INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE
CRYSTAL SKULL
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the
Crystal Skull is a 2008 American action adventure film directed by
Steven Spielberg and the fourth installment in the Indiana Jones
series. Released nineteen years after the previous film, the film is
set in 1957, pitting Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) against Soviet
agents, led by Irina Spalko (Cate Blanchett), searching for a
telepathic crystal skull. Jones is aided by his former lover, Marion
Ravenwood (Karen Allen), and her son, Mutt Williams (Shia LaBeouf).
Ray Winstone, John Hurt and Jim Broadbent are also part of the
supporting cast.
Screenwriters
Jeb Stuart, Jeffrey Boam, Frank Darabont, and Jeff Nathanson wrote
drafts before David Koepp's script satisfied the producers. The
filmmakers intended to pay tribute to the science fiction B-movies of
the 1950s era. Shooting began on June 18th, 2007, at various
locations in New Mexico; New Haven, Connecticut; Hawaii; and Fresno,
California, as well as on sound stages in Los Angeles. To maintain
aesthetic continuity with the previous films, the crew relied on
traditional stunt work instead of computer-generated stunt doubles,
and cinematographer Janusz Kaminski studied Douglas Slocombe's style
from the previous films.
The film premiered at the 2008 Cannes Film
Festival on May 18th, 2008, and was released worldwide on May 22nd,
2008 to generally positive reviews from critics, although audience
reception was more mixed. There was significant praise for the
performances, action scenes, John Williams' musical score, and the
costume design. Criticism, however, focused on the dialogue,
storyline, pacing, and overuse of CGI. It was also a financial
success like the previous three films in the series, grossing over
$786 million worldwide, becoming the franchise's highest-grossing
film when not adjusted for inflation, and the second highest-grossing
film of 2008.
INDIANA JONES
Harrison Ford reprises the role of Dr.
Henry "Indiana" Jones, Jr. To prepare for the role, the
64-year-old Ford spent three hours a day at a gym, practiced with the
bullwhip for two weeks, and relied on a high-protein diet of fish and
vegetables. Ford was adamant that he got to wield Indiana's famous
whip. Paramount executives wanted the weapon to be computer generated
because of new film safety rules, but the actor branded the rule
"ridiculous". Ford had kept fit during the series' hiatus
anyway, as he hoped for another film. He performed many of his own
stunts because stunt technology had become safer since 1989, and he
also felt it improved his performance. It is also said that he still
fit into his pants from Raiders of the Lost Ark. He argued, "The
appeal of Indiana Jones isn't his youth but his imagination, his
resourcefulness. His physicality is a big part of it, especially the
way he gets out of tight situations. But it's not all hitting people
and falling from high places. My ambition in action is to have the
audience look straight in the face of character and not at the back
of a capable stuntman's head. I hope to continue that no matter how
old I get." Ford felt his return would reduce American ageism
(he refused to dye his hair for the role), because of the film's
family appeal: "This is a movie which is geared not to [the
young] segment of the demographic, an age-defined segment ... We've
got a great shot at breaking the movie demographic constraints."
He told Koepp to add more references to his age in the script.
Spielberg said Ford was not too old to play Indiana: "When a guy
gets to be that age and he still packs the same punch, and he still
runs just as fast and climbs just as high, he's gonna be breathing a
little heavier at the end of the set piece. And I felt, 'Let's have
some fun with that. Let's not hide that.'" Spielberg recalled
the line in Raiders that said, "It's not the years, it's the
mileage," and felt he could not tell the difference between Ford
during the shoots for Last Crusade and Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
IRINA SPALKO
Cate Blanchett joins the cast as Soviet
agent Irina Spalko. Screenwriter David Koepp created the character
and producer Frank Marshall said Spalko continued the tradition of
Indiana having a love-hate relationship "with every woman he
ever comes in contact with." Blanchett had wanted to play a
villain for a "couple of years", and enjoyed being part of
the Indiana Jones legacy. Spielberg praised Blanchett as a
"master of disguise", and considers her his favorite
Indiana Jones villain for inventing much of Spalko's character.
Spalko's bob cut was her idea, with the character's stern looks and
behaviour recalling Rosa Klebb in From Russia with Love. Blanchett
learned to fence for the character; but during filming, Spielberg
decided to give Spalko "karate chop" skills. LaBeouf
recalled Blanchett was elusive on set, and Ford was surprised when he
met her on set out of costume. Several weeks into production Harrison
Ford saw a blonde woman on the set, when he asked who she was he was
told it was Cate Blanchett, who he had never seen out of costume and
did not recognize without her black wig. He noted, "There's no
aspect of her behavior that was not consistent with this bizarre
person she's playing."
MARION RAVENWOOD
Karen Allen, who previously appeared in
Raiders of the Lost Ark, reprises the role of Marion Ravenwood (under
the married name of Marion Williams). Frank Darabont's script
introduced the idea of Marion returning as Indiana's love interest.
Allen was not aware her character was in the script until Spielberg
called her in January 2007, saying, "It's been announced! We're
gonna make Indiana Jones 4! And guess what? You're in it!" Ford
found Allen "one of the easiest people to work with [he's] ever
known. She's a completely self-sufficient woman, and that's part of
the character she plays. A lot of her charm and the charm of the
character is there. And again, it's not an age-dependent thing. It
has to do with her spirit and her nature." Allen found Ford
easier to work with on this film, than in Raiders.
It's a consensus around The Hall of Fame
that one of the main reasons we love this movie is Marion. It
wouldn't have been the same without her and if they make another she
has to be in it as well!
MUTT WILLIAMS
Shia LaBeouf plays Mutt Williams (AKA:
Henry Jones III), Indiana's sidekick and, it turns out (spoiler
alert) his son. The concept of Indiana Jones having offspring was
introduced in The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles; in the episode
"Princeton, February 1916", Indy and his high school
sweetheart discuss having a child and naming him "Henry Jones
III." (This scene was deleted from the VHS and DVD releases.);
additionally, in several episodes, an elderly Indy is shown to have a
daughter. During the film's development, the latter was incorporated
into Frank Darabont's script, with Indiana and Marion having a
13-year-old daughter. Spielberg found this too similar to The Lost
World: Jurassic Park, so a son was created instead. Koepp credited
the character's creation to Jeff Nathanson and Lucas. Koepp wanted to
make Mutt more academic, but Lucas likened Mutt to Marlon Brando's
character in The Wild One: "he needs to be what Indiana Jones'
father thought of [him] the curse returns in the form of his
own son he's everything a father can't stand." LaBeouf
was Spielberg's first choice for the role, having been impressed by
his performance in Holes. Excited at the prospect of being in an
Indiana Jones film, LaBeouf agreed without reading the script and did
not know what character he would play. He later gained fifteen pounds
of muscle for the role, and also repeatedly watched the other films
including Blackboard Jungle, Rebel Without a Cause, and The Wild One
to develop his character's personality, copying mannerisms and words
including the use of a switchblade as a weapon. Lucas also consulted
on the greaser look, joking that LaBeouf was "sent to the
American Graffiti school of greaserland." LaBeouf pulled his
rotator cuff when filming Mutt's duel with Spalko; an injury that
worsened throughout filming. He later pulled his groin.
GEORGE "MAC" McHALE
Ray Winstone plays George "Mac"
McHale, a British agent whom Jones worked alongside in World War II,
but has now allied with the Russians to resolve financial problems.
The character acts as a spin on Sallah and René Belloq
Jones's friend and nemesis, respectively, in Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Spielberg cast Winstone as he found him "one of the most
brilliant actors around", having seen Sexy Beast. Winstone tore
his hamstring during filming. "I keep getting these action parts
as Im getting older", he remarked. Like John Hurt,
Winstone wished to see the script prior to committing to the film. In
interviews on British TV Winstone explained that he was only able to
read the script if it was delivered by courier, who waited while he
read the script, and returned to the U.S. with the script once
Winstone had read it. His reasoning for wanting to read the script
was, "If I'm gonna be in it, I want to be in it." He gave
suggestions to Spielberg, including the idea of Mac pretending to be
a double agent. He also stated that once filming was completed he had
to return the script, such was the secrecy about the film. He was
later presented with a copy of the script to keep.
HAROLD OXLEY
John Hurt plays Harold "Ox"
Oxley, Mutt's surrogate father and Indiana's old friend. Frank
Darabont had suggested Hurt while writing the screenplay. The
character is inspired by Ben Gunn of Treasure Island. Hurt read the
script before agreeing to his role, unlike other cast members who
came on "because Steven you know, 'God' was doing
it. And I said, 'Well, I need to have a little bit of previous
knowledge even if God is doing it.' So they sent a courier over with
the script from Los Angeles, gave it to me at three o'clock in the
afternoon in London, collected it again at eight o'clock in the
evening, and he returned the next day to Los Angeles."
Jim
Broadbent is Charles Stanforth, the dean of Marshall College and
friend of Jones. Broadbent's character stands in for Marcus Brody,
who had been portrayed by actor Denholm Elliott in Raiders and Last
Crusade and had died in 1992. As a tribute to Elliott, the filmmakers
put a portrait and a statue on the Marshall College location, and a
picture on Jones' desk, saying he died shortly after Indiana's father.
Joel Stoffer and Neil Flynn have minor
roles as FBI agents interrogating Indiana in a scene following the
opening sequence. Alan Dale plays General Ross, who protests his
innocence. Andrew Divoff and Pasha D. Lychnikoff play Russian
soldiers. Spielberg cast Russian-speaking actors as Russian soldiers
so their accents would be authentic. Dimitri Diatchenko plays
Spalko's right-hand man who battles Indiana at Marshall College.
Diatchenko bulked up to 250 pounds to look menacing, and his role was
originally minor with ten days of filming. When shooting the fight,
Ford accidentally hit his chin, and Spielberg liked Diatchenko's
humorous looking reaction, so he expanded his role to three months of
filming. Ernie Reyes, Jr. plays a cemetery guard.
Igor
Jijikine plays Russian Colonel Antonin Dovchenko, Spalko's second-in-command.
His character stands in for the heavily built henchmen that Pat
Roach played in the three previous films, as Roach died in 2004 from
throat cancer.
Sean Connery turned down an offer to cameo
as Henry Jones, Sr., as he found retirement too enjoyable. Lucas
stated that in hindsight it was good that Connery did not briefly
appear, as it would disappoint the audience when his character would
not join the film's adventure. Ford joked, "I'm old enough to
play my own father in this one." The film addresses Connery's
absence by Indiana implying that both Henry, Sr. and Marcus Brody
passed away before the film's events. Connery later stated that he
liked the film, describing it as "rather good and rather
long." Michael Sheard, who portrayed Adolf Hitler in the third
film, expressed interest in appearing in the film, but he passed away
in August 2005.
John Rhys-Davies was asked to reprise his
role as Sallah as a guest in the wedding scene. He turned it down as
he felt his character deserved a more substantial role. That's too
bad, because as fans of the series we would have loved to see him
there. Of course we at the Hall of Fame have an opinion on this
subject. Actors will turn down a cameo or small part in a sequel
feeling the part isn't important enough. As a fan we may not be
looking at a single film in a series but the whole universe as
created by the writers, actors and director. So, though the part may
be small, it's all part of a larger narrative and it's fun to see
these characters return, even briefly. Actors shouldn't look at it as
just one movie or one sceen but as being part of a larger universe
and not worry about not being noticed because, as fans, we notice
this stuff!
The pictures of Marcus (Denholm Elliott)
and Henry Jones Sr. (Sean Connery) shown prominently on Indy's desk
are both from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) More
difficult to spot is a photograph of Indy and Sallah (John
Rhys-Davies) from Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) on the fireplace
mantel in Indy's home. A picture of Willie Scott (Kate Capshaw) from
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984) can be seen in the
background on a cupboard when Indy is talking to Mutt. She is wearing
her red stage dress from Club Obi Wan. A doctored photograph of a
young Sean Connery and River Phoenix briefly seen in Indiana Jones
and the Last Crusade (1989) is also visible on a small table as Dean
Stanforth (Jim Broadbent) enters the room.
During the late 1970s, George Lucas and
Steven Spielberg made a deal with Paramount Pictures for five Indiana
Jones films. Following the 1989 release of Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade, Lucas let the series end as he felt he could not think of a
good plot device to drive the next installment, and chose instead to
produce The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles for TV, which explored the
character in his early years. Harrison Ford played Indiana in one
episode, narrating his adventures in 1920 Chicago. When Lucas shot
Ford's role in December 1992, he realized the scene opened up the
possibility of a film with an older Indiana set in the 1950s. The
film could reflect a science fiction 1950s B-movie, with aliens as
the plot device. Meanwhile, Spielberg believed he was going to
"mature" as a filmmaker after making the trilogy, and felt
he would just produce any future installments.
Ford
disliked the new angle, telling Lucas, "No way am I being in a
Steven Spielberg movie like that." Spielberg himself, who
depicted aliens in Close Encounters of the Third Kind and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial,
also resisted it. Lucas came up with a story, which Jeb Stuart
turned into a script from October 1993 to May 1994. Stuart had
previously written The Fugitive, which starred Ford. Lucas wanted
Indiana to get married, which would allow Henry Jones, Sr. to return,
expressing concern over whether his son is happy with what he has
accomplished. After he learned that Joseph Stalin was interested in
psychic warfare, he decided to have Russians as the villains and the
aliens to have psychic powers. Following Stuart's next draft, Lucas
hired Last Crusade writer Jeffrey Boam to write the next three
versions, the last of which was completed in March 1996. Three months
later, Independence Day was released, and Spielberg told Lucas he
would not make another alien invasion film. Lucas decided to focus on
the Star Wars prequels.
In 2000, Spielberg's son asked when the
next Indiana Jones film would be released, which made him interested
in reviving the project. The same year, Ford, Lucas, Spielberg, Frank
Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy met during the American Film
Institute's tribute to Ford, and decided they wanted to enjoy the
experience of making an Indiana Jones film again. Spielberg also
found returning to the series a respite from his many dark films
during this period, such as A.I.: Artificial Intelligence, Minority
Report, and Munich. Lucas convinced Spielberg to use aliens in the
plot by saying they were not "extraterrestrials", but
"interdimensional", with this concept taking inspiration in
the superstring theory. Spielberg and Lucas discussed the central
idea of a B-movie involving aliens, and Lucas suggested using the
crystal skulls to ground the idea. Lucas found those artifacts as
fascinating as the Ark of the Covenant, and had intended to feature
them for a Young Indiana Jones episode before the show's
cancellation. M. Night Shyamalan was hired to write for an intended
2002 shoot, but he was overwhelmed writing a sequel to a film he
loved like Raiders of the Lost Ark, and claimed it was difficult to
get Ford, Spielberg and Lucas to focus. Stephen Gaghan and Tom
Stoppard were also approached.
Frank
Darabont, who wrote various Young Indiana Jones episodes, was hired
to write in May 2002. His script, entitled Indiana Jones and the City
of Gods, was set in the 1950s, with ex-Nazis pursuing Jones.
Spielberg conceived the idea because of real life figures such as
Juan Perón in Argentina, who protected Nazi war criminals.
Darabont claimed Spielberg loved the script, but Lucas had issues
with it, and decided to take over writing himself. Lucas and
Spielberg acknowledged the 1950s setting could not ignore the Cold
War, and the Russians were more plausible villains. Spielberg decided
he could not satirize the Nazis after directing Schindler's List,
while Ford noted, "We plumb wore the Nazis out."
Jeff Nathanson met with Spielberg and
Lucas in August 2004, and turned in the next drafts in October and
November 2005, titled The Atomic Ants. David Koepp continued on from
there, giving his script the subtitle Destroyer of Worlds, based on
the J. Robert Oppenheimer quote. It was changed to Kingdom of the
Crystal Skull, as Spielberg found it more inviting a title and
actually named the plot device of the crystal skulls. Lucas insisted
on the Kingdom part. Koepp's "bright [title] idea" was
Indiana Jones and the Son of Indiana Jones, and Spielberg had also
considered having the title name the aliens as The Mysterians, but
dropped that when he remembered that was another film's title. Koepp
collaborated with Raiders of the Lost Ark screenwriter Lawrence
Kasdan on the film's "love dialogue."
The second draft's prologue is set in
Borneo in 1949, with Indiana proposing to Dr. Elaine McGregor after
defeating pirates. She abandons him at the altar, because the
government requests her aid in decoding an alien cylinder (covered in
Egyptian, Mayan and Sanskrit symbols) in New Mexico. Indiana pursues
her, and battles Russians agents and aliens for the cylinder. The
script featured army ants, a rocket sled fight, Indiana surviving an
atomic explosion by sealing himself in a fridge, and a climactic
battle between the U.S. military and flying saucers. Henry Jones,
Sr., Short Round, Sallah, Marion Ravenwood and Willie cameo at
Indiana and Elaine's wedding(s). Indiana is also a former colonel and
was assigned to the O.S.S. during World War II.
- Indiana Jones and the
Saucer Men from Mars script by Jeb Stuart, dated February 20, 1995
Unlike the previous Indiana Jones films,
Spielberg shot the entire film in the United States, stating he did
not want to be away from his family. Shooting began on June 18th,
2007, in Deming, New Mexico. An extensive chase scene set at the
fictional Marshall College was filmed between June 28th and July 7th
at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut (where Spielberg's son
Theo was studying). To keep in line with the fact the story takes
place in the 1950s, several facades were changed, although signs were
put up in between shots to tell the public what the store or
restaurant actually was.
Afterwards, they filmed scenes set in the
Peruvian jungles in Hilo, Hawaii until August. Indiana Jones and the
Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was the biggest film shot in Hawaii
since Waterworld, and was estimated to generate $22 million to $45
million (US) in the local economy. Because of an approaching
hurricane, Spielberg was unable to shoot a fight at a waterfall, so
he sent the second unit to film shots of Brazil's and Argentina's
Iguazu Falls. These were digitally combined into the fight, which was
shot at the Universal backlot.
Half the film was scheduled to shoot on
five sound stages at Los Angeles: Downey, Sony, Warner Bros.,
Paramount and Universal. Filming moved to Chandler Field in Fresno,
California, substituting for Mexico City International Airport, on
October 11th, 2007. After shooting aerial shots of Chandler Airport
and a DC-3 on the morning of October 12th, 2007, filming wrapped.
Although he originally found no need for re-shoots after viewing his
first cut of the film, Spielberg decided to add an establishing shot
filmed on February 29th, 2008, in Pasadena, California.
Spielberg and Janusz Kaminski, who has
shot all of the director's films since 1993's Schindler's List,
reviewed the previous films to study Douglas Slocombe's style. "I
didnt want Janusz to modernize and bring us into the 21st
century", Spielberg explained. "I still wanted the film to
have a lighting style not dissimilar to the work Doug Slocombe had
achieved, which meant that both Janusz and I had to swallow our
pride. Janusz had to approximate another cinematographer's look, and
I had to approximate this younger director's look that I thought I
had moved away from after almost two decades." Spielberg also
hired production designer Guy Hendrix Dyas after admiring his design
work for Superman Returns. Spielberg did not want to fast cut action
scenes, relying on his script instead for a fast pace, and had
confirmed in 2002 that he would not shoot the film digitally, a
format Lucas had adopted. Lucas felt "it looks like it was shot
three years after Last Crusade. The people, the look of it,
everything. Youd never know there was 20 years between
shooting." Kaminski commented upon watching the three films
back-to-back, he was amazed how each of them advanced
technologically, but were all nevertheless consistent, neither too
brightly or darkly lit.
While shooting War of the Worlds in late
2004, Spielberg met with stunt coordinator Vic Armstrong, who doubled
for Ford in the previous films, to discuss three action sequences he
had envisioned. However, Armstrong was filming The Mummy: Tomb of the
Dragon Emperor during shooting of Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, so
Dan Bradley was hired instead. Bradley and Spielberg used
previsualization for all the action scenes, except the motorcycle
chase at Marshall College, because that idea was conceived after the
animators had left. Bradley drew traditional storyboards instead, and
was given free rein to create dramatic moments, just as Raiders of
the Lost Ark second unit director Michael D. Moore did when filming
the truck chase. Spielberg improvised on set, changing the location
of Mutt and Spalko's duel from the ground to on top of vehicles.
The Ark of the Covenant is seen in a
broken crate during the Hangar 51 opening sequence. Lucasfilm used
the same prop from Raiders of the Lost Ark. Guards were hired to
protect the highly sought after piece of film memorabilia during the
day of its use. A replica of the staff carried by Charlton Heston in
The Ten Commandments was also used to populate the set to illustrate
the Hangar's history.
The nuclear bomb test that Indiana Jones
finds himself in is loosely based on the Operation Teapot atomic bomb
tests of 1955, detonated on the Nevada Test Site. Most notable is the
use of buildings and mannequins to observe the destructive force of
the explosion, which was also featured in the nuclear bomb test in
the film. The announcements and countdown preceding the explosion are
based on the Ivy Mike test of 1952, the very first detonation of a
hydrogen bomb (most notably the warning "Do not remove goggles
or face blast until ten seconds after first light.")
Untitled
AV
CLUB FEATURETTE DEPARTMENT
Untitled
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull finds Indy (Harrison Ford) trying to outrace a brilliant and beautiful Russian agent (Cate Blanchett) for the mystical, all-powerful Crystal Skull of Akator. Teaming up with a rebellious young biker (Shia LaBeouf) and his spirited original love Marion (Karen Allen), Indy takes you on a breathtaking action-packed adventure in the exciting tradition of the classic Indiana Jones movies!
Producer Frank Marshall and Spielbery
stated that the film would use traditional stunt work and very few
CGI effects so to be consistent with the previous films. CGI was used
to remove the visible safety wires on the actors when they did their
stunts (such as when Indy swings on a lamp with his whip). Timed
explosives were used for a scene where Indiana drives a truck through
crates. During the take, an explosive failed to detonate and landed
in the seat beside Ford. It did not go off and he was not injured.
During filming significantly more CGI work
was done than initially anticipated as in many cases it proved to be
more practical. There ended up being a total of about 450 CGI shots
in the film, with an estimated 30 percent of the film's shots
containing CG matte paintings. Spielberg initially wanted
brushstrokes to be visible on the paintings for added consistency
with the previous films, but decided against it. The script also
required a non-deforested jungle for a chase scene, but this would
have been unsafe and many hours of CGI work was done to create the
jungle action sequence. Visual effects supervisor Pablo Helman (who
worked on Lucas' Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace and
Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones as well as
Spielberg's War of the Worlds and Munich) traveled to Brazil and
Argentina to photograph elements that were composited into the final
images. Industrial Light and Magic then effectively created a virtual
jungle with a geography like the real Amazon.
The appearance of a live alien and flying
saucer was in flux. Spielberg wanted the alien to resemble a Grey
alien, and also rejected early versions of the saucer that looked
"too Close Encounters". Art director Christian Alzmann said
the aesthetic was "looking at a lot of older B-movie designs,
but trying to make that look more real and gritty to fit in with the
Indy universe." Other reference for the visual effects work
included government tapes of nuclear tests, and video reference of
real prairie dogs shot in 1080p by Nathan Edward Denning.
John Williams began composing the score in
October 2007 and ten days of recording sessions wrapped on March 6th,
2008, at Sony Pictures Studios. Williams described composing for the
Indiana Jones universe again as "like sitting down and finishing
a letter that you started 25 years ago". He reused Indiana's
theme (Raiders March) and also Marion's from Raiders of the Lost Ark,
and also composed five new motifs for Mutt, Spalko and the skull.
Williams gave Mutt's a swashbuckling feel, and homaged film noir and
1950s B-movies for Spalko and the crystal skull respectively. As an in-joke,
Williams incorporated a measure and a half of Johannes Brahms'
"Academic Festival Overture" when Indiana and Mutt crash
into the library. The soundtrack features a Continuum, an instrument
often used for sound effects instead of music. The Concord Music
Group released the soundtrack on May 20th, 2008
The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull premiered
at the Cannes Film Festival on May 18th, 2008, a couple of days ahead
of its worldwide May 21st23rd release. It was the first
Spielberg film since 1982's E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial to premiere at
Cannes. The film was released in approximately 4,000 theaters in the
United States, and dubbed into 25 languages for its worldwide
release. More than 12,000 release prints were distributed, which was
the largest in Paramount Pictures' history. Although Spielberg
insisted his films only be watched traditionally at theaters,
Paramount chose to release the film in digital cinemas as part of a
scheme to convert 10,000 U.S. cinemas to the format. The Kingdom of
the Crystal Skull is also notable for being the last film in the
series to be distributed by Paramount, as Walt Disney Studios will
distribute future films, since its parent company's acquisition of
Lucasfilm in 2012.
Frank Marshall remarked, "In today's
information age, secrecy has been a real challenge. ... People
actually said, 'No, we're going to respect Steven's vision.'"
Prior to release, moviegoers on the Internet scrutinized numerous
photos and the film's promotional LEGO sets in hope of understanding
plot details; Spielberg biographer Ian Freer wrote, "What Indy
IV is actually about has been the great cultural guessing game of
2007/08. Yet, it has to be said, there is something refreshing about
being ten weeks away from a giant blockbuster and knowing next to
nothing about it." To distract investigative fans from the
film's title during filming, five fake titles were registered with
the Motion Picture Association of America; The City of Gods, The
Destroyer of Worlds, The Fourth Corner of the Earth, The Lost City of
Gold and The Quest for the Covenant. Lucas and Spielberg had also
wanted to keep Karen Allen's return a secret until the film's
release, but decided to confirm it at the 2007 Comic-Con.
An extra in the film, Tyler Nelson,
violated his nondisclosure agreement in an interview with The Edmond
Sun on September 17th, 2007, which was then picked up by the
mainstream media. It is unknown if he remained in the final cut. At
Nelson's request, The Edmond Sun subsequently pulled the story from
its website. On October 2nd, 2007, a Superior Court order was filed
finding that Nelson knowingly violated the agreement. The terms of
the settlement were not disclosed. A number of production photos and
sensitive documents pertaining to the film's production budget were
also stolen from Spielberg's production office. The Los Angeles
County Sheriff's Department set up a sting operation after being
alerted by a webmaster that the thief might try to sell the photos.
On October 4th, 2007, the seller, 37-year-old Roderick Eric Davis,
was arrested. He pleaded guilty to two felony counts and was
sentenced to two years and four months in prison.
Howard Roffman, President of Lucas
Licensing, attributed the film's large marketing campaign to it
having been "nineteen years since the last film, and we are
sensing a huge pent-up demand for everything Indy". Marketing
relied heavily on the public's nostalgia for the series, with
products taking inspiration from all four films. Paramount spent at
least $150 million to promote the film, whereas most film promotions
range from $70 to 100 million. As well as fans, the film also needed
to appeal to younger viewers. Licensing deals include Expedia, Dr
Pepper, Burger King, M&M's and Lunchables. Paramount sponsored an
Indiana Jones open wheel car for Marco Andretti in the 2008
Indianapolis 500, and his racing suit was designed to resemble
Indiana Jones's outfit. The distributor also paired with M&M's to
sponsor the #18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, with NASCAR driver Kyle
Busch behind the wheel, in the 2008 Dodge Challenger 500 at
Darlington Raceway. Kyle Busch and the #18 team won the race and
visited victory lane with Indiana Jones on the car. With the film's
release, producer Frank Marshall and UNESCO worked together to
promote conservation of World Heritage Sites around the world.
Disneyland hosted "Indiana Jones Summer of Hidden Mysteries"
to promote the film's release.
The
Boston-based design studio Creative Pilot created the packaging
style for the film's merchandise, which merged Drew Struzan's
original illustrations "with a fresh new look, which showcases
the whip, a map and exotic hieroglyphic patterns". Hasbro, Lego,
Sideshow Collectibles, Topps, Diamond Select, Hallmark Cards, and
Cartamundi all sold products. A THQ mobile game based on the film was
released, as was a Lego video game based on the past films. Lego also
released a series of computer-animated spoofs, Lego Indiana Jones and
the Raiders of the Lost Brick, directed by Peder Pedersen. Stern
Pinball released a new Indiana Jones pinball machine, designed by
John Borg, based on all four films. From October 2007 to April 2008,
the reedited episodes of The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles were
released in three DVD box sets.
Random House, Dark Horse Comics, Diamond
Comic Distributors, Scholastic and DK published books, including
James Rollins' novelization of Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, a
two-issue comic book adaptation written by John Jackson Miller and
drawn by Luke Ross (Samurai: Heaven and Earth), children's
novelizations of all four films, the Indiana Jones Adventures comic
book series aimed at children, and the official Indiana Jones
Magazine. Scholastic featured Indiana and Mutt on the covers of
Scholastic News and Scholastic Maths, to the concern of parents,
though Jack Silbert, editor of the latter, felt the film would
interest children in archaeology.
The film was released on Blu-ray Disc and
DVD in North America on October 14th, 2008 and in the U.K. on
November 10th. The film made its worldwide television premiere on USA
on December 9th, 2010. On September 18, 2012, it was re-released on
Blu-ray as part of Indiana Jones: The Complete Adventures.
Several
collectible editions have also been released. For example: Best
Buy's gift set includes a replica crystal skull from Sideshow
Collectibles and a $25 gift card to Sideshowcollectibles.com; Kmart's
giveaway of four mini-posters comprises LEGO replicas of the original
Indiana Jones theatrical posters; and Target Corporation's DVD
package includes an 80-page hardcover book of behind the scenes photographs.
The director of the Institute of
Archaeology of Belize, Dr. Jaime Awe, sued Lucasfilm, Disney and
Paramount Pictures on behalf of the country Belize for using the Mitchell-Hedges
skull's "likeness" in the film.
Indiana Jones is distributed by one
entity, Paramount, but owned by another, Lucasfilm. The pre-production
arrangement between the two organizations granted Paramount 12.5% of
the film's revenue. As the $185 million budget (the most expensive
film directed by Steven Spielberg to date) was larger than the
original $125 million estimate, Lucas, Spielberg and Ford turned down
large upfront salaries so Paramount could cover the film's costs. In
order for Paramount to see a profit beyond its distribution fee, the
film had to make over $400 million. At that point, Lucas, Spielberg,
Ford and those with smaller profit-sharing deals would also begin to
collect their cut.
The film was released on Thursday, May 22,
2008 in North America and grossed $25 million its opening day. In its
opening weekend, the film grossed an estimated $101 million in 4,260
theaters in the United States and Canada, ranking #1 at the box
office, and making it the third widest opening of all time. Within
its first five days of release, it grossed $311 million worldwide.
The film's total $151 million gross in the U.S. ranked it as the
second biggest Memorial Day weekend release, behind Pirates of the
Caribbean: At World's End. It was the third most successful film of
2008 domestically, behind The Dark Knight and Iron Man respectively,
and the year's second highest-grossing film internationally, behind
The Dark Knight. It was most financially successful Indiana Jones
film when not adjusted for inflation of ticket prices.
Indiana
Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull received strongly
polarized reviews, yet mostly positive; as a result, it has been
nominated both for numerous "best of" and "worst
of" awards. Review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes critical
consensus reads, "Though the plot elements are certainly
familiar, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull still
delivers the thrills and Harrison Ford's return in the title role is
more than welcome."
Roger Ebert gave the film 3.5 stars out of
4, the same rating he gave The Last Crusade, finding it "same
old, same old", but what "I want it to be." Leonard
Maltin also gave the film 3 1/2 stars out of 4, more than he gave
Temple of Doom and Last Crusade, and wrote that "Indy returns
with the same brand of high adventure that marked the original
Raiders of the Lost Ark." Empire's Damon Wise criticised the use
of CG but praised Ford's performance and wrote that "It won't
change your life but, if you're in the right frame of mind, it will
change your mood: you might wince, you might groan, you might beg to
differ on the big, silly climax, but you'll never stop smiling."
James Berardinelli gave the film 2 stars
out of 4, calling it "the most lifeless of the series" and
Margaret Pomeranz of At the Movies gave the film 2 1/2 stars out of
5, saying that the filmmakers "had 19 years since the last
Indiana Jones movie to come up with something truly exciting and
fresh, but I feel there's a certain laziness and cynicism in this
latest adventure."
The film was nominated for Best Action
Movie at the 2009 Critics' Choice Awards. The Visual Effects Society
nominated it for Best Single Visual Effect of the Year (the valley
destruction), Best Outstanding Matte Paintings, Best Models and
Miniatures, and Best Created Environment in a Feature Motion Picture
(the inside of the temple). It was nominated at the Saturn Awards for
Best Science Fiction Film, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Supporting
Actor, Best Costumes and Best Special Effects. It won Best Costumes.
At the 51st Grammy Awards, John Williams won an award for the Mutt
Williams theme.
In
2009, the film won the Razzie Award for Worst Prequel, Remake,
Rip-off or Sequel. Paste magazine ranked the movie 10th on its list
"The 20 Worst Sequels to Good Movies".
The Communist Party of the Russian
Federation called for a ban on the film, accusing the production team
of "demonizing" the Soviet Union. A party official said:
"In 1957 the USSR was not sending terrorists to America but
sending the Sputnik satellite into space!" Spielberg responded:
"When we decided the fourth installment would take place in
1957, we had no choice but to make the Russians the enemies. World
War II had just ended and the Cold War had begun. The U.S. didn't
have any other enemies at the time." The film's depiction of
Peru also received criticism from the Peruvian and Spanish-speaking public.
According to the Associated Press, Indiana
Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull received a
"respectful" but "far from glowing" reception
from Indiana Jones fans, and that "some viewers at its first
press screening loved it, some called it slick and enjoyable though
formulaic, some said it was not worth the 19-year wait." South
Park parodied the film in the episode "The China Probrem",
broadcast five months after the film's release. The episode parodied
the negative fan reaction, with the characters filing a police report
against Lucas and Spielberg for "raping Indiana Jones".
Some fans (including some here at the Hall
of Fame) scoffed at the idea of aliens, the flying saucer and the
whole "nod" to the science fiction B-movies of the 1950s as
being unbelievable. But is it really any more unbelievable than the
mystical religious elements of Raiders and The Last Crusade? We took
a vote and decided no!
Other
disappointed Indiana Jones fans used the term "nuking the
fridge", based on a scene where Jones survives a nuclear blast
by hiding in a refrigerator, to denote the point when a franchise
passes its peak and crossed into the absurd, similar to "jumping
the shark". This phrase has appeared across the internet, and
was chosen as #5 on Time magazine's list of "top ten
buzzwords" of 2008. Asked about the scene and phrase, Spielberg
said: "Blame me. Don't blame George. That was my silly idea ...
I'm proud of that. I'm glad I was able to bring that into popular
culture." Lucas denied this, saying Spielberg was
"protecting him". According to Lucas, he had assembled a
dossier of research data to convince Spielberg; Lucas stated that his
research claimed the odds of surviving in the refrigerator are about "50-50."
The mixed fanbase reaction did not
surprise Lucas, who was familiar with mixed response to the Star Wars
prequels, and predicted that "we're all going to get people
throwing tomatoes at us." David Koepp said: "I knew I was
going to get hammered from a number of quarters [but] what I liked
about the way the movie ended up playing was it was popular with
families. I like that families really embraced it." Although
Spielberg said "I'm very happy with the movie. I always have
been", he also said "I sympathise with people who didn't
like the MacGuffin [the interdimensional beings] because I never
liked the MacGuffin."
At the 2010 Cannes Film Festival, LaBeouf
told the Los Angeles Times he had "dropped the ball on the
legacy that people loved and cherished" and felt that "the
movie could have been updated ... we just misinterpreted what we were
trying to satiate." In 2011, in response to LaBeouf's comments,
Harrison Ford said: "I think I told [LaBeouf] he was a fucking
idiot ... As an actor, I think it's my obligation to support the film
without making a complete ass of myself. Shia is ambitious, attentive
and talented - and he's learning how to deal with a situation which
is very unique and difficult." LaBeouf later regretted his
comments and their effect on his relationship with Spielberg: "He
told me there's a time to be a human being and have an opinion, and
there's a time to sell cars. It brought me freedom, but it also
killed my spirits because this was a dude I looked up to like a sensei."
On March 15th, 2016, Walt Disney Studios
announced that Spielberg and Ford are both set to return for a fifth
Indiana Jones film, scheduled for release in 2019. Lucas will return
as executive producer, while Kennedy and Marshall will serve as
producers and Koepp as screenwriter. Williams will also return to
compose the score. On April 24th, 2017, Disney shifted the release
date of the untitled Indiana Jones sequel from July 19th, 2019 to
July 10th, 2020.
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