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Patrick said,
May 20th, 2008 

you guys about summed everything up, except I didn’t get to see any of them in theaters, since I was born 01/01/90. I grew up with someone who did, so I got right into those movies at the ripe old age of 5.

Andy said,
May 20th, 2008 

I remember going to the theatre to see all of the Indy movies and I loved every single one of them. I can’t say that the movies changed my life, but they directly skewed the types of movies that I love. To me, Raiders will ALWAYS be one of the best films ever made and I can watch it over and over again. I guess that is why Harrison Ford is probably my all-time favorite actor. He was in Star Wars and Indy. How many of US would love a career that is defined like that??

Isabel Holtreman said,
May 20th, 2008 

What a wonderful idea! I’ve been reading this site since its inception, but always on the run between work and trying to build a creative life. So, before I join in on this conversation, please allow me a moment to apologize to my brother, Vic, for not participating sooner. I’ve been a very, very bad sister.
As I read my brother’s post, I must admit a tear came to my eye remembering that night and how floored we were at what we’d just witnessed.
Sure, we’d been sitting next to one another as young teens watching STAR WARS twice through in the days where one movie ticket allowed you to stay for a second showing. I remember looking at Vic after the first run and telling him I was going to make movies someday. His simple answer: “Okay.”
Sure, we’d taken the day off from school (with our mother’s permission!) to be the first two in line, lawn chairs in tow, at 7:30 a.m. one rainy morning. We’d waited three years to see THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK.
But RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK was an altogether different experience. It’s incredible mixture of high action and fantasy caused it to transcend its genre into something that had never been seen before. I know, it was modeled after the old serials, but please, Spielberg knocked his knock off out of the park. Indiana Jones became the benchmark for the perfect action hero. That reluctant, flawed, honorable sort that, whatever his issues, would sacrifice everything in order to save the day.
My number one reason for going to a movie is to leave feeling, not only entertained, but inspired. How many movies can continue to do that for you for 27 years straight?
Recently, I went back to school to obtain a Master’s degree in Screenwriting and just won a grad student award for my first action/fantasy entitled THE MIN RUBY. I was very pleased to receive the award but I have to be honest, when my professor told me that parts of my script felt like an Indiana Jones movie, I knew I had arrived and that I finally had a shot in this business.
Lucas and Spielberg were the filmmaking dream team of their time. I devoured everything I could about them and their films and when I saw the trailer for this last (?) installment, I couldn’t wipe the smile off my face. They, and this film is why I’m one of a handful of women who are determined to write and ultimately direct action/adventure movies.
People sometimes ask me to name my favorite film of all time and my answer is always “In what genre?” But if I’m pressed to name one and only one it’s RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, hands down.
Kudos to you, Vic, for creating this site and for reminding me of that formative time that made us both who we are today.

790 said,
May 20th, 2008 

Its like leaving your normal life behind, sneeking into a train out of town with cash, gun, whip, and a treasure map!

Harrison Ford and the Crew, have made alot of people happy!

May 20th, 2008 
Well it only took 4 1/2 years and 1600 posts, but I finally got you to drop a comment. :-)
Good times…

Vic

John "Kahless" Taylor said,
May 21st, 2008 

I was born 01/01/90. I grew up with someone who did, so I got right into those movies at the ripe old age of 5.

Posted by: Patrick at May 20, 2008 6:49 PM

Why do I suddenly feel like I need a cane or a bottle of Ensure? :o)

When it comes to movie franchises, one thinks of Star Wars, Star Trek, James Bond, and leading the pack, Indiana Jones. Being a Trekker, you would think I would say that the Trek franchise is the best, or even Star Wars, but all these franchises have one problem….some of their movies have sucked. Even those Temple of Doom was the worst in the series so far, it is still a good movie. I believe that Harrison Ford is the reason these movies are soo good; sure, they have great action and special effects but the acting, the humor, of Ford reigns supreme. We see the same in his role as Han Solo, the consummate rogue.

Patrick said,
May 21st, 2008 

I don’t think you need a cane or a bottle of ensure. maybe just a whip and a fedora.

May 21st, 2008 
“I don’t think you need a cane or a bottle of ensure. maybe just a whip and a fedora.”

Damn straight.
:-)
Vic

roboknight said,
May 22nd, 2008 

Well, I certainly don’t need a bottle of Ensure yet, but I do remember going to see all three Indiana Jones movies at the theater. I also remember that movies spent a few months in theaters back then when they were good and “Raiders” was there for a long time. I remember going to see it with my dad. That and “Empire” have the strongest memories because I went to see them both with my dad. To this day I’ve always wanted to be an archeologist. Even if, as Jones says in “Last Crusade” - “An archeologist spends most of his time in the LIBRARY!”. Unfortunately, I’ve never been able to duplicate the experience I felt seeing “Raiders” for the first time. I was completely swept away. It took you to truly exotic locales and you met interesting characters. Although I did like “Last Crusade” immensely (I didn’t care for “Temple of Doom” nearly as much), “Raiders” really was the one that just takes you from one adventure to the next. Even “Star Wars” didn’t make me want to pilot an X-wing as much as “Raiders” made me want to be an archeologist. At any rate, now that I’ve seen “Crystal Skull”, I can say that I liked it over all - much better than I liked any of the new “Star Wars” flicks, but it didn’t leave me feeling like I wanted to quit my day job to become an archeologist. But Harrison Ford can still pull of Indiana Jones, so maybe I’ll go out and get a fedora and whip after all.

Patrick said,
May 22nd, 2008 

I just saw Crystal Skull which I thought was pretty good, not as good as the others of course, but it did have it’s moments. it’s definitely a worthy addition to any “archeologist’s” collection. I’m betting that they re-release Raiders in theaters for a few nights only in 3 months or so. I might finally get my chance to see it on the big screen. it won’t be the same as it was for you and Vic, but I think it will be pretty cool. I am also waiting for the confirmation on Indy 5, and I hope they don’t give Shia the fedora until the 6th one, but after that last scene I’m kinda nervous.

roboknight said,
May 24th, 2008 

Well, if “Raiders” comes back to the big screen, I’ll shell out for it again. I remember jumping the first time that skeleton hanging from the spikes appeared as they were headed into the temple to grab the golden idol. I can’t say how many times I’ve seen that movie, or parts, or started in the middle and finished it anyway… but its been a lot. I’d even like them to run all 4 back to back… ;) (Actually, MY back probably couldn’t take it, but I still don’t need that bottle of ensure!)…

The original post mentioned “the golden age” of childhood movies from 1977-1989. There were a lot of breakthroughs in those years. And quite a few interesting stories. “Star Wars”, “Indiana Jones”, a few good “Bond” flicks, two of the better “Star Trek” movies, “Back to the Future”, and a variety of PG kids movies that turned out fun as well as some of the other sci-fi /fantasy flicks. Lot of amazing screen visuals and so forth, but mainly just darn good story-telling.

The Big Dentist said,
May 25th, 2008 

Brilliant idea for a thread! I love hearing people’s impressions of the same thing at different stages of their lives. Vic, I walked into Raiders knowing nothing about it as well (Ark? What, with Noah and everything?), and came out, shall we say, “pleasantly surprised”. I used to read Starlog religiously cover-to-cover, devouring anything I could about these weird & wonderful movies and shows I’d never seen and was never likely to - this being back when the UK had a grand total of three yes THREE TV channels! Occasionally its sister-mag Future for the factual stuff, and over here we had Starburst as well.

I visited Elstree studios during a break in the filming of Temple Of Doom in 1983. I remember the big Chinese dragon on the bar being sculpted out of styrofoam, covered in plaster and painted; had a walk round the mine car set, which had a completely circular track running the entire circumference of the biggest sound stage, with the cars powered by electric motors. Best of all was the pit of spiders. 50% of a shaft (if that makes any sense) to allow the actors to still be filmed head-on, with the walls lined by eight-foot planks of wood. Onto these had been nailed hundreds of rubber spiders they’d apparently ordered fom some local joke shop. When the scene was being filmed, guys up top would jiggle the planks about to create the impression of a seething mass behind the actors. Cracks me up, that. These days they’d spend silly money and several months CGIing the whole thing.

None of the actors were on set at the time, but I did see Spielberg on his own in the catering unit getting himself a salad. Not as tall as you’d think (don’t they say that about everyone?). I really wanted to go up and just thank him from the bottom of my heart for Close Encounters, but didn’t want to be a pest and didn’t have the guts anyway!

Sadly the finished movie wasn’t a patch on the original and I haven’t watched it for years. The initial thrill of seeing an old 1930s-type serial being played hell-for-leather in a big-budget present was further eroded by those rip-off series like Bring ‘Em Back Alive and Tales Fom The Gold Monkey, or Jade Monkey, or whatever it was called.

I can’t say Raiders or the two sequels changed my life in any way, but for me Kate Capshaw was up there with Carrie Fisher and Sigourney Weaver in changing how women could be portrayed in action films. I’m hoping the new one will do something interesting with the concept of her aging as well as Indy.

May 25th, 2008 
Ah, another oldster. :-) And I think you meant Karen Allen and most certainly NOT Kate Capshaw when referring to strong females in film.

Vic

May 25th, 2008 

I still have a theater stub from Raiders - the old fashioned kind, and it was only $3.50!

To me, there are scenes that I will re-watch over and over again (and have)like the airplane fight, the truck chase (especially the truck chase - which in my opinion is the single best action sequence ever committed to film - it is action perfection) The way Indy pauses on the bluff before charging his horse down the path out of the blind spot, the way he pulls the first German straight out of the truck, the silly “are you kidding me?” grin he gets when the motorbike and sidecar try to overtake him, the grunt he gives when seeing the Germans in his side view mirror, the look of raw determination when retaking the truck after being thrown out the window, the music, the look on the German officer’s face right before getting Indy’s shoe in the face, Indy finally overtaking Belloq’s car, the looks on their faces, the sense of triumph, the cinematography, the editing, all spot on.

The Big Dentist said,
May 25th, 2008 

Sorry, you’re quite right: I meant Karen Allen! I’ve just got back from my niece’s wedding and it’s the early hours of the morning here. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it…

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