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It belongs in a museum --
Raiders of the Lost Ark turns 40, and it's still an unqualified
masterpiece
Paramount released 4K Blu-Ray collection of first 4 films to mark the
occasion.
Jennifer Ouellette - Jun 13, 2021 8:56 pm UTC
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267 with 143 posters participating
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Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) relishes the challenge of stealing
a Peruvian fertility idol.
Lucasfilm
*
Alfred Molina made his film debut as the treacherous guide,
Satipo.
Lucasfilm
*
Satipo gets his comeuppance.
Lucasfilm
*
Indiana outruns a giant boulder. The fiberglass, plaster, and
wood boulder was controlled by a concealed steel rod in the
rubber rock wall.
Lucasfilm
*
Rene Belloq (Paul Freeman) prefers to let Indy do the hard work
and then steal precious artifacts from him.
Lucasfilm
*
An apple for teacher.
Lucasfilm
*
US Army intelligence agents have a proposition for Indiana.
Lucasfilm
*
Indy and Marcus Brody (Denholm Elliott) celebrate their new
mission: to find the Ark of the Covenant.
Lucasfilm
*
Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen) can drink most men under the
table.
Lucasfilm
*
"Indiana Jones. I always knew some day you'd come walking back
through my door."
Lucasfilm
*
Sadistic Gestapo agent Arnold Ernst Toht (Ronald Lacey) also
wants the head piece to the Staff of Ra.
Lucasfilm
*
"Whiskey...."
Lucasfilm
*
Careful, that medallion is hot!
Lucasfilm
*
John Rhys-Davies played Sallah, an Egyptian excavator who is
Indy's ally in Cairo.
Lucasfilm
*
Marion makes a monkey friend.
Lucasfilm
*
The monkey is a spy! Vic Tablian played the Monkey Man.
Lucasfilm
*
Marion's makeshift weapon is no match for that knife.
Lucasfilm
*
Indiana faces a Cairo swordsman (Terry Richards).
Lucasfilm
*
Time constraints forced Steven Spielberg to nix an elaborate whip
vs. sword fight scene. Instead, Indy just shoots the swordsman.
Lucasfilm
*
That treacherous monkey reveals Marion's hiding place.
Lucasfilm
*
Indiana drowning his sorrows in the wake of Marion's presumed
death.
Lucasfilm
*
Marion is alive! Captured by the Nazis.
Lucasfilm
*
"Heil Hitler."
Lucasfilm
I still remember the thrill of watching Raiders of the Lost Ark for
the first time in the summer of 1981. I spilled my popcorn at the
very first jump scare: our hero, Indiana Jones, triggered a booby
trap while tracking a Peruvian fertility idol, and a skewered,
decaying skeleton popped into the frame. From then on, it was a
nonstop ride of thrills, chills, and more than a few spills, with
enough humor, romance, and supernatural mysticism thrown in to
capture anyone's imagination. Snakes! Spiders! A Nazi monkey spy!
Plus plenty of explosions and a gross-out melting face! Next to the
first Star Wars movie, it was the best movie I had yet seen in my
relatively young life.
I wasn't alone in my enthusiasm, despite a tepid trailer that
captured none of the action/adventure flick's enduring magic. Critics
(mostly) raved, and audiences flocked to theaters to see Raiders
again and again for several months after its release on June 12,
1981. It was the top-grossing film of that year and didn't leave
theaters until the following March, ultimately grossing $354 million
globally. Raiders was nominated for multiple Oscars, winning five
(for film editing, art direction, sound, sound editing, and visual
effects). The Library of Congress selected it for preservation in the
National Film Registry, and it is widely considered to be one of the
greatest movies of all time. Even director Steven Spielberg has said
he considers it the most perfect film in the franchise.
(Major spoilers below because it's been 40 years, and who even are
you if you haven't seen this movie yet?)
George Lucas had wanted to make an homage to the serial adventure
films of his youth since 1973 and came up with the idea of a
globe-trotting adventurous archaeologist named Indiana Smith.
(Indiana was the name of Lucas' Alaskan Malamute, which became a
throwaway quip at the end of 1989's Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade: "We named the dog Indiana!") He got distracted by other
films, including Star Wars, released in 1977. That same year, Lucas
was vacationing in Hawaii with Spielberg and pitched his Indiana
Smith idea. Spielberg convinced him to change the last name to Jones
and eventually came on board as director.
With screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan, the two men held a marathon
brainstorming session the following January in Los Angeles, coming up
with an outline and several key set pieces. It was Kasdan's job to
weave all those elements together into a coherent, compelling
narrative; he found inspiration in classic films like Red River,
Seven Samurai, and The Magnificent Seven. Several Hollywood studios
rejected the project, balking at the proposed $20 million budget (a
mere pittance by today's standards). But Paramount finally agreed,
with producer Frank Marshall joining the team to make sure Spielberg
stuck to his budget.
Crowds in line to see Raiders of the Lost Ark, June 25,
1981.
Enlarge / Crowds in line to see Raiders of the Lost Ark, June 25,
1981.
Steve Ringman/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images
Lucas had originally conceived Indy as something of a womanizer and
Kung Fu expert, with Spielberg suggesting he could be a gambler or an
alcoholic--just to make him fallible and vulnerable and to bring some
lighter comic touches to the character. Only the womanizing element
really stuck. Among those considered for the role were Chevy Chase,
Bill Murray, Nick Nolte, Peter Coyote, Jack Nicholson, and Tom
Selleck. Of course, Harrison Ford--already a star thanks to his
portrayal of Han Solo in Star Wars and The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
--was in hindsight the perfect choice, bringing the same mix of tough
cynicism masking a heart of gold, bravado, and self-deprecating humor
that made Han Solo such a fan favorite.
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Casting relative newcomer Karen Allen--best known at the time for a
supporting role in 1978's Animal House--as Indy's love interest,
Marion Ravenwood, was another inspired choice. She beat out Amy
Irving, Debra Winger, and Sean Young, among other contenders for the
role. Spielberg, Lucas, and Marshall were looking for an actress who
could hold her own against the swashbuckling Indiana Jones, bucking
the typical damsel in distress stereotype. Although Marion does her
share of yelling, "Indeeeee!" when she's in a tight spot, she's
hardly a passive shrinking violet: she's equal parts feisty, smart,
funny, and vulnerable. Allen brought all those qualities and more to
the role--"I was never really a girly-girl," she recently told the
Hollywood Reporter--which is why she remains the franchise's best
and most popular love interest for the archaeologist.
Allen's natural adventurous spirit came in handy for some of the more
difficult scenes, such as being trapped with Indy in the
snake-infested Well of Souls. Unlike the fictional archaeologist's
famous aversion to snakes, after the first few days, Allen took the
serpents in stride, particularly since there was usually plexiglass
between the actors and the cobras. There was also a nurse armed with
antivenom and an ambulance on call--just in case. A few folks on set
did get bitten by pythons, Allen recalled, which are not poisonous,
although "it is a nasty bite." Even more dangerous was the fight
scene in the burning Nepalese bar: Allen and Ford did their own
stunts for that scene, and yes, the fire was real.
Harrison Ford and Steven Spielberg on the set of Raiders of the
Lost Ark.
Enlarge / Harrison Ford and Steven Spielberg on the set of Raiders of
the Lost Ark.
Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images
Much has been written over the years about the eventful 73 days of
shooting. Because of the tight schedule, Spielberg couldn't indulge
in very many takes--usually only three or four, although he later said
this constraint kept the film from being pretentious. The cast and
crew endured temperatures of 130deg F in Tunisia, and Ford and several
crew members came down with amoebic dysentery. The opening sequence
set in Peru was actually filmed in Hawaii, and while they found the
perfect cave location, it was also near a mosquito breeding ground,
with everyone suffering multiple bites. And the tarantulas covering
the guide Satipo (Alfred Molina) were all male and thus not
aggressive. When they just wouldn't move, the crew placed a female
spider on his chest to encourage them.
During another scene, a fly visibly landed on Paul Freeman's face as
his character, rival archaeologist Rene Belloq, calls Indy's bluff to
blow up the ark. Freeman didn't even miss a beat; he just continued
with his lines. But the fly didn't really crawl into his mouth; the
scene was edited in post-production to make it appear that way, and
the sound team added some extra buzzing to call more attention to the
fly. And it took 50 takes to get the monkey to perform its
scene-stealing Nazi salute, coaxed by a grape hanging over its
head. For all the headaches, however, Lucas felt it was a relatively
smooth shoot, in large part because the studio didn't interfere.
If Raiders shows its age at all (apart from the delightfully dated
special effects), it's in the broad ethnic stereotypes, from the
one-note Nazi caricatures (like Ronald Lacey's sadistic Gestapo
agent) to the Egyptian dig workers at Tanis and street beggars in
Cairo. More troubling by today's #MeToo standards is the romantic
history between Indy and Marion--the cause of his falling-out with her
father, Abner. "I was a child!" Marion protests when confronting him
about ruining her life. "You knew what you were doing," he replies.
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Allen has said Marion was 16 and Indy was 26 at the time. But a 2008
oral history of the film reports that Lucas suggested Marion was 11;
Spielberg protested, saying "She had better be older." (Ya think?)
Allen recently defended the age difference, insisting that the exact
nature of the relationship was deliberately vague, and the two may
have only "kissed a few times"--which would have been a big deal for a
starry-eyed teenager of that era.
*
Indiana in the map room, as he discovers the location of the Well
of Souls, resting place of the ark.
Lucasfilm
*
"Why did it have to be snakes?"
Lucasfilm
*
Marion's escape attempt is foiled.
Lucasfilm
*
Removing the ark from the Well of Souls.
Lucasfilm
*
Alas, the Nazis have captured Sallah.
Lucasfilm
*
Jones is trapped in the Well of Souls.
Lucasfilm
*
"Why Dr. Jones, whatever are you doing in such a nasty place?"
Lucasfilm
*
Marion is tossed into the well with him. But of course, they're
going to escape...
Lucasfilm
*
The climactic moment in the (largely improvised) fight between
Indy and a brawling Nazi (Pat Roach).
Lucasfilm
*
Marion mans the machine gun.
*
Indy gives chase to the truck convoy transporting the ark.
*
Ford did many of his own stunts, but for this one, Spielberg used
a stuntman.
*
"It's not the years, it's the mileage."
*
Captain Simon Katanga (George Harris) negotiates with Colonel
Dietrich (Wolf Kahler) for Marion.
Lucasfilm
*
A fly visibly landed on Freeman's face while shooting this scene.
Freeman didn't miss a beat.
*
The opening of the ark initially proves disappointing.
*
The Nazis dared to laugh, and the ark decides to take vengeance.
*
A Lucasfilm receptionist in a long white robe was suspended in
front of a blue screen for this shot.
*
A skeletal model based on the receptionist's face completed the
transformation.
*
Dietrich's head shrivels, courtesy of a mold lined with
air-filled bladders.
*
The infamous melting face involved a sculpted model with layers
of different colors of gelatin over a heat-resistant stone skull.
*
"Don't look at it , Marion."
*
"Top. Men."
Lucasfilm
*
The ark is buried once again, this time in a cavernous government
warehouse.
As for real-world archaeologists, let's just say they have a
longstanding love/hate relationship with Raiders. On the one hand, it
makes archaeology look cool as hell; there was a subsequent increase
in students wanting to major in archaeology after the film's release.
On the other, it's a vision of archaeology that is vastly different
from how the field has evolved since the 1930s, as archaeologist
Kristina Killgrove recently noted in an article for Smithsonian
magazine. She and her colleagues vented their various frustrations
with Indy's disregard for ethical guidelines, the lack of racial and
gender diversity, and the inaccurate depiction of archaeologists as
treasure hunters.
Despite all of that, University of California, Berkeley,
archaeologist Bill White ruefully admits that Indiana Jones made him
want to become an archaeologist in the first place. "These movies are
an escape for many of us, including archaeologists," he told
Killgrove. "I want non-archaeologists to know that's not really how
archaeology is, but I don't want them to lose the value of these
movies as fantasy, action, and adventure."
The Sound of Raiders of The Lost Ark with Ben Burtt and John Roesch,
one of the original Foley artists for the film.
Given Raiders' box office success, a sequel was soon forthcoming:
1984's Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. While it, too, was a box
office success, that film had none of the magic of the original. The
humor is forced, Kate Capshaw's constant screeching grates on the
nerves, and one of Indy's allies is a young Chinese boy known only as
Short Round, if we're talking about outdated ethnic stereotypes.
Also: chilled monkey brains for dessert, anyone? (Because poking fun
at weird ethnic food is such a laff riot.) I still find the film
practically unwatchable decades later. Fortunately, The Last Crusade
was a welcome return to form, with Sean Connery lighting up the
screen alongside Ford as Indy's academic egghead father.
Alas, the franchise stumbled yet again with 2008's Indiana Jones and
the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, although we did get Karen Allen's
return as Marion, Cate Blanchett as a deliciously evil villain, and
the useful film trope "nuking the fridge" as an updated term for
"jumping the shark" (inspired by a particularly implausible scene).
All the key franchise elements were there, they just never gelled,
and it ended up mostly feeling tired and lifeless. The film still
grossed nearly $800 million worldwide, even though critical reviews
were mixed.
A fifth Indiana Jones film (as yet untitled) just started filming
earlier this month, with James Mangold (Logan) replacing Spielberg as
director. We seem to alternate between good films and bad ones, so
maybe that pattern will hold and we'll get the magic again with this
new outing. Ford, now 78, is returning as Indy, so he will not be
passing the bullwhip to Shia LaBeouf, who played Mutt, his son with
Marion, in Crystal Skull. Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Mads Mikkelsen
have been cast in undisclosed roles, and both Allen and Rhys-Davies
have expressed interest in returning as Marion and Sallah,
respectively. And of course, John Williams will be composing the
score; bringing in anyone else would be sacrilege.
In the meantime, to mark the film's 40th anniversary, Paramount has
released a 4K Blu-Ray collection of the first four Indiana Jones
films for your home viewing pleasure, and all are available for
streaming. But if you're fully vaccinated and live near one of the
handful of theaters screening Raiders of the Lost Ark this month,
it's well worth catching it on the big screen--if only for nostalgia's
sake.
Listing image by LucasFilm
reader comments
267 with 143 posters participating
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Jennifer Ouellette Jennifer Ouellette is a senior writer at Ars
Technica with a particular focus on where science meets culture,
covering everything from physics and related interdisciplinary topics
to her favorite films and TV series. Jennifer lives in Los Angeles.
Email jennifer.ouellette@arstechnica.com // Twitter @JenLucPiquant
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