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Friday, May 23, 2008
Rich Galen :: Townhall.com Columnist
Indiana Jones and the.... Whatever
by Rich Galen
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If you don't have an actual job, then you are not actually playing actual hooky when you decide to hit the 11:00 AM opening-day viewing of the new Indiana Jones movie.

Here's a trick which works best if, as previously mentioned, you don't have a job. Summer blockbusters often open before most public schools are done for the year. If that is the case, you want to go to a mid-day showing on its opening day. The kids are still in school and those who do have jobs will be … at their jobs.

If you do this, you will not have to stand in line nor sit 17 inches from the screen because you didn't get there six hours in advance.

Where else can you get tips like these?

The full title of the film is "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" which has already been shortened by the Text-Message-Generation to KOCS .

It is the fourth in the Indiana Jones series which began with "Raiders of the Lost Ark" in 1981.

The second film, "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" followed in 1984 and "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" in 1989. Combined, the Indy series has grossed about $1.2 Billion worldwide, not including VCR/DVD rentals and sales.

This movie runs a tad over two hours, is rated PG-13 and, as in all three previous films it was directed by Steven Spielberg, produced by George Lucas' Lucasfilms, with the music written by John Williams.

You may not know this, but I am a serious student of film. As evidence of this, I went into the theater knowing that one of the main characters was being played by Cate Banchette. I also knew that Karen Allen, Indy's love interest in the first movie, was making a return appearance.

I thought it was very interesting that the leading women from the first two movies - "Raiders" and "Temple of Doom" were being brought back for this movie.

About 27 seconds into the movie when the Cate Blanchette character first appeared on the screen, I couldn't understand how she could look so different from her character in "Temple."

She looked way different because she was a different actress. Kate Capshaw, not Cate Blanchette, had been the female lead in "Temple of Doom."

I have done this before. When the movie "Ray" was all the rage I didn't understand how Jamie Farr (who is White) had gotten that role. The actor who played Ray Charles was, of course, Jamie Foxx. Jamie Farr had played Max Klinger on the old M*A*S*H series.

You now understand why I am rarely (read never) invited to screenings at the Motion Picture Association of America offices which are only about three blocks from mine.

Despite the fact that Ford is now 66 and Karen Allen is now 57 they still look pretty good. Cate Blanchette is 11. No, she's the age Harrison Ford was in the first "Indy" film: 39.

KOCS is set in 1957 and the bad guys (or gals) are Russian Commies, not German Nazis. To make certain there is no confusion, Spielberg has Elvis Presley's "Hound Dog" playing under the opening credits and first scenes - clearly a post-WWII song.

I have a hard time staying awake for the entirety of a two-hour movie at a theater. The Lad once said, "Let me get this straight: You are in a comfortable chair, in the largest living room in the world, in the dark, watching the equivalent of a gigantic TV set, having eaten a pound of popcorn during the previews, and you fall asleep? I'm shocked."

These kids today, huh?

I did my "first day showing" trick with the last Harry Potter movie. When I watched the DVD several months later, I was surprised at how much of it I had missed.

I didn't miss a single frame of KOCS.

If you like car chases you will love this movie. If you love close-escape after close-escape you will love this movie. If you love people who get dunked into rivers, lakes and wells then show up in the next scene, 25 seconds later in the story, completely dry you will REALLY love this movie.

If you are torn between this movie or "Sex in the City," you may not want to spend the eight bucks.

I, on the other hand, may go see it again.

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About The Author

Rich Galen has been a press secretary to Dan Quayle and Newt Gingrich. Rich Galen currently works as a journalist and writes at Mullings.com

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Saw the movie at last
and I actually did like it. Because it's another version of Star Trek 3, and Mama Mia: it's essentially about the fact that we Boomers are not dead yet and that we can on occasion be much smarter, quicker, better behaved and so on than Generation Whine ("What are you, about 80?" sneers Jones III at one early point) and eventually they figure that out. The perfect touch was right at the end when the brat reaches for the hat -- only to have it plucked from his grabby hand by Dad, who still is still just as durable as the hat.

It was also good to see that Indy finally married Marian for the right reason, and the look on Jones III's face was priceless as he contemplated the fact that old people were now going to have a honeymoon, and, well, just ewwwwww.

Wonder how many more Boomer Movies there will be to show us that no matter what the gang of seventeen year old stick figure Bratz without bosoms, bums, calves or life experience may believe, we're still out here having fun and not about to curl up and die and let them run the world.

So there.

Did anyone notice . . .
First of all, I loved it. Yeah, it was not as good as the first or the third (the second one was always kind of "meh" for me), but I was highly entertained and the new era actually didn't feel as weird as I thought it would, being so used to the 1930s. And I'm glad Spielberg and Ford put their foot down with Lucas regarding the "alien" aspect of it. Anymore "alien" and it would have degenerated into real kookiness. It was just enough, with enough archaeology (well, pseudo maybe) to be interesting. Like a Chariots of the Gods kind of thing - kooky, but maybe, just maybe they're right? ;)

Anyhoo - about what you guys haven't said - Cate Blanchett's line in the tent about using mind control to take over the U.S. and we won't even know it - getting into our government and schools. I thought that was rather un-liberal of the socialist moviemakers regarding communism. And isn't it obvious that it's already happened? Just without the paranormal aspect. Haven't we all said that before . . . a lot? Anyway, that gave me the creeps big time because in the end, it was kind of true.

Well, it was still a great flik, IMHO.

Cheers.

Fabius Cunctator
I hope you were kidding.

However, as long as Hollywood continues to be run by the current crop of dunces, I am afraid we will be subjected to the dreck that they are putting forth into the theatres.

The good news is that there is always a chance for another renaissance in film.

If you recall, the era preceeding the first Star Wars movie was pretty bleak, movie-wise. At that time, there was a trend toward "reality"-based, low-production-value, anti-social, counter-culture flicks with deliberatly unhappy & ambigious endings.

It was pretty dismal and depressing going to the movies for a while.

Unfortunatly, the same kind of Leftie Loser nuts are back making the movies again. They have learned how to grab more power, and intimidate all productions into inserting their counter-culture garbage. They are not letting the poor showing at the box office deter them.

They have their propaganda ready, and as a group, they are keeping their stories straight, fooling the executives into thinking that the reason people are rejecting their dreck is that they would rather sit at home in a dark room and stare at a moniter, instead of gathering in a theater full of happy people and enjoy an exciting collective experience.

This, of course, is nonsense. If Hollywood were making films that people wanted to see, the lines would go around the block.

When a good film actually hits the theaters, such as Iron Man or Narnia, we see how much money they can make.

But this crowd hates America so much, they don't care, as long as they can get their propaganda out there.

Fabius Cunctator 2:46am
I disagree. There is always a way to make a great movie, write a great book, compose great music, etc.

All it takes is imagination.

In today's world however, too many of of the producers of "art" are either so full of themselves or "drinking the koolaid" of of political correctness or whatever, that they can't see the forest for the trees.

It what you wrote was true (and if what you wrote was sarcasim, I hereby apologize), then the writing of all great plays should have ended with Shakespeare and the painting of great art should have ended with Michaelanglo.

This movie sucked
$8 and 3 hours I'll never get back. No story--predictable--pitiful special effects and no end to the action sequences so there could be a story. Confusing too, what with the opening scenes and then the way the tale developed.
I do want one of those fridges though.

Call me nuts
I consider Arabs to be whites. I thought Jamie Farr was from a Lebanese Christian family, and was therefore white. Interestingly, people from India, who are often dark skinned, are also classified as Caucasian, and their languages are part of the Indo-European language group.

Cate Blanchett is one of my favorite actresses, both The Gift and The Missing are great. Tommy Lee Jones is also a wonderful actor.

Apparent Generation Gap
My husband and I enjoyed the movie, even the unbelievable "campy" parts, movies as an "escape" an adventure that you could not live in real life. With a real lack of political correctness, (although there was some, and all the "insider" baby-boomer jokes).

Our grown-up DD and her fiance did not enjoy the movie, repeated gags, over done "story" and really "nothing new" to the story.



Apparent Generation Gap
My husband and I enjoyed the movie, even the unbelievable "campy" parts, movies as an "escape" an adventure that you could not live in real life. With a real lack of political correctness, (although there was some, and all the "insider" baby-boomer jokes).

Our grown-up DD and her fiance did not enjoy the movie, repeated gags, over done "story" and really "nothing new" to the story.



For bob
Jason was half-correct; Jamie Farr (Anglicised version of Jamil Farah, an Antiochian Orthodox name) is Lebanese like his character.

However, Lebanese (like other Arabs) are considered as White by US classification (Canadian classification is more divided up, due to Canuckistan's crazy "multiculturalism" policy).

Thank you, theBaron
Thank you, theBaron. As a feature used to be called in the Saturday Evening Post, "The Perfect Squelch", that is exactly what you did against Jason Soleil's typically liberal non-point - and to underline the undesirability of such ongoing liberal rants seen daily in Townhall posts, isn't it about time all the unnecessary put-downs herein cease post haste? As opposed to liberal blogs, where the meaner the better rules, can't we in Townhall posts maintain some semblance of polite conversation? Strong points can still be made without the put-downs.

The Last Crusade
Will they have to rename it the next to last crusade now?

It is my favourite. My kids were impressed when Indys father slapped him for Blasphemy. They said together *I thought only YOU did that!*

And riding off into the sunset together was a perfect ending to the trilogy. Nobody asked for a curtain call.

Jamie Farr is a Lebanese?
Funny, I thought he was a guy!

Speaking of that, did you hear about the time Al Gore walked into a bar and saw two attractive women at the other end of the counter.

Al said to the bartender, "I would like to buy those two lovely ladies a drink."

But the barkeep said, "I am sorry Mr. Gore, but those ladies are Lesbians."

"That's OK," said Al. "I am open minded."

So he walks over there and says: "So- I hear you ladies are from Beruit."

Cate Blanchett is currently my favorite
actress.

It is really hard for me to understand how anyone could confuse her with the talentless Ms. Capshaw!!!

For anyone else who doesn't know who Cate Blanchett, she is Galadriel, the Elvan Queen in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, who also narrates the opening of the first film.

She has also played Queen Elizabeth I twice, and won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for playing Katherine Hepburn in The Aviator.

Two of her films that I recommend are The Missing (with Tommy Lee Jones as her father) and The Gift (with Keanu Reeves, Katie Holmes, Greg Kinnear and Hillary Swank).

I just saw this movie
and while it is not the best of the Indiana Jones movies, it is worth seeing.

The comment I wanted to make is about writer George Lucas, who started his film career making films that created a new cultural "mythology" for an entire generation.

Then something happened, and Lucas lost the magic touch.

In his youth, Lucas was heavily enfluenced by Joseph Campbell, author of "The Hero With A Thousand Faces," who taught the young George about the power of archetypes in storytelling.

In fact, I will go further and say that I suspect Campbell helped Lucas to write some of his earlier screenplays, such as the original Star Wars trilogy, and Raiders of the Lost Ark.

This explains why Lucas has been unable to make a truly great film since the death of Joseph Campbell in 1987.

In fact, by the second Indiana Jones film, Lucas was already showing his shallow fixation on special effects, and his lack of ability to develop memorable characters.

This is most apparant in the later Star Wars trilogy. Although it was spectacular in the Special FX department, the relationships between the characters lacked the sophistication that were evident in the first three films. The latter three were obviously written by a less mature, less sophisticated person, and unless we live in Bizarro-World, people usually become more mature as they age.

I believe that this is also why it took so long for Lucas to come up with the second trilogy... because he didn't come up with the first three without help from a truly great man.

Great franchise, but tired
South Park made the point best, we need to band together to prevent producers from degrading their own legacies. Yeah, it's a built-in audience money-maker, but really? I must have missed the groundswell demanding another Indy movie. Don't get me wrong, I loved the originals. (A Temple fan, by the way) I just don't know if trotting out yet another Indy movie to make the rounds when very little original is coming out of Hollywood is the best idea.

And what does being Lebanese make Farr? Absolutely nothing. Lebanon has a wide array of ethnic groups and arabs didn't even move into the area until the 7th century. Might as well be saying an "American" = anglo-saxon. I'd at least hope that by "white" Galen meant "non-black". Considering his pigmentation and that his birth name is Jameel Joseph Farah, the only thing I can conclude is he is swarthy and probably not-adopted...


When you come to the end of a trilogy
stop.

George Lucas and Steven Speilburg both should engrave this on the inside of their sunglasses.

But I am going to see it anyway because I doubt it can be worse than Speed Racer. (Don't go to see Speed Racer if you have not seen it yet. It's like being trapped for 2 hours in a pinball machine.)

Dull article.
The first page is especially dull. Who cares??

Loved the first move
… and like nearly all sequels, the magic is gone.

I will wait for the DVD to come out

Jason
Actually the character of Klinger is Lebanese. I am not sure what Farr's ethnic background is.

What, Lebanese are Causcasian?
So, is he Semitic? Are Semites-Jews and Arabs-not Caucasian? They're not Negroid or Mongolian?

And who cares, anyway? Only the Left, to support its group politics.

Hillary delenda est.

Jamie Farr isn't white, you dim-bulb...
...he's LEBANESE! A point they made time and again throughout the entire run of the show!
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