, it's hardly a war-winning weapon, sending one cup around one person at a time.

Even Elsa said that the Nazi's just wanted it for bragging rights, while she was in it for the immortality.

Stan4dSteph 05-19-2008 01:32 PM

My favorite part of Raiders is when the Nazi guy eats the fly.

Bornieo: Fully Loaded 05-19-2008 01:37 PM

Raiders is the best for every reason posted here in this thread. I love the other 2films a great deal - there's alot though that I don't like about them including the dumbing down of Brody and Sala in Last Crusade.

The thing about Temple of Doom, for me at least, was that I saw it in the theatre -70mm projection- from the front row and it was a great experiance. The bugs - the heart thing (which I'd like to try someday) - the minecar were all really amazing from that viewing. Seeing it on a little 19inch TV doesn't do it justice.

But...


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:51 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.