Terrific discussion, folks! Constructive and not too snarky! You guys rock!
Mind if I throw a few cents in?
Here goes ... make of this what you will ...
For me TLC has always felt a bit like an attempt to win the audience back. An audience the filmmakers may have thought was slipping away after ToD.
As I recall, when it first came out, ToD was considered something of a creative misfire. (I was 19 back in 1989 ... yes, I know. I'm old!) It's true that it made tons of money, but I remember a lot of fans being pretty unhappy with it. (Thankfully, time has been kinder to ToD than some of our initial knee-jerk reactions at the time. I'm pleased to see that it holds up pretty well today.)
In any event, I always felt that because of negative fan reaction to ToD (or at least the filmmakers' perception of a negative reaction), TLC always felt like it was designed to win those fans back by giving them what they liked so much the first time around in Raiders. The Nazis were back, Marcus was back, Sallah was back, they returned to Judeo-Christian iconography ... hell, they even moved the movie back in time!
So for me, TLC has always kind of felt like a greatest hits album instead of a story on its own.
Don't get me wrong, there are elements of it that I absolutely love, chiefly the father/son relationship. I think TLC may well feature the most emotional growth Indy ever goes through on screen. It's great stuff. (And Connery is tremendous playing against his usual tough-guy type.)
But the obvious green screen effects often pulled me out of the movie. (A problem I had with ToD as well, but more on that in a minute.) And while I loved seeing Marcus and Sallah again, they really didn't get much to do. Certainly not enough to fill the screen time they got. Things just get too crowded for my taste.
As a rule, I find the more people you give Indy to look after ... the less interesting the movie gets. (A really
big problem I had with KotCS, too.) When he's alone or just has one partner, that's great. For my money, that's Indy at his best. The more people you give him to protect, it just gets muddled and confusing. And it pulls focus away from Indy. My opinion, anyway.
But really, the thing that pulls me out of all the Indy sequels are the "big" effects sequences. And not just when the effects are done badly. For me, all three of the sequels lose me when the effects and the action sequences get too
big.
Meaning ... what I love about Raiders isn't JUST that most everything is shot in-camera with actual stuntmen in real locations. It's more than that. I love Raiders because almost everything Indy goes through is
plausible. Until the Ark is opened in the end and the supernatural forces are unleashed ... nothing before that is impossible in our world.
Is it likely? Hell no! But it's
plausible that one guy could physically survive an adventure like that. While the fights are certainly amped up a little (thanks to Ben Burtt's amazing sound work) they felt like they could be real fights. The chase sequences, while a little exaggerated, feel like they could be real chases. In short, Raiders is grounded in recognizable reality.
But when we get to ToD, things start to immediately get too big, too fantastical, and too cartoony. Regardless of the quality of the effects, the sequences just get too impossible. They're jumping out of an airplane with a raft then tobogganing down a mountain into a raging river. Too much for me to swallow. And then the mine car sequence is just insanely over the top for me. Impressive as an effect, but totally cartoony to the rational side of my brain. The bigger the sequences got in the sequels, the further they'd push me out of the movies.
In a way, it's kind of like Raiders was a Bourne movie and the sequels were Roger Moore Bond movies. (That's not a quality comparrison, but an stylistic one.) There's an immediacy to Raiders that comes from keeping the scale more human-sized and believable. And that's wrecked for me when the green screens and pixels take over.
That said, I have to admit they did pull back a little on the
scale of the action sequences for TLC, which was good ... but the distracting green screen shots and Indy's growing pool of hapless old guys to protect ... well, those pull me out of the movie, too. (And you can multiply these issues by a factor of 10 for KotCS.)
Anyhow, I'm blathering at this point. Sorry about that!
The long and short is ... I love Indy ... especially when he's on his own and in very nitty-gritty action. I'd LOVE to see a more stripped down and more realistic approach to Indy 5 (check out aintitcool.com today for some tidbits) ... but I'm not gonna hold my breath too long!
Sorry for blathering!