Shadow Master
Super Freak
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2011
- Messages
- 555
- Reaction score
- 13
That's like proto-Indy, in a way.
It seems after TOD the series lost some of it's pulpy feeling it had so much with the first two. Raiders and especially TOD both have that feeling of being like the vintage adventure serials come to life and TOD also has it's EC Comics flare going for it. It'd be great for the fifth to bring back that feeling.
The only thing about TOD I ever took issue with was making it a prequel to Raiders. Not even really issue per say, I just feel it flows better when watched after Raiders. Raiders is more subdued with it's pacing but TOD is just a rocket from start to finish with it's pacing that when watching Raiders after you have to wind down, if that makes any sense. I usually watch TOD after Raiders as I feel they flow better that way.
Of course there's also the problem of Indy saying he doesn't believe in the supernatural in Raiders, but I always chalked that up to him simply not wanting to have his teaching credentials revoked from the university staff from telling what he saw and experienced at Pankot, so he said he didn't believe simply as a cover more than anything.
I believe Spielberg and Lucas opted to make it a prequel to go for a different adversary other than the Nazis
We made Temple Of Doom a prequel because we didn't want to use the same bad guys. We had ideas about the Monkey King. We had ideas for a haunted-castle movie but then Steve had just done Poltergeist and said, "I don't wanna do that again." We were struggling to come up with another MacGuffin. We couldn't find anything as good as the Lost Ark. We ended up with the Sankara Stones, which was a little obscure.
https://web.archive.org/web/20080808115736/https://www.empireonline.com/indy/day10/
Capshaw: I don't think there was a good review. I was blind-sided by it. The thing that surprised me the most was that the critics, women critics in particular, were very critical of Willie Scott, as if we were making a political statement and I was doing nothing for my sisters. I found it odd that it was an action-adventure film and we were meant to be doing message work.
Kennedy: You really think I'm going to enter a discussion about Willie as a female role model when Willie is now Steven's wife? You don't wanna go there.
I never saw the E.T. Special Edition and methinks I should keep it that way. I've read about the changes made and it's ridiculous he felt the need to do that.
It's too bad he's so down on TOD, I bet that's probably played a massive role in it's negative reception over the years. I wonder how he'd react if a fan came up to him and told him it was their favorite of the series and a life-changing film for them?
For myself, I tried [changing a film] once and lived to regret it. Not because of fan outrage, but because I was disappointed in myself. I got overly sensitive to [some of the reaction] to E.T., and I thought if technology evolved, [I might go in and change some things]…it was OK for a while, but I realized what I had done was I had robbed people who loved E.T. of their memories of E.T. […] If I put just one cut of E.T. on Blu-ray and it was the 1982, would anyone object to that? [The crowd yells “NO!” in unison.] OK, so be it.
https://www.slashfilm.com/steven-spielberg-regrets-altering-et-raiders-hit-bluray-original-forms/
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