The Weekly Planet - Indiana Jones & The Raiders Of The Lost Ark - Caravan Of Garbage
Episode Date: June 1, 2023Harrison Ford began his journey as Indiana Jones in the Steven Speilberg directed George Lucas written hit Raiders of the Lost Ark. Acting as a thrownback to the adventure serials from decades earlie...r it introduced a nazi punching swashbuckling grave robber/archeologist which became an imediate smash hit. So on the road to Dial Of Destiny in 2023 lets take a look back at the four equally beloved Indiana Jones movie in this Caravan Of Garbage series reviewSUBSCRIBE HERE ►► http://goo.gl/pQ39jNHelp 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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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+.
Will you rise with the sun to help change mental health care forever?
Join the Sunrise Challenge to raise funds for CAMH,
the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,
to support life-saving progress in mental health care.
From May 27th to 31st,
people across Canada will rise together
and show those living with mental illness and addiction
that they're not alone.
Help CAMH build a future where no one is left behind.
So, who will you rise for?
Register today at sunrisechallenge.ca.
That's sunrisechallenge.ca.
Welcome back, everybody, to Caravan of Garbage,
where, due to a very special event,
an almost once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
to see a new Indiana Jones film, Mason.
Oh, you were just talking about the release of a movie.
Yeah.
That's not a big deal to you?
That's a big deal.
You don't love big movie?
I love big movie, James.
Don't get me wrong.
I love big movie.
They don't come around that often.
Movies?
No, Indiana Jones.
They made three in the 80s.
And that's bloody it.
Am I right?
There's only bloody three Indiana Jones.
That's the only ones I can consider.
I bought the fourth Blu-ray and I blew it up with a stick of dynamite.
So your contention is there's only three movies but there's four Blu-rays?
Yeah, because I bought them all but I blew up the fourth one to make a point.
But if you think there's only three movies, what was on the fourth Blu-ray?
No, because I'm saying I acknowledged it to purchase it.
Oh, interesting.
I used my purchasing power
but then I exploded it.
Alright.
Anyways, we're going
through the trilogy.
Raiders of the Lost Ark,
Temple of Doom.
James, it's Indiana Jones
and the Raiders of the Lost Ark.
No, it's not.
They changed it, Mason.
I'm angry about it.
Raiders of the Lost Ark,
Temple of Doom, Crystal Skull.
We're going to hit a ball.
There we go.
There we go. No, we'll do all
four. We'll do all four. Starting with this one,
what I like about this one. The first one.
The first one. It's so real.
Which is a weird thing to
say, but like the foliage,
the sweat, everyone looks like they're
going to shit their pants. Like at
any second. Which is true of the actual
filming of this. Everybody had
dysentery.
I know, like famously, the swordsman fight was cut out because Harrison Ford was like,
I'm going to shit my pants, can I shit him with a gun please?
Which is a very real world thing that would happen, I feel.
And isn't it fascinating that Harrison Ford admitted to that?
Or somebody did.
Somebody spilled and he went, yeah, that's true actually.
Because he could have said,
I thought it would be a funnier joke if I just shot him.
And everybody would have said, we agree with you.
You're very handsome.
You're a genius.
And as far as we can tell, nothing else is going on with you.
That's right.
You know how some people, and it's not just actors, but it's people.
Okay.
They've just got it.
You know?
Yeah. There's nobody like young harrison ford absolutely they just don't exist he's a unicorn mason yeah yeah yeah and i
know like diehard is credited for like introducing the everyday action man and i guess that's true
in the sense that like you know he it was in the modern day and it came after the muscle-bound heroes. But this is a little bit before that.
And it's just, I mean, it's obviously because all of the stunts are real.
A lot of the stuff like Harrison Ford does himself for this one,
not so much the next one, which we'll talk more about next week.
But it just, I can't even explain it.
I would argue also that everybody in this movie has got it.
Yes.
Like I would argue that Karen Allen's got it. Yep. Like, I would argue that Karen Allen's got it.
Yep.
Jonathan Rhys-Davies and...
He's got it.
They've all got it.
All the other people?
All the other people do have it.
You threw me off because you were like,
oh, I was like, oh, I'm going to name some people
and you're going to go, he's got it.
And then it just threw me.
I couldn't think of a single other person.
The guy that plays Belloc?
Sure.
Like, they're all, they've all, you know,
I think the best part of this movie for me personally it's probably the action set
pieces yeah and past that it's the casting like it's and it's in its people i think spielberg
has like a gift for casting all these people to make even like maybe uninteresting scenes like
feel compelling like the scene where they've got it yeah they've got compelling. Like the scene where- They've got it. Yeah, they've got, exactly.
There's the scene where Indy is explaining
to the government guys,
like the significance of the staff and the,
and Spielberg's cast a couple of government guys
who were like, ooh, how interesting.
Yeah.
Ooh.
They've got it.
They've got the skill at like just listening intently.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
And you probably know
this and a lot of people who watch this probably do but you know for those who don't spielberg's
dream was to direct a bond movie and until recently you had to be british to direct a bond
film right yeah now you can't be british that's right they flipped it and so george lucas came up
with this concept of this like pulpy 1930s,
40s kind of action hero,
which is a throwback to like serials of that era.
After he'd made Star Wars, he was on a holiday and he's like,
I don't know, he could be like, he's a ladies man
and he's a grave robber and he's a defiler of history.
What do you think?
Sounds like he's got it.
Yeah, he absolutely does got it.
And I just think as an archetype,
it's like it's a reintroduction of things we've seen before.
But again, it just feels very fresh.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
By night, grave-robbing archaeologist, action adventurer.
By day, sexy college professor
who's just constantly trying to avoid unwanted advances
from young women.
And doing work. Yeah. And doing work.
Yeah, also doing work.
Marking, you know, writing exams, reports, et cetera, and so forth.
Everyone gets a B.
I bet everyone in his class gets a B.
Definitely.
Yeah.
What I love about this also, you know, that idea that everything is real.
There's, like, real spiders and snakes.
And, you know, unlike one of the movies which people, you know,
do not like, The Last Crusade,
there's a lot of, like, CGI rats and things in that,
which people don't care for.
And I understand that.
I get where people are coming from.
But this one, before we hit that CGI era, Mason, of 1989, it's just, I mean,
that.
Molina's got so many spiders on him.
I was going to say, like, a back full of tarantulas.
Like, that's crazy.
Love that.
It's amazing he's still in the movie industry at all.
I would have given up after that, honestly.
Completely agree.
So a few things I guess that I noticed about this movie that I've watched for like the hundredth time.
So Marion, when she's doing that shot drinking competition, she drinks 10 shots along with that other guy in I guess maybe an hour, let's say.
Probably less. That's like an inhuman I guess, maybe an hour, let's say. Right. Probably less.
That's like an inhuman amount of alcohol.
She cheated, right?
Because she's up and she's doing fist fights and whatever and she seems mostly fine.
Like, that's a con, I assume.
And I know later she, like, outdrinks the French guy.
Yeah.
What do you think's going on there?
Just an incredible liver?
Yeah, I think that's it.
Just a body failing?
James, I'd rather bloody be a good liver than have one, you know what I mean?
Not wrong, Mason.
No, I think she's just a drunk.
She's got a high tolerance.
Yeah, you're probably right.
What else are you going to do up in that frozen north, you know what I mean?
Why would you even be there?
Right?
Yeah.
I guess because something terrible happened to her.
We'll talk about it.
The other thing is, I love, and I'm sure you can speak to this more,
the assorted looks that Indiana Jones has.
Like, you've got his classic attire that he opens with.
You know, it's the khaki shirt and the leather jacket in the rainforest
and whatever, and all of that.
And then you've got his professor attire.
He's got his airplane traveling suit.
Oh, my God, I'd forgotten about that one.
A bit more professional.
Yeah, that's right. Less tweety, very double-breasted pinstripe. Absolutely. He's got his driving
gloves if he wants to do a big truck action sequence, which I appreciate. So this look is
actually based off Charlton Heston's outfit from the movie Secret of the Incas. I don't know if
you've ever seen any images of that, but it's identical. It's just ripped straight from that,
which is fine. I'm okay with it. Because it because look frankly who wore it better come on let's be real mason and like you mentioned just
the action sequences are just so fun and well thought out and staged for the most part there
is a moment there is a little bit where he takes that punch and he flips the wrong way yeah there's
that but there's also a moment where there's a fight in the market uh the market stall area kind
of thing.
And clearly Spielberg's gone, okay, Karen,
Indy's going to be punching some guys.
So if you could just like pick up a piece of pottery and just lightly brush somebody on the head with it.
Just do some background stuff if you wouldn't mind, you know?
Yeah, absolutely.
Just like the scrappy fighting that's going on.
He's just destroying people's livelihoods and laundry.
At one point a truck goes past and he just lines up the driver,
and he just executes him, like straight up.
Incredible, Mason.
It's pretty good, right?
Just point blank.
Yes.
Shoots a guy in the head.
Man.
And the only person who didn't get sick on this was apparently Spielberg
because he only ate SpaghettiOs.
He brought that over and somehow survived on that.
It's amazing.
Steven SpaghettiO.
The fact that that's not his nickname in Hollywood is astounding then.
Well, maybe we could change that.
I mean, I don't know what that would do to your insides
because I can't imagine it would be much better
than what was happening to everybody else.
Maybe in that scene where we were introduced to...
Balak?
No. Sak? No.
Sala?
No.
Marion?
Maybe in the scene where we were introduced to Marion,
he drew on his own life experiences.
He's like, listen, Karen, just imagine you're eating 10 bowls of SpaghettiOs,
but you've got an iron stomach.
She's like, what?
It's like it doesn't affect you because you love SpaghettiOs,
but for whiskey or whatever.
Yeah, but don't worry.
I'm pretty confident the nickname will not catch.
What?
Karen SpaghettiOs.
That's you.
I think my favourite action sequence in this, though,
is the truck rescue.
Everyone's just fucking eating dirt, just rolling around in it.
People are going off cliffs.
He fights German Paul Hogan.
It's just all good, man.
It's just the blood and the glass and bits like falling off the truck
as he's scrambling around it and just the leaping about
and swiping Nazis off, brushing them against trees.
Like some spiders off Alfred Molina's back.
Exactly.
Just incredible.
Like to this day,
the idea that you got Harrison Ford
and you're just dragging him behind a truck in real life.
Yeah.
Amazing.
Yeah, couldn't do it these days.
No.
In this PC culture.
It's true.
I love all of that.
My favourite action sequence I think remains him fighting the giant guy on top of the plane. Yeah, well it's true. I love all of that. My favourite action sequence I think remains
him fighting the giant guy on top of the plane.
Yeah, well, it's fair.
And it's spinning around and the gasoline's slowly making its way
towards the trucks and the fire and oh my God.
And a lot of that stuff that you do today with propellers
or helicopters in movies, that has to be CGI due to safety reasons,
obviously, and just the fact that you can't do that
here i mean you're probably not going to use like real propellers but you know it just it just looks
so good all of that man everyone's getting machine gunned it's insane this is an insane movie when
you look at it as something like you haven't been watching since a kid. It's just insane. The fact that somebody made this in this era is just wild to me.
Anyways, there is the criticism, and you might be aware of this.
It's a popular rumor that's been going around for years.
A rumor?
It's a rumor, a theory.
I think it was popularized on the Big Bang Theory,
but I think it was like a cracked article maybe.
Oh, I know what you're talking about.
It's that if Indiana Jones wasn't there, everything would probably be fine.
Yeah.
Like if he wasn't there, the Nazis probably never would have found the location of the Ark.
Yeah.
And it would probably have taken them a really long time.
And then even if they did, they would just probably open the Ark and they'd all die.
And then another expedition of Nazis would show up.
Yeah.
And they would open the Ark and they would die and so on and so forth
and then there wouldn't be a World War II.
Exactly.
Thanks a lot, Indiana Jones.
But I don't believe that them opening it in the desert
and him being there, that's integral that he survives that
to get it out of there.
Because without him there, where does it go?
What happens to it?
He needs to be there to call the Americans and go,
you're not going to believe this.
You're going to have to come and get me.
I close my eyes, but I think it was God.
I'm pretty confident it was God.
Mom, can you come and get me?
This is army intelligence.
Army intelligence, can you come and get me?
Yeah, and if you look at what he does along the way,
he kills like 40 to 50 Nazis.
I mean, other people as well, but Nazis.
I think that's important.
Sure.
He saves Marion at the bar.
Who knows what was going to happen to her at that point?
And them rekindling their relationship leads to the creation of Matt Williams,
which is probably the most important thing that happens in all of these movies.
I think so too.
That guy can wear the heck out of a leather jacket.
Yeah.
Who would be a friend to the apes if not for Mutt Williams swinging through the trees?
Exactly, yeah.
So what you're saying is if Indiana Jones wasn't there, things wouldn't have worked out so well for Indiana Jones.
That's what I'm saying.
It's all personal growth and big time bonuses for old mate Henry Jones here.
And he calls his mum to come and get him.
That's true, yes.
Yeah, absolutely.
I think also, like, Indiana Jones was being followed, right?
So I think Baloch probably knows about the Ravenwoods outside of Indiana Jones.
So I think this is something like he was across regardless.
So, you know, that's what I think.
Just call your jets, cracked.com yeah settle down
all right stay out of my feed for one second will you crack.com there is i don't know if they're
still around yeah they're doing something okay there is i mean they fired a bunch of people as
all websites do yeah but there is a question of if the nazis retrieved this magic box with God in it. Yeah. What do you do with that?
Like can you refract like the laser that comes out of it with mirrors
to like to shoot London?
What do you do with it?
That's a really good point.
Do you send it in?
Do you like send it as a gift?
Sure, you Trojan horse it.
Maybe you do.
Maybe you gussied up something quintessentially British.
Yeah.
Like a model.
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+.
Will you rise with the sun to help change mental health care forever? Join the Sunrise Challenge
to raise funds for CAMH, the Center for Addiction and Mental Health, to support life-saving progress
in mental health care. From May 27th to 31st, people across Canada will rise together
and show those living with mental illness and addiction that they're not alone.
Help CAMH build a future where no one is left behind.
So, who will you rise for?
Register today at sunrisechallenge.ca.
That's sunrisechallenge.ca.
Horace Minor, and then you drive it into Parliament or Buckingham Palace.
Yep.
You write for Churchill on the side of it.
Yes, and the Queen, you write, or the King.
Yeah, King then.
King and Queen, maybe.
Sure, yeah, why not?
One fell swoop.
Yeah, maybe.
But then also, Indy and Marion survive by just closing their eyes.
Yeah.
But is there more to it than that?
Because otherwise, I guess it would work until everybody just realizes they need to close their eyes.
Sure, yeah.
But also, maybe it just kills Nazis.
Yeah, maybe it kills bad people because it is the Ten Commandments.
Nazis, James.
Sure.
There's a difference.
You're right.
There are degrees.
We appreciate both sides here.
If you're a viewer, we thank you.
No, just kidding.
They're the same.
Yeah, absolutely.
Why wouldn't, like, maybe closing your eyes is no different.
Yeah.
Maybe you open it up on the battlefield and it just kills Churchill.
I mean.
We know what you're going to do, Churchill.
Yeah, that's not a terrible outcome.
If you don't know, maybe look into it.
Maybe type Churchill famine into Google. gonna do churchill yeah that's not a terrible outcome if you don't know maybe look into it maybe type churchill famine sure to google it just do some light reading just go from there
i would have loved though if indiana jones did shoot it with a rocket launcher yes because what
the fuck does that look like yeah god's wrath being shot with a bloody anti-tank missile. Who knows, man?
That would have been insane.
Right?
Yeah.
And I guess my question is as well, what's the message of the movie?
Is it don't look at God?
Like God fucking hates you?
Don't even have a peek?
I don't know.
And I feel like them squirreling it away.
I mean, this is also, I guess, like the point and kind of the joke at the end of the movie
is that it's dangerous that this thing has just been boxed and forgotten about.
Yeah.
But like the idea of somebody coming across that in the year like 2040, you know, all
the 50s as we see, you know, in a later movie.
But yeah.
So I like his glasses, right?
I like his glasses.
I'm going to change direction here for a second, if you don't mind.
From God's Wrath on Earth to his little glasses.
Yeah.
But I think, and this is going to be something that evolves over the three movies.
I think there's like an inconsistency in his use of them.
Because he's teaching he's got them on, which says to me that they're reading glasses, right?
But he seems also not to have a problem seeing somebody at a distance like if somebody's written
something on their eyelids hypothetically he can see that you can see that yeah but then when he's
off on his little adventures he doesn't need them at all he doesn't need them at all so i just want
i just want to keep an eye on this over the next few movies all right i mean a theory is emerging
of course that they are fashion specs yes that is what i'm implying wow yeah i mean is it
like a disguise is it almost like a clark kent like alter ego kind of thing oh okay right right
of a metaphor or whatever so you don't recognize him when he takes them off is that what this is
maybe yeah well maybe he's just mr mcoon it out there. Maybe he can't see.
I mean, you know.
I mean, he didn't shoot that guy in the head.
Maybe he was aiming for his arm.
I'll just wing this guy and, oh, no.
Now, Mason, I want to talk about ages.
And specifically, I want to talk about just the only thing I really need to cover, I feel,
is the ages of everybody at the time that they filmed this movie.
Okay.
The ages of the actors or the characters.
Which would have been 1980, which is when this was filmed.
Harrison Ford was 38.
Okay.
Karen Allen was 29.
Okay.
Paul Freeman, Baloch, 37.
What?
Yes.
Wow.
Here's one for you.
Yep.
John Rhys-Davies, 36.
Incredible.
William Hootkins, 32.
Wow.
That's Porkins.
He's one of the government guys.
Love all of that.
And I don't know whether there's anything else here.
Is there anything else we need to discuss which is, say, age-related to the movie Indiana Jones?
I mean, I don't think we have to.
Now, look, I need you to know that if you want to go into this, I do have extensive notes.
All right, then let's do it.
Okay.
For those people who don't know,
the script states that Marion is 25 years old during this movie.
Okay.
Right?
And it's mentioned that she had an affair with Indiana Jones 10 years earlier.
His, which would have made him roughly 27 years old.
Okay.
And she's 15. 15.
Now, George Lucas apparently said that it would be more interesting
if the dynamic was she's 15, because then it's like,
maybe don't, that's bad that you did that.
But Spielberg's like, why don't we just make her 16 or 18?
Yeah, sure.
Or like 25.
Yeah, right.
Sure.
Or last, it was last year.
What can happen in a year?
Yeah.
And here's the thing though.
Yes.
Karen Allen has come out recently in defense of this.
And she said, look, it was wrong and you knew it.
I think maybe that he led her on in some way,
but when she said she was a child,
I think she meant she was 16, something like that.
So yeah, the idea that, you know...
Well, they are all coming to Disney Plus in the US very shortly,
at time of recording,
and I'm wondering if maybe there'll be a cheeky edit
in the new version where she's like, Indy, you took advantage of me.
I was only in my mid-20s.
And you were also in your mid-20s.
We were the same age.
What I think is funny also is that it's mentioned that Indiana Jones
and Abner Ravenwood had a falling out.
And it's this, I assume, right?
Yeah.
Now, I know a lot of people might be coming to the comments
and going, what are you going on about?
It was the 1920s.
It was a different time.
But just remember that you're defending fictional characters
and a terrible thing.
I just need people to bear that in mind, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Nobody's happy about this.
Nobody needs to justify any of it.
I mean, Karen Allen, of course, she's in the movie.
I get it.
But it's just, it is how it is, I guess.
Yeah.
And if you're going to complain about inconsistencies,
the gun that he looks at before he throws it in the suitcase,
it's a different gun.
He looks at the gun.
What?
And then he throws it in the suitcase.
It's a different gun.
That's incredible.
Slightly different.
That's good. Yeah is a different gun. That's incredible. Slightly different. That's good.
Yeah.
What a trick.
Also, they didn't have Walter P38s in 1936.
No.
They came out in 1938.
Where'd he get it?
The future, probably.
Yeah, but also, I think a bunch of stuff in this movie didn't happen.
No, that's also true, yeah.
Maybe God sent it to him.
Probably.
I'm talking about a different gun.
There's a lot of different. There's a lot of gun inconsistencies in this movie. Sure. I'm talking about a different gun. There's a lot of different.
There's a lot of gun inconsistencies in this movie.
Sure.
Well, let's get into it.
Okay.
You got a list?
Not really.
I don't need a list.
It's just stuff I noticed.
Yeah, let's move it along.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Anyways, everybody, it's time for-
How does he have a Browning high power in 1936, James?
I know they came out in 1935, but an American with a British handgun?
You're saying-
A year later?
Mason, there's probably a video game or a comic or a novella.
That explains where he got the gun.
Where he got it from?
Yeah, yeah.
Britain.
Winston Churchill gave it to him.
Winston Churchill gave it to him.
Thanks for stealing all this stuff, Indy.
We'll pop it right in the British Museum.
Here's a gun in exchange.
You can shoot anybody you like with it.
Not legally, but you can. anybody you like with it not legally
but you can
you can just shoot whoever
yeah yeah yeah
each of the bullets
has my face on it
anyways it's time for
Raiders of the Lost Trivia
this is a trivia segment
of the show
where we look at some things
and go wow
these are some fun little tidbits
it also stops people from
pointing out obvious things
we didn't mention
yeah
so Indiana Jones
and the Infernal Machine, a popular video game,
Tomb Raider style, has a bonus mission where you actually return to Peru
and you retrieve a second idol.
Oh.
You didn't know there were two idols, did you?
No.
It's so you can get to replay the scene where you've got the idol
and the big boulders falling after you.
You walk past Alfred Molina and you're like, idiot, this idiot.
Should have thrown me the whip.
I'm going to let the spiders eat you now.
So Spielberg's first choice for this role was Ford,
but Lucas didn't want to cast Harrison Ford again
off the back of American Graffiti and then, of course, Star Wars
because he didn't want to be like, you know, De Niro was with Scorsese.
He didn't want that kind of dynamic.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
So they actually went for Tom Selleck.
Okay, Magnum P.I.
Exactly.
But he was, of course, committed to Magnum P.I.
There's actually a screen test of him and Sean Young
playing at one of the scenes.
And they're like, we could be in a movie too.
Not this one.
But, of course, he did make a number of Indiana Jones knockoffs.
There was High Road to China a couple of years after this.
There was Quigley Down Under.
Quigley did go down under.
Which sounds like a sequel to-
Quigley 1.
Quigley in America.
Quigley in his home state.
That's right.
Of Quiggleton.
It's a long family legacy.
Even his character in Friends
All of these people trying to recapture the magic of Indiana Jones
And they didn't quite get there
Then Harrison Ford was in Blade Runner with Sean Young
Yep
He actually got Blade Runner off the back of this
Because they went, wow, he's actually an incredible actor
Should we use the George Lucas rule of
Don't use a really charismatic actor who makes successful movies again,
no, let's just hire him, I reckon.
Well, the reason they weren't going to hire him
is because they thought he was actually frozen
at The Empire Strikes Back.
So this came out in 1991 and they went,
oh, I don't think that was real.
I think we could probably call this guy.
So if anybody wants to do this,
here's a little hint for you.
The way they got that monkey to do a Nazi salute
is to hold a grape up on a string.
Took 50 takes. There you go. You know? They could salute is to hold a grape up on a string. Took 50 takes.
There you go.
You know?
They could have put maybe the monkey's arm on a string.
No.
Oh.
Grapes.
Okay, fine.
Yeah.
Or they could have indoctrinated it into Nazism, I guess.
Yeah.
I mean, that's 50 takes indoctrination.
They can't be that different in time span.
I think so.
Yeah.
So you've probably heard this, though, but there's been much discussion about how does he jump on the
submarine and survive that trip?
How do you get inside a submarine that's
submerging, right? Now, I think
is it the case that
back in the day, submarines mostly
didn't submerge that far?
Is that it? That's right. They actually filmed this
scene and there are some images that survived
it. He lashes himself to the
periscope and just gets
dragged the entire way there yeah yeah and i want to end on this uh piece of raiders of the lost
trivia oh yes it's that paul freeman ate a fly controversy who's that belloc oh yeah that that
famously youthful actor yeah i know right so the moment where indiana jones is threatening to blow
up the ark which by the way he should have done because it would have been insane.
Right, yeah.
You see a fly crawl into Paul Freeman's mouth and it does not fly away.
I see.
That's against the very spirit of the fly to not fly away.
Exactly.
So people have analysed this in like 4K and HD restorations or whatever.
And that fly does definitely not leave his mouth.
That's important that you know that.
But apparently what happened is, this is the rumor,
that there are actually a couple of frames that are missing in this
that were cut out as a joke.
So it looks like they recognized it,
and it looks like that he ate the fly.
I don't know whether that's true, but that's the story.
The frames are out there
they must be you know some people collect individual animation cells yeah some some
billionaire somewhere's got a couple of frames of a flight coming out of a man's mouth and he's like
look at this nobody's got this now the box office for this on a budget of 20 million dollars it made
367 million dollars uh with also a couple of re-releases around the time.
It was the biggest movie of the year.
This is also the only Indiana Jones movie to be nominated for Best Picture.
Huh.
Which again speaks to, like, nobody had made something like this.
It's wild.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The only one that comes close is Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
You know?
I do know that, yes.
And we'll get to it.
That's my third movie, Mason.
Yeah, I see where this is going, yes.
I get it.
It's not a joke, Mason.
I'm serious about it.
It is a joke and you're being silly.
You're being a silly billy.
You know, look, maybe some people don't like us to be silly.
Or maybe they do.
And if they are interested in a bit more silliness,
let's pay Walt.
Two silly billies.
That's right. Two silly billies. That's right.
Two silly billies taking your money.
You can head over to bigsandwich.co where if you sign up,
there's a bunch of exclusive stuff.
There's video game Let's Plays.
That's right.
There's movie commentaries.
There's bonus podcasts.
That's right.
Our podcast, The Weekly Planet, where we talk movies and comics and TV shows,
that comes out there early on Sunday as opposed to Monday.
And, of course, these videos, Caravan of Garbage.
Lawrence, who's editing this particular set of films,
is getting them done early, and they are going up early,
if you do want to say them.
Thank you, Lawrence.
But it will cost you money.
Better loot some tombs then.
You're going to have to.
I guess.
You do what you can.
Or if you just want to support us here in whatever,
or this is your last video, it's fine.
Yeah.
It's all good, man.
All right, join us next week for Temple of Doom.
And you might be like, isn't that a really nasty movie?
And wasn't it nasty because both George Lucas and Steven Spielberg
had divorces, like, around the time?
They divorced one another.
They did.
Anyway, we'll get to it.
We'll talk about it next week. Thanks, everybody, for watching about it next week thanks everybody for watching we'll see you next week goodbye
we're both dabbing aren't we i guess yeah in a manner of speaking
fx is 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+.