The Weekly Planet - Indiana Jones & The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull - Caravan Of Garbage
Episode Date: June 22, 2023It's the end of the road. We've reached peak Indiana Jones in the 2008 sequel, coming 19 years after the last in Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Harrison Ford is back older and wiser to rekindle his lo...ve with Marion, build a relationship with his awful son Mutt and find a glass skull or whatever. Look it might not be the best but it certainly has a lot of stuff in it. Thanks for watching our Caravan Of Garbage reviewSUBSCRIBE HERE ►► http://goo.gl/pQ39jNVideo Edition ► https://youtu.be/kxw8tPGNi2kHelp support the show and get early episodes ► https://bigsandwich.co/Patreon ► https://patreon.com/mrsundaymoviesJames' Twitter ► http://twitter.com/mrsundaymoviesMaso's Twitter ► http://twitter.com/wikipediabrownPatreon ► https://patreon.com/mrsundaymoviesT-Shirts/Merch ► https://www.teepublic.com/stores/mr-sunday-movies The Weekly Planet iTunes ► https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-weekly-planet/id718158767?mt=2&ign-mpt=uo%3D4 The Weekly Planet Direct Download ► https://play.acast.com/s/theweeklyplanetAmazon Affiliate Link ► https://amzn.to/2nc12P4 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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the other a mission to reveal it before thousands of lives are lost.
FX's The Veil, starring Elizabeth Moss, is now streaming on Disney+.
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Welcome back, everybody, to Caravan of Garbage,
where we are wrapping up the Indiana Jones film series.
The tetralogy.
Mmm hmm.
Some people think it's a quadrilogy, but that's not a real thing.
Whoa.
It's a Tetralogy I think, maybe, probably.
I'm not 100% sure, but I started the sentence and I'm going to finish it now.
I'm finishing it now.
Four movies, Tetralogy.
I admire your confidence.
Thanks.
You feeling confident enough to allow everybody to leave a like on this video?
Yes.
Great! Yes? Yeah. Thanks. You feeling confident enough to allow everybody to leave a like on this video? Yes. Great.
Yes.
Yeah.
So, Mason.
Yes.
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
Yes.
Finally, we got here.
The good one.
Finally.
You're going to continue this joke for the whole video?
I think I stopped it last video.
I think you might have, yeah.
Yeah.
So, here's the thing, right?
We had a bunch of Indiana Jones before this, like leading up to it.
Did we?
I mean, after 89.
Oh.
So there were lots of books.
There were a few comics.
There were a whole lot of pretty solid video games.
There was some edutainment, as we know.
Well, that's the thing, because Harrison Ford actually reprised his role as Indiana Jones
in the young Indiana Jones Chronicles.
Yeah, he's got a beard because he was filming The Fugitive at the time.
Oh, right.
Because there's definitely, if I recall,
there's definitely another actor who plays a very old Indiana Jones
with an eye patch.
Yeah, there's a few.
There's like a little kid and then there's like Sean Patrick Flannery age
and there might be some others in there as well.
An actor of Sean Patrick Flannery age.
That's right.
Did they get Sean Patrick Flannery or did they just want somebody?
He wasn't available.
Emboise.
Imagine you're Sean Patrick Flannery and the audition sheet comes out
and they're like, we want somebody of Sean Patrick Flannery age.
You're like, I'm Sean Patrick Flannery age.
No.
Not quite.
Not quite, though.
Not what we're looking for.
Here's the thing about this one as well.
Go on.
It just feels late.
I feel like they missed a trick making one in the mid 90s to make it feel like the old ones
because it doesn't feel like any of them how do you feel do you feel like the dial the upcoming
dial of destiny is too late to 2000 and late well i haven't seen it yeah right but it's probably too
you think it's past its prime okay i mean again i haven't seen it okay let me ask you this about
this movie particularly yeah having just re-watch. Okay, let me ask you this about this movie particularly.
Yeah.
Having just rewatched it presumably recently,
what do you think about it now?
What did you think about it then when it came out?
It came out and I thought it was okay.
I think it dips wildly at a point, which we'll talk about.
We might have the exact same time code.
That's right.
And then I spent a long time like really not liking it and watching it again, I'm like, it's fine.
Yeah, look, I remember intensely disliking it when it came out.
I haven't seen it since.
I didn't see it again at the cinemas.
Why would I?
Didn't see it on any kind of home media.
Didn't watch it on VHS.
So this is my first rewatch and I think a lot of it is pretty good.
You know what I think is maybe tricking some people?
Yeah.
The movie has moved to the 1950s,
and everybody seems a little bit more colourful.
It's less of a grubby universe, I think.
Yeah.
And I think people are like, this has an unreality to it.
I don't think the unreality is a result of the era,
because I don't hate the concept of this.
Oh, no, there's two unrealities to this.
One is that, moving the year into the 50s,
and the other one is the incredibly shonky CGI.
Sure.
But we'll get to that, I'm sure, later.
Absolutely.
But where do you set a movie when Harrison Ford is in his 60s?
That's true.
You have to set it in this era.
Like, I don't hate the idea of aliens and Kate Winslet and –
not Kate Winslet.
What the fuck's her name?
What's her name?
Kate.
She's a strap.
Blanchett.
There we go.
And Kate Blanchett heading up a bunch of Russians.
It's fine as a concept.
In the young Indiana Jones Chronicles...
Oh, here we go.
He met Dracula.
Yes.
He could meet some aliens.
And what, he learned about blood types or something?
No, they killed him.
Oh, good.
All right.
Well, you're right.
So, you know, Indiana Jones is meant
to be a pulp adventure hero.
And in the era of the original
movies, he would have been exploring
ancient ruins and meeting supernatural
creatures, or having supernatural
experiences and so forth. And in the 1950s
people started getting obsessed with
little green men and UFOs and that sort
of stuff. And if his
character had continued in pulp novels or radio plays
or whatever they were doing at the time or movie serials,
he would have been searching for that sort of thing.
It's like the character of Rick Dangerous, James.
Oh, yeah.
From the computer game series Rick Dangerous where originally...
The game's Rick Dangerous, James.
That's exactly right.
Never played this.
Well, Rick Dangerous, James, originally was an Indiana Jones-style hero,
a rip-off, you might say, and then in 1990 in Rick Dangerous 2
he became more of a Flash Gordon-style hero.
Then this movie came out a mere 18 years later.
Coincidence?
I think not.
It sounds like a coincidence.
But you're right.
I'm not mad about the turn to aliens.
I am a little bit mad that they were like,
the vernacular had to change.
They're like, no, they're actually interdimensional beings.
You know what it is?
I've just thought it.
You know what it is?
Yeah.
There's too much explanation.
Okay, sure.
Yeah.
There is a lot of like looking at a thing and being like,
what's this about?
And what does this mean?
Is this Mayan?
Is this interdimensional?
Who's this guy?
What does he know?
But the thing is, if we can jump to the end just briefly
and then go back, there's too much explanation as to what was happening okay like
john hurt who is a nice addition to this franchise i think is just like it's definitely interdimensional
beings is it give me a little bit of ambiguity there well the reason that happened is because
lucas for years was like i want to do aliens and spielberg was like i don't want to do another
alien movie i've made a couple alien
movies already. It's not interesting to me.
So Lucas said, well, let's do
interdimensional beings. And Spielberg literally
went, whatever.
And that's how we got here. As long as
we do not use the word aliens and
someone says, yes, that is what this is.
Why not do aliens though? Yeah, I feel like
you're right. There's too many levels of complexity.
And nobody would say that in the 50s.
No.
It's a dimensional beings, probably.
But anyway, John Hurt, it was nice to see him.
Yep.
Ray Winston and Jim Broadbent are also in this, and they're great.
But I think two people that were missing, and we see them on little...
Yeah.
We see them on Indy's desk in little production stills
that have been turned into family photographs.
We don't have Marcus Brody, and we don't have Henry Jones Sr.
Yeah, one passed away
and Sean Connery was like,
I'm very retired.
Thanks, Alex G.
And that's why he didn't want to
re-appear in this one.
But I think it was,
and it's nice to have.
Karen Allen?
It's nice to have Karen Allen.
Yeah.
But the fact that everybody else is new,
there feels like a disconnect there.
Yeah, I don't disagree with that.
I didn't hate Shia LaBeouf in this.
I don't like him.
Initially, I did, because he shows up in the full Marlon Brando with the weird, you know,
the hat they had.
I know.
And the thing about that is-
It's sad.
It feels sad.
Yeah.
Because you know how they borrowed Indiana Jones' look?
Yeah.
They're like, well, let's take an iconic, like a different iconic movie star look and
just slap it on this fucking idiot.
Yeah.
The thing is, James,
obviously they're like,
okay, well,
you want him to be the most iconic version of that
from that era
and that is Marlon Brando.
But the thing about that look is
no one, including Marlon Brando,
can actually pull off that hat.
You see that movie?
It's embarrassing, that hat.
No one looks good in that hat.
But then he loses the hat fairly quickly
and I'm like, okay.
Yeah, leather jacket and a knife is fine.
He looks like he is in a Marlon Brando cosplay.
Yeah.
Furry cosplay.
No, that's not it.
I can't back that up.
But then I'm like, okay, I'm settling into this character.
I don't mind this.
I liked his back and forth between Indy and Mutt.
I quite enjoyed it for the most part.
I believed it.
Yeah, I think probably like my real world dislike for Shia LaBeouf
is definitely creeping into this.
Yeah, right.
But I don't think in terms of additions,
if you compare him to any of the previous companions,
literally any of them, he doesn't stack up.
Right, okay.
And like the fake kind of the faux toughness that he's doing,
I don't feel it. It's very much that concept the fake kind of the faux toughness that he's doing i don't i
don't doesn't i don't feel it it's very much that concept of like this is the guy you all love this
guy because at this point he'd done a few things he'd done transformers transformers the first one
he'd done constantine yeah uh other things that we would recognize holes holes i think they should
have given it to like maybe josh hartnett Yeah, perfect. That would have been great. But yeah, you're right.
He'd done a few roles.
He was a big box office draw seemingly.
And they were like, well, we can't miss out on this guy.
We've got to get him in.
We've got to put him in that stupid hat.
Absolutely.
Here's the thing about Harrison Ford in this.
He does kind of feel like listless for some of it.
Just kind of like, all right, well, I've done a lot of this,
but I think I can go along with whatever's happening here.
And I'll say this of The Force Awakens.
Okay.
That's right.
That's right.
I'm going to compliment The Force Awakens.
For SEO, can you say something about The Last Jedi as well?
Sure.
Okay, great.
He's not in that movie.
There you go.
That's true.
Controversial.
There's an energy that Harrison Ford has in The Force Awakens,
which I don't feel is here.
Right, yeah, yeah, yeah. But that being said said i think he looks good like he looks strong i remember him looking a
lot older yeah right then like seeing it now i'm like oh he looks terrific yeah like he's clearly
like he's kept up with it there's a moment at the start where you just see him like climbing some
boxes and he's just he's just moving really. You'll believe a man can climb some boxes.
But a guy that age moving like that, that's unusual.
There's a moment where he's just in a white T-shirt.
He looks fucking incredible.
He looks incredible.
Yeah.
And he's facing off against some of the most intense actors
from network television at the time.
The Janet from Scrubs, who I love.
Some other guys.
The guy from the OC, Alan Dale.
That's right.
Australia's own Alan Dale is in that room.
Neighbours' own Alan Dale.
That's true.
I also feel like there's an in-canon reason
for why Indiana Jones is still like this.
Roids?
No, but maybe.
I'll talk about it later.
Here's the thing I do like about this.
I think the opening action sequence,
I know nobody likes the ferrets and whatever.
I agree.
I know they're not ferrets.
It doesn't matter.
Let's just all move past it.
Move past the ferrets, folks.
The bit where he's taking on all the Russians
and he's just tearing through them
and Mac is the only one in that warehouse
that is just like,
this is a fucking lunatic.
You need to back up from this guy.
He's got to kill all of us.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You can see the rage rising in him and he's going to snap. He's going to kill all of us. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You can see the rage rising in him, and he's going to snap.
He's going to do one of his signature big punches.
That's right.
And you are all in a lot of trouble.
He's going to punch three to four of you at a time.
Yeah.
Yeah, when he comes out of the trunk of the car.
You know what's interesting about that sequence,
and I hadn't thought about it?
Right at the start, there's the moment where the teens go past in their car,
and you think something is going to happen?
Like you think the teens are going to be
Russian operatives or something
and they're going to crash into the army vehicle
and they're going to attack, whatever.
They just leave.
What's their adventure going on?
Was that Archie and the gang?
It's just a nod to like...
Are they heading to Riverdale?
Yeah, they're heading to Riverdale.
Wow.
For a sock hop and a malt shop? Probably. I thought so. I think it's just a nod. For a sock hop and a malt shop?
Probably.
I thought so.
I think it's just a nod to like George Lucas' love of, you know, that era.
It was the American Graffiti Kids.
Exactly.
They were going to do some American graffiti.
Absolutely.
I also love that the American government.
Hamburger, you would say.
That's right.
Apple pie.
Big glowing neon sign that says.
Marlon Brando's stupid hat.
Malt shop.
Yeah.
I also believe that the US government would just put an alien in a box and forget about it.
Yeah.
And just, where is it?
Somewhere in here.
Yeah.
Should we check in on it?
Nah, it's probably alright.
It's probably fine.
Who's going to go there?
Put it next to the box that's got God in it.
I love that.
I think that's great.
What if the alien and God have a conversation and they want to get out of here?
Well, we locked the boxes.
And we put some other boxes on top of those boxes,
so they're not getting out.
Speaking of boxes, the fridge moment.
Yeah.
Now, I know that this has become like a thing.
It's the nuke the fridge.
It's the jumping the shark of this particular franchise.
There was an era for jumping the shark as well.
This idea came from an early Back to the Future script where the original idea for time travel was a fridge in
a nuclear explosion oh i see but and the thing about this is i just i know it's unrealistic
i just i don't care i didn't care this i don't know yeah and i think do you remember in like
temple of doom they drop out of a plane in a in. They do silly things all the time. And I love the reveal, like the silhouette of Indiana Jones
with the nuclear explosion, like kind of ushering in this new era.
Oh, my God.
I love that.
And he said this is ushering in a new era.
Is it good?
Well, it's been better, but this is definitely a new era.
Wow, that can really do more than one old man with a whip.
I feel a little bit past my use-by date, honestly.
You know what he should have done?
Jumped in the Ark of the Covenant.
Yeah, absolutely.
He should have taken a nuclear-powered journey with God
and they could have had a chat.
I also think the motorcycle chase through the uni is a little bit of fun.
That's a bit of fun.
I like that he's still teaching kind of on the fly.
I wonder whether all of his students,
this is the first time
they've seen him
do anything like this.
Yeah, right.
So they're just like,
what is this?
Imagine seeing like
a professor
or high school teacher,
you know,
just tear through
the university
on a motorcycle.
James,
I know you're like,
well,
it'd be a big thing
for seeing your teacher
on a big motorcycle
having a big chase,
but just imagine a teacher
doing anything out of school. Oh my God. Oh my oh my king oh these guys are the movies i saw my
teacher at the shop what was he buying i don't know regular shop stuff t-shirt that happened to
me a bit oh yeah kids freak out when they see you in the real world but the thing about this movie
is gone as it goes on the the modern kind of effects of the day and style kind of takes over
there's that soft the hobbit kind
of glow james it's one hour and 20 minutes it's exactly what happens they end up in the jungle
yeah there's a chase and there's a big cutting machine a big cgi cutting machine the thing about
that scene is also it doesn't look bad all of the time they really did have a stretch that they
like ran back and forth through it was like the scene in
The Matrix
Reloaded
where it changes
to CGI
when it's Neo
fighting all the
Agent Smiths
and he's fighting
about 20 Agent Smiths
and they're all
real stuntmen
and then they're like
okay bring in
50 more Agent Smiths
and obviously
there wasn't enough
room on the
basketball court
it wasn't enough
Hugo Weaving
doesn't have that
many brothers
that's true
he has cousins
but you know
he's beefing with those cousins.
So he's got a lot of cousins, man.
Yeah.
And so they just switched to all CGI and it just, you can immediately tell.
The monkeys and the swinging and.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The monkeys.
The point at which Shia LaBeouf is doing the splits between two different jeeps while sword fighting
and he keeps getting hit in the nuts with branches and he's still doing it.
What is, no, that's...
I mean, you do that for real?
Yeah.
That's the best stunt of all time.
Absolutely.
Jean-Claude Van Damme would do it, you know,
to advertise a mineral water or something.
Or mint mobile or something.
Mint mobile.
But it's not real and it doesn't look real.
It doesn't have any weight to it.
Yeah.
And they continue with that for a lot of it.
There's even the scene at the end where they're all sort of like
sitting around in the ruins and they're like, boy, that for a lot of it. There's even the scene at the end where they're all sort of like sitting around in the ruins
and they're like, boy, that was a big adventure we had.
And you'd be like, yeah, it was, but it's undercut by the fact that they're nowhere.
Yeah.
They're in a void and there's some brickwork and the rest is green.
FX's The Veil explores the surprising and fraught relationship between two women who
play a deadly game of truth and lies on the
road from Istanbul to Paris
and London. One woman
has a secret. The other,
a mission to reveal it before thousands
of lives are lost.
FX's The Veil, starring Elizabeth Moss,
is now streaming on Disney+.
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It's green.
Yeah.
And you couldn't go to a real place for that?
A place?
Top of a convenience store?
Boy, we should have had a lot of adventures here.
Boy.
I bought a t-shirt down there.
Isn't this where they film Clerks?
Boy, what an adventure.
That's right.
The thing is as well,
and this really surprised me,
Spielberg didn't shoot this movie
in digital.
And this was in the era
where they were doing that.
Like the previous two
Star Wars movies had done it.
And here's a quote
from him that says,
It looks like we shot it
three years after
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
You'd never know
there was 20 years
between shooting.
And that might be what the raw footage looks like with a bit of tweaks,
but that's, you can tell.
Yeah.
You can really tell.
I know you mentioned Mac and you're like, I like him or whatever.
Who's Mac?
Ray Winston.
Oh, yeah.
I don't think he's funny or interesting.
And again, it's that layers upon layers of like i'm an a um i'm a double cross
dude no i'm a double agent i'm a yeah it's just like i don't know i think they just because they
were like part of the trope of indiana jones is somebody's going to betray him at some point so
they had to throw that guy in okay great but he's again just as a as a general companion you meet
along the way he's no jonathan reese davies as an example i think if maybe if they had kept them
side by side why don't you have a photo of Jonathan Rhys-Davies on his desk?
He probably did somewhere amongst the papers.
It's got the boom mic in the frame.
It's just like, whatever, take it from the making of it.
We don't care.
I also feel like where this falls down is that it's really light
on the horror elements of the previous movies.
There's a moment where a bunch of Russians get torched by a jet engine
and it just feels like some guy's just being engulfed in CGI flame and nothing.
The fire ants or the giant ant situation.
Exactly.
Much better, I feel, than the CGI rats from the third movie, Mason.
Oh, yes.
Remember when I said that and a lot of people yelled at me
that they weren't CGI?
I just want people to know that's a thing I believe.
You didn't miss a joke that I said.
Not you, Mason.
I'm telling everybody.
I miss tons of jokes.
And you know it ends with Cate Blanchett.
It's a lot of power and I want all the power,
but it's too much power, et cetera.
Her head should have popped.
Yeah.
Just bam.
Yeah.
Just spread it all over the aliens
and they would have been like, bleh.
Yuck.
But again, and when we get to the end
when it all forms up
and there's literally a little gray man there.
Yeah.
Give me more ambivalent.
Not, not, give me more ambiguity.
You know what I mean?
She sees something and we don't know what it is.
I think that would have been better.
Okay, fair enough.
But there is some good practical stuff in this.
Like for example, those guys who live in a wall.
I want to know, like, how does that day start?
Like you pack your little lunch
and you go and crawl into a wall.
Is that how that's,
that how your day starts and ends?
Pretty cool.
You clock in like those Warner Brothers cartoon dogs
that hate each other or whatever.
But what I do want to talk about before we get into the glasses, Mason,
is something that I feel like is in your wheelhouse.
He's wearing the same or very similar outfit to what he has previously.
Again, we've talked about the hat, how it does change movie to movie
and they go back to previous models sometimes. Sometimes it's grey. Again, we've talked about the hat, how it does change movie to movie and whatever,
and they go back to previous models sometimes.
Sometimes it's grey.
Yeah, sometimes it's grey, Mason.
Freaking hell.
Do you think in this era it is time to change up the outfit?
Does it feel sad to you to see him wearing the same getup?
You mean his adventure outfit?
The slacks and the shirt and the leather jacket?
Like the teaching stuff I'm fine with and whatever,
but do you think in this era it's like maybe you want to,
I don't know, get another shirt?
Track suit, for example?
Sure.
No, I think it's cool.
Okay.
Yeah.
He's a man who knows.
Even some variation on it, you know?
Yeah.
I mean, I think, yeah, sometimes I feel that with a cat.
I think also we've been spoiled by like MCU movies
and superhero movies where every character gets a new look every movie,
even several times a movie.
Yeah, it does look like a guy
who's only had one outfit for like 30 years.
Even Han Solo had a slightly different jacket
is what I'm saying.
I think this one is a slightly different jacket.
I mean, it is, but it's still like the, you know,
it's the basic look.
Yeah.
You know?
Look, I'm torn.
I think you're right.
I don't even know what you would
what would that even look like changing because the problem is if you never change the character's
look ultimately it looks it starts to be a bit cartoony yeah but i mean maybe it's the thing
it's like that you know they've never really changed it so why now maybe like 35 1935 was
the best year of his life and why would he it almost certainly was. Why would he change?
And as a man, that's when your style, you know.
1935.
1935.
That's why you're all dressed like it's 1935 over here.
You're absolutely right.
What about a long black trench coat a la The Matrix?
What about that?
Absolutely.
But look, I think, you know, it's got. I mean, he still looks good in it again and he moves well.
It's very practical.
What's he going to switch to jeans?
They take forever to dry, James.
Yeah, they do take forever to dry.
He's always falling into a river.
You know what I mean?
I like it.
The slacks, he's practical.
He's got a lot of pockets.
Oh, that river bit.
Oh, yeah.
Pretty good is what I'm saying.
Sure.
But we've got to circle back around to his glasses.
Okay, now you're trying to determine what prescription Indiana Jones has
or whether, in fact, he has a prescription at all.
Now, if I recall, the only time he's wearing glasses in this is the scene
at the college where he's teaching.
He's wearing little round glasses, but for the most part,
he's looking over the top of them.
Yes.
So that would suggest to me that those ones are reading glasses
because when he looks out into the student body,
he's peeking over them.
And when his friend opens the door to speak to him,
he's looking over them.
And then when he goes to speak to Jim Broadbent,
he takes them off entirely.
So I think he's using them to look at the blackboard,
but when he looks over the top
of him he can see the the the students perfectly well okay that would be my guess i agree i think
uh from this investigation well i've done yeah well i'm obviously i've got my input here but
you you're the one who has to make the final decision here well there's a little wrinkle
on this that i want to talk about okay i do think that they're just reading glasses i think maybe
sometimes he'll just wear them because he's just got them on you know but but here's the thing it's interesting that his
vision has not deteriorated yeah and his health has basically stayed the same and we know that's
because he's hollywood rich and famous that's true and that's why in real life that he's still able
to do the things that he is in this movie but if you look at the last crusade novelization
there is i think there's a link between the grail
and him being this level of fitness.
You think it has something to do with the fact
that he chugged from the Tumblr of eternal youth?
Okay, the Tumblr of youth.
Terrific, okay.
So here's the thing.
If you go into the novelization,
it goes into more detail about how it works,
and apparently what it
is is you have an alan dean foster joint no it's a oh you really fuck me on this mason
i gotta know max alan collins robert mcgregor okay rob mcgregor okay all right yeah so what
you basically have to do what the knight had to do was drink every day and if you drink from it
every day you retain your youth okay but the And if you drink from it every day, you retain your youth.
Okay.
But the longer that you drink from it and if you pause drinking,
then your age catches up to you the longer you leave it.
I see.
But you basically, yeah, that's why the knight apparently had a few
crises of faith and that's why he aged.
He basically took a couple of days off and then went,
no, I love God, actually, and he kept drinking.
Do you love God or do you love your perfect skin mate great question yeah but here's the thing do you love god or do you love not having any crow's feet
but what it does do if you even drink from it once when there was only one set of crow's feet
that's when i carried you sorry continue, continue. That's all right.
But what it does do, even if you drink from it once,
any injuries or diseases that you have, it clears up and gives you an absolutely fresh bill of health.
So this is, we can break Indiana Jones' life up from before.
Yeah.
Before the.
Last crusade.
Before BC, before crusade.
Yep.
And AD after drinking. After, before Crusade. Yep. And AD, after drinking.
After drinking from a big stone cup.
Exactly.
Okay, so potentially...
Essentially, he got a reset.
Yeah, so his prescription after that
is not necessarily the same as the one before.
No, I would say it's very possible,
and there's probably comics and novels
that say the opposite of this,
that that fixed his eyes, and then the 19 years in between,
his eyes basically went back to where they were slowly.
Yeah, right.
Yeah.
So it didn't youthify him.
It basically just clean bill of healthed him.
And it potentially, when he looked into the crystal skull,
that gave him LASIK.
So maybe his vision's perfect now because he didn't use glasses
after that at all, did he?
That's true.
Not even at the wedding. He wasn't's true. Not even at the wedding.
He wasn't wearing them.
Not even at the wedding.
So yeah, anyways, it ends with like, it's too much power.
Why did I absorb all this power, et cetera.
And there's a moment where Mac just falls over and I just was thinking to myself, hey, Mac, get up.
Just get up.
Yeah.
And he's like, I think I'm all right.
It's going to stay here, I reckon.
Okay, so you think he heard you?
No, he didn't get up.
He flew into the vortex.
Oh, yeah.
Maybe he got off after.
No, he went into the vortex.
Yeah, but when he landed in wherever the vortex takes you.
I think a stone probably killed him.
Oh, yeah, that's actually probably true.
Yeah.
Anyways, Mason, it's time for Indiana Jones
and the trivia of the crystal trivia.
I love that.
The trivia segment of the show where we go, wow, new trivia.
Pretty good.
Not necessarily new, but it is trivia.
So when Indiana Jones is referring to being kidnapped by Pancho Villa,
he's referring to the Adventures of Young Indiana Jones,
the episode Spring Break Adventure.
Whoa.
So those are all canon.
Interesting.
Except for the old Indiana Jones eyepatch stuff,
which George Lucas put in and everybody complained within the studio
because they don't line up with the stories properly.
So they ended up taking those out.
He's got perfect vision after the crystal skull laser thing.
That's right.
Why would he need an eyepatch?
Yeah.
That's interesting.
It's interesting that I guess I just assumed that was just a callback
to an adventure that they had and we've never seen it or what have you,
but it's good to know it's a very specific thing.
Absolutely.
And they learned some stuff.
They learned some stuff, yeah.
Harrison Ford was apparently adamant that he got to wield
Indiana Jones' famous whip.
Paramount executives wanted the weapon to be computer generated
because of new movie safety rules, but Ford branded this rule ridiculous.
You'd never get away with making this movie now,
though, I tell you that much, Mason.
That's right.
Not with today's culture.
You'd never make Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
That's right.
You couldn't have a whip.
You'd have to have...
An equality whip.
You'd have to have an equality whip.
You'd have to whip every single person equally.
That's good.
That's good, I think.
Yes, that's good.
So, as mentioned, Sean Connery turned down a cameo because he was enjoying retirement
too much and Alex G fucked him up.
But John Rhys-Davies was also approached a cameo at the wedding at the end, but thought
it would cheapen the character.
So, decided not to.
Probably a good call, honestly.
So, these were some of the titles that were considered for the movie.
This one's from George Lucas.
Indiana Jones and the Saucer Men.
Steven Spielberg's was...
Oh, yeah, no, all right.
It's fine, right?
Steven Spielberg's idea...
But it sounds a little bit like Indiana Jones and the Sauce of Men.
Yeah, fair enough.
Yeah.
That's good, too.
I guess, sure.
Steven Spielberg's idea was Indiana Jones and the
Blank blank
Of the Mysterians
Fill it in
He was going to fill it in later
I'll do it all the day
Yeah
And screenwriter
David Cope
Wanted Indiana Jones
And the son of Indiana Jones
I don't think that's real
No
That sounds made up
Speaking of son of Indiana Jones
Oh Indiana Jones
This is day one
Day one they're breaking the script
Oh Indiana Jones And the son of Indiana Jones What did, Indiana Jones. This is day one. Day one, they're breaking the script. Oh, Indiana Jones and the Son of Indiana Jones.
What did you say?
Nothing.
I don't have any ideas for that.
Speaking of Son of Indiana Jones, Mason,
this is what Shia LaBeouf said about this movie.
He's this movie's biggest critic.
Because I feel like with some distance,
and we've seen this with other movie franchises before,
a lot can be forgiven.
I think with a judicious edit, a lot of this could be fixed.
If instead of fighting while doing the splits on the top of a couple of Jeeps.
He dies.
He just dies straight away.
Anyway, so he said, I feel like I dropped the ball on the legacy that people loved and
cherished.
You get the monkey swinging and things like that, and you can blame it on the writer and
you can blame it on Steven,
but the actor's job is to make it come alive
and make it work, and I couldn't do it.
So that's my fault.
Simple.
Now, as a result of this,
apparently this destroyed his relationship with Spielberg.
Because also, Spielberg obviously had a hand
in the Transformers movies as well.
He sure did, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, very loosely.
Don't blame him for that.
So, though he did pick Michael Bay.
Ah.
Yeah.
Harrison Ford said this of Shia LaBeouf. I think LaBeouf
was a fucking idiot. As an actor,
I think it's my obligation to support the film without
making complete arse of myself. Shia is
ambitious, attentive and talented
and he's learning how to deal with a situation
which is very unique and difficult.
And Steven Spielberg apparently gave
Shia the following advice. Tom Cruise
never picks his nose in public.
And Shia LaBeouf said,
and all I thought was, I don't want to be Tom Cruise.
It was this gut reaction.
What a tangled web of people saying weird stuff.
Incredible.
But I would say, look, as much as a lot of people
don't like Shia LaBeouf for a bunch of good reasons,
I don't think he could have...
I don't think any actor could.
You can't fix.
Daniel Day-Lewis couldn't have saved swinging through the trees with monkeys.
He couldn't have done it.
No, I agree.
Yeah.
Anyways, box office for this on a budget of $185 million,
making this by far the biggest Indiana Jones budget.
Thus far.
Thus far, yes.
It made $790 million that year.
It is the second highest grossing movie of the year internationally
behind The Dark Knight.
I see.
All the other ones are number one.
This is number two.
That's not a bad outcome at all.
Yeah.
And here's the thing, Mason.
People, they love these videos.
They tell me.
Oh, yes.
And they say, can I see them early?
And you say no.
No, I say yes.
I've been telling them no.
No, you've got to tell them yes. Okay, you tell them no, I'll tell them yes. Okay, great. We'll come at them like that And you say no. No, I say yes. I've been telling them no. No, you've got to tell them yes.
Okay, you tell them no, I'll tell them yes.
Okay, great.
We'll come at them like that.
Right, right, right.
But if you head over to BigSandwich.co, they always go up early.
Lawrence, who edited this series, we very much appreciate it.
Thank you, Lawrence.
He gets them done.
And Ben, who's coming back also, they get them done early.
They go up there.
And there's also bonus podcasts.
There's movie commentaries.
We do video game Let's Plays,
and we're going to be playing some Indiana Jones stuff,
if you want to check it out. That's right.
Exclusively there.
But who wants a hint towards next week?
Me?
I don't.
Well, you know, right?
Yeah, I do.
It's Mission Impossible.
We're coming back to those.
Oh, nice.
What are we up to?
Four?
Up to four.
I don't know.
We'll find out.
All right, cool.
I'll do a Google search.
I remember liking four a lot.
Yeah, me too.
Anyways, thank you so much, everybody, for watching.
Please give a big subscribe to your favorite YouTube channel.
And then us.
Yeah, that's right.
Grab that jam, you guys.
We'll see you next week.
Goodbye.
I was going to make that joke.
I was going to make it.
Too late.
That's right.
If you drink from the bloody cup of the bloody Christ, the cup, the thing,
then you wouldn't be so stupid.
Yeah, maybe.
I don't think it does that.
But I would.
Well, you could hope.
I would try.
Yeah.
As women, our life stages come with unique risk factors,
like high blood pressure developed during pregnancy,
which can put us two times more at risk of heart disease or stroke.
Know your risks.
Visit heartandstroke.ca.
FX's The Veil explores the surprising and fraught relationship
between two women who play a deadly game of truth and lies
on the road from Istanbul to Paris and London.
One woman has a secret.
The other, a mission to reveal it
before thousands of lives are lost.
FX's The Veil, starring Elizabeth Moss, is now streaming on Disney+.