"The Return of the Great Adventure"

After all, such films/programs were the direct inspiration for the Indiana Jones adventures. They were the cheaply-made films that played in 1930s and 40s, when cinemas would show a whole run of products for the price of one admission, often including a newsreel, an animated short, previews, a B-feature and a main feature, among other things. Serials, which studios like Republic Pictures made as their main product, were made on miniscule budgets and relied heavily on pulpy adventure thrills, and would end with a cliff-hanger ending so the audience would have to return the next week to find out what happened. STAR WARS had actually been heavily-inspired by those kinds of films, and George Lucas was a long-time fan of old serials, as was his good friend, Steven Spielberg, with whom he shared the top of the list of most successful filmmakers of all time. The idea was to make an old-fashioned thrill ride adventure for modern audiences.
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Oh balls. |
Because Lucas had to split his schedule with the Star Wars franchise, Lawrence Kasdan, who had impressed Lucas in writing THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK and previously sold a spec script to Spielberg, was brought in to write a screenplay for RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK.
Even with the two most lucrative names in Hollywood behind it, RAIDERS was considered a bit of a risk. It was an unproven kind of film and came with a hefty price tag; furthermore, Spielberg, even with two films already that became the biggest of all time, was notorious for productions that went way over schedule and budgets that soared uncontrollably. Worse, Spielberg had just come off of 1941, both his most expensive and lowest-grossing film yet, as well as his first critical failure. Even while it wasn't a flop, it wasn't a blockbuster as expected, and people were beginning to wonder if Hollywood's "Boy Wonder" had lost his touch. After multiple rejections from other studios, Paramount agreed to take on the picture, and Lucas and Spielberg made a special effort to maintain within their already well-sized budget and bring the film in on schedule, to prove Spielberg could do it. Rather than the 20-30 takes that Spielberg had often done before, RAIDERS was heavily planned out in pre-production storyboarding and then filmed scenes with little more than a few takes. When shooting was completed, the film was turned in early, before the end of the permitted schedule.
The film was a cultural phenomenon, currently standing at number twenty on the list of highest-grossing domestic releases of all time, adjusted for inflation. At the 51st Academy Awards held in 1982, the film received eight nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director, and tied with CHARIOTS OF FIRE for the most wins that year with four, as well as an additional Special Achievement Award. On a side note, it's interesting to note that RAIDERS, often considered one of the most purely entertaining films ever made, lost Best Picture to CHARIOTS OF FIRE, definitely one of the slowest, most boring Best Picture-winning films, but I guess REDS was the favorite that year anyway. RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK was included in the set of films inducted to the National Film Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" on the tenth anniversary of the yearly selection in 1999. It was also included on the American Film Institute's list of 100 greatest films of the 20th century, and listed Indiana Jones as #2 on their list of Greatest Film Heroes, behind TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD's Atticus Finch at number one. It spawned three sequels and many imitators, and the hat and whip used in the second sequel, 1989's INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE, are displayed in the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C. The series even inspired an extremely popular and elaborate Disneyland attraction, Indiana Jones Adventure: Temple of the Forbidden Eye, which resulted in a full-blown revamping of Adventureland to match the Indiana Jones aesthetic. One of the Mercedes-Benz trucks from the desert truck chase sequence is displayed outside the exit queue of the ride.
The film is truly one of the most entertaining ever made and filled with one spectacularly thrilling action-adventure set piece after the other, among the highlights: the prologue sequence in an booby-trap riddled Peruvian jungle temple where Indy seeks a solid gold fertility goddess idol, a wild west-style shootout in a tavern in Nepal, a frantic chase through a crowded Cairo marketplace, and a high speed chase through the desert between a series of trucks and a horse. It's pure pulp of the best kind, filled with snappy dialogue, larger-than-life characters and a dash of supernatural thrills. The climactic "Opening the Ark" scene is one of the most spectacular sequences ever filmed, where the dastardly Nazi villains (how great is that?) open the fabled Ark of the Covenant in a perverse mockery of a Hebrew ceremony and find it filled with sand...then, all their lights, mics and camera equipment recording the event explode inexplicably in a shower of sparks. Thunderous clouds form within the Ark, wispy lights flow out amongst the soldiers and a ghostly apparition glides in the air to the eerie notes of a John Williams score. The apparition's angelic face suddenly transforms to a skull-like "angel of death", and electric-like rays fire out from the Ark, skewering through every soldier, sparing Indiana and his partner Marion Ravenwood, who close their eyes through the intense experience. The three main villains; Belloq, Indy's unscrupulous rival archeologist, Major Toht, a sadistic Gestapo officer and Col. Dietrich, the Nazi officer in charge of operations; are each killed in memorable fashion as Toht's flesh melts off in a bloody goop, Dietrich's head implodes and Belloq's head explodes gorily before all evidence of the event, save for the heroes, are enveloped in a pillar of fire between the Ark and the Heavens which then retracts into the Ark and the lid falls securely in place.
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The bar has been set high for villain deaths. |
older viewers, and thanks to the era of superhero blockbusters, PG-13 has become a family film norm.

When Lucas approached Spielberg with the project, Spielberg had been hoping to a James Bond movie, and he envisioned Indiana Jones as being in a similar vein. Looking at the first three films, all of which Spielberg committed to when he signed on, it isn't any stretch; they're all 'stand-alone' adventures, each with a new girl (a femme fatale in LAST CRUSADE, a Bond motif) and a new MacGuffin, and they're all basic exercises in escapism. For better or worse though, the director and Harrison Ford as the lead became so integral to the very idea of the character, that leading man replacement method of the 007 films never happened, so instead, Harrison Ford returned at 64 for a continuation of the series in 2008's INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL, which, while still a pretty good film (shut up fanboys), was less in the serial method that the character is based in and more of a homage to the character.
RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK (June 12, 1981)
Directed by Steven Spielberg
Starring: Harrison Ford, Karen Allen, Paul Freeman, John Rhys-Davies
Rated PG for unspecified reasons (but more suitable today at a hard PG-13, due to adventure violence and action throughout, frightening images and smoking/drinking)