Hollywood has an unfortunate history of portraying ethnic cultures and indigenous people as scary, primitive, and secondary to white men. Though much has changed in the last 40 years, the 1980s were rampant with these racial stereotypes and beliefs, with The Indiana Jones franchise also attributing to the is
A huge part of what made him so instantly memorable in Raiders is Lawrence Kasdan’s script, which gave him a bunch of exciting things to do. From outrunning a boulder to climbing underneath a moving truck, these are the coolest things Indy did in Raide
Cancers love the fantasy angle in this movie. As was already discussed, swashbuckling isn't enough. They have to be immortal warriors fighting against a shameless, ancient evil to keep Cancer interested. Just don't mention the sequ
If Indy didn’t think fast, they would’ve been stuck down there until some other civilization uncovered the Well of Souls, centuries later. Fortunately, Indy manages to find an opening in one of the walls, so he and Marion are able to escape in the nick of t
MMORPGs that trace their lineage to Korean developers include Lineage and Maple Story . lost ark patch notes Ark uses artwork that ESO players would find familiar, along with features from other MMOs like quest texts and action b
In the opening sequence of Raiders of the Lost Ark , Indy defies death to retrieve a sacred golden idol from an ancient temple. His double-crossing buddy Satipo isn’t so lucky, but Indy manages to avoid the booby traps and makes it out of the tem
**Raiders of the Lost Ark is a movie that has its own behind-the-scenes mythology as is. But going back to when you first got the script, what was your impression of it? It's very Lucas and Spielberg, but also unlike anything they'd done previously. What was your first thought
Original cast member Sam Neill, nevertheless, does a great job of carrying the movie on his lonesome shoulders as fellow original main cast member Laura Dern sits shamefully wasted in the background as not much more than a ca
Looking at every movie and its score on review aggregate site Metacritic, this list will hopefully give a newcomer to either franchise a better understanding of the movies and their sometimes complicated hist
Speaking of fantasy, how about an immortal swordfighter? Here's another period drama that flew under your radar. Indeed, Highlander is a period drama and we're not just talking about the medieval scenes. The early 1980s was also an iconic time. This movie opens with a professional wrestling match, after all, cementing its status as a period film from the late 20th cent
Indiana Jones was instantly established as one of the most iconic heroes of action cinema in his big-screen debut Raiders of the Lost Ark . Played by Harrison Ford with equal parts grit and charisma and brought to life by Steven Spielberg’s camera , Indy is a timeless screen leg
These screenshots are exactly what they seem, revealing how the better part of gameplay takes place. It's not like three-dimensional MMOs like WoW or ESO. Instead, the game is on an isometric, 3D platform reminiscent of the Diablo franch
The third Indiana Jones movie returned the title character back to a story much more in tune with what audiences loved and remembered the most about Raiders of the Lost Ark and fared far better with crit
We're looking back at a movie that came out 40 years ago and has had such an impact. When you hear that movie name, what is the thing you think of? Do you think of the shoot? Do you think of the reception it got? What is the one memory that you take from this mo
We didn't get together and invent any backstory, which perhaps we should of rather, but we didn't. It didn't seem necessary; we both liked the script. The script was good enough - not good enough, it was a terrific script. But as for playing between each other, we had such a nice accord of batting stuff backwards and forwards, and mutual respect and everything. I think that just came across; the easiness of it. Although there was a time constraint, there was never any constraint on getting something right. For instance, after the first or second week, Steven decided to reshoot a lot of the second unit stunt stuff, because he just didn't think it was good enough. And they all went away and reshot it without a question. While we were going to start doing the snake pit, he was unhappy with these rubber snakes that they started with - with just a few real ones. He said, "No, no, no. We won't shoot that today. No, we'll get some more snakes," which all came over from a snake farm in Holland in a couple of days' time, "and then we'll shoot
But that thing with Harrison doing the shooting instead of the sword sequence, which was rehearsed, was because he got ill. It wasn't for time purposes. We all got dysentery from Tunisia, working there. I think the only people who didn't get ill were Steven, who had his food flown in cans from Fortnum & Mason, and Howard G. Kazanjian, the producer. Everyone else at some point or other got ill, I think - I'm trying to remember whether Karen got ill. Anyway, I got ill right at the end of the picture. But Harrison got ill when he was meant to do that sword fight that he'd rehearsed the day before, and he just couldn't move that much. If he'd moved, he'd have had a terrible accident. So he said, "Why don't I just shoot the f*cker?" And that's how that wonderful moment came aro