Indiana Jones

Harrison Ford was born today, July 13th, in 1942 and I thought I’d find some fascinating facts from the Indiana Jones franchise.

From Business Insider:
Tom Selleck nearly played Indiana Jones.

It’s hard to imagine anyone other than Harrison Ford donning the fedora and cracking the bullwhip, but the role almost went to Tom Selleck instead. The “Magnum P.I.” and “Friends” star was actually one of the first actors to be offered the role, and even did a screen test alongside “Blade Runner” actor Sean Young as Marion Ravenwood. But as Selleck explained in 2017, CBS wouldn’t let him take the role because he’d already shot the “Magnum P.I.” pilot for the network.

There were around 10,000 snakes in the “Well of Souls” scene.

There are plenty of bugs and reptiles in the whole franchise but the Well of Souls scene is arguably the one that makes many fans squirm because of the thousands of snakes that slither on screen to terrify Indy and Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen). In a behind-the-scenes featurette, Allen recalled that the original plan was to use “mechanical snakes” but they didn’t look realistic enough. And archival footage shows director Steven Spielberg bringing in numerous snake handlers to fill the set with snakes and glass lizards — which look like snakes. 

Harrison Ford even said: “We were working with, I think, around 8, 10,000 snakes.”

The cobra actually spat venom at Harrison Ford.

Although it sounds wild that there were thousands of snakes on the “Raiders” set, the filmmakers didn’t realize how serious the situation could be until one of them actually spat venom at Harrison Ford. Producer Kathleen Kennedy recalled how the cobra reacted to the actor in the scene where Indy comes face-to-face with the snake. Luckily, there was a sheet of glass separating them. She said: “At one point, it hooded and whipped its head off to the side and literally threw venom all over the glass. So that was something that caused everybody to sit up and take notice and recognize that this was not something to play around with.”

Harrison Ford got run over by a plane filming “Raiders of the Lost Ark.”

During the scene where Indy and Marion fight Nazis on the runway, Harrison Ford was actually run over by the plane and tore the ACL ligament in his knee. In a behind-the-scenes documentary, the star recalled: “At a certain point I slipped and fell, and the wheels rode up onto my knee, which resulted in me tearing my anterior cruciate ligament in my left leg in the middle of Tunisia. So rather than submit to any local medical care, we just wrapped it up and put ice on it, and I carried on.” 

It wasn’t the only time that Ford got injured on film sets, as he broke his leg years later filming “Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens,” and hurt his shoulder rehearsing a fight scene for “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.”

Willie Scott was named after Steven Spielberg’s dog.

While Indiana himself is named after George Lucas’ dog, his “Temple of Doom” love interest, Willie Scott (Kate Capshaw), was named after Steven Spielberg’s Cocker Spaniel.  Spielberg explained the name in a behind-the-scenes documentary for the sequel. He said: “Willie was the name of my dog, by the way. ‘Cause, since Indy was named after George’s dog, Indiana, and I had a dog named Willie, and then Short Round was the name of Bill and Gloria’s dog, so Ke was called Short Round. So in that sense, all three characters are named after our house pets.”

Harrison Ford taught Ke Huy Quan how to swim on a day off from filming.

Ke Huy Quan’s career has had a resurgence thanks to “Everything Everywhere All At Once,” but many theatergoers know him for his role as Short Round in “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.” One of the big reasons why his character works so well as comedy relief in the darker movie is because of the believable familial dynamic he has with Indy, and that comes from how Quan and Ford hung out together on set when they weren’t filming. The actor told The New York Times that Ford taught him to swim on a day off while they were in Sri Lanka. Quan said: “We were just hanging out at the swimming pool in Sri Lanka in our hotel, and he says, ‘Ke, do you know how to swim?’ I didn’t, so he says, ‘Come on, I’ll teach you.'” 

Kate Capshaw had to be taught how to scream for “Temple of Doom.”

“Temple of Doom” sees nightclub singer Willie Scott get swept along in the adventure after meeting Indy in Shanghai, and because she’s not used to the shenanigans that the archaeologist gets involved in, she’s understandably freaked out by all the action. Kate Capshaw had to be taught how to scream on set, as she explained: “I couldn’t scream, so Steven taught me how to scream. I mean, you know, screaming isn’t as easy as it looks.”

Steven Spielberg cut a scary snake scene for Kate Capshaw.

One of the scenes that didn’t make it off the page in “Temple of Doom” saw a snake descend around Willie Scott, but Kate Capshaw was terrified of the creature while filming in Sri Lanka. Capshaw explained that she was incredibly worried about the scene, and producer Frank Marshall took her to see the snake first to try and ease her into it. Capshaw recalled: “I went over and looked at it, and looking at it, I get tears in my eyes and I’m having a hard time breathing and I’m looking… I can almost work myself up right now. And I went over and I put my hand on the snake, and I lost it.” Spielberg added: “She was shaking and she was all white, and you could see right through her makeup. She had lost all of her color. And I said, ‘I’m not gonna put you through this. Let’s cut it out.’ And I cut the whole scene out of the movie. I think she probably years and years later, married me for that!”

The Nazi uniforms in “The Last Crusade” were apparently genuine.

Costume designer Anthony Powell explained in the “Last Crusade” making-of documentary that the Nazi uniforms worn by the hundreds of extras in the film were genuine. He said: “We had a lot of Nazis in the film. All of those uniforms, I think, were genuine ones that I found in Eastern Europe somewhere. Joanna Johnston worked with me on the two last ‘Indiana Jones’ pictures. I’d give her research pictures and sketches and drawings and things, then she’d go out and find it all.”

2,000 rats were bred for just one sequence in “The Last Crusade.”

“Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” sees Indy and his father, Dr. Henry Jones Sr. (Sean Connery), hunt for the Holy Grail, and the search takes the hero to Venice with Elsa Schneider (Alison Doody).  Unfortunately, when they end up in the catacombs, Schneider is confronted with thousands of rats. It turns out that the crew bred 2,000 of the little critters just for that sequence.  In the making-of documentary, Spielberg explained: “In order to have rats that aren’t infected with some virus or disease, you have to basically cultivate them from living births. So our animal handlers gave birth to something like 2,000 living rats. And they were everywhere! The set was half-water, it was like an aqueduct. We had rats walking the very narrow lips of the aqueduct and coming out of holes, rats in poor Alison Doody’s hair.” Thankfully, Ford wasn’t as bothered by all the rats, as he admitted to keeping “black hooded rats” as pets when he was a “nature counselor” as a teenager.

Sean Connery and Harrison Ford filmed a scene together without wearing pants.

Yes, you read that right. Sean Connery and Harrison Ford decided not to wear pants during a conversational scene on the zeppelin in “The Last Crusade.” During the documentary, Connery explained: “The passengers were wearing fur coats and hats, it was supposed to be the wintertime, and I played it without my trousers. Harrison said: ‘You’re not gonna play the scene without your trousers?’ I said, ‘If I don’t, I’ll be stopping all the time because I sweat enormously. I sweat very easily.’ Well, he did the same.” Like father, like son.

Cate Blanchett picked her “Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” haircut by looking at high school yearbooks from the 1950s.

Fast-forward to 2008, and a new “Indiana Jones” movie reared its (crystal) head with “Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.” The film sees the adventurer race against Russian villain Irina Spalko (Cate Blanchett) to find a mythical city in South America. But when it came to Spalko’s intimidating look, Blanchett got inspiration from 1950s high school yearbooks. She explained in the making-of documentary: “I had a look at yearbooks of people’s high school photos in the ’50s, and I found a couple of photos. One of a Russian girl, and one of an American girl with an incredibly short fringe, and I just thought that really emphasized the eyes, so that’s in the end what we went with.”

“Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” carries on the tradition of including a “Star Wars” Easter egg.

When Steven Spielberg and George Lucas made “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” the duo couldn’t resist including a sneaky reference to “Star Wars” on the walls of the Well of Souls scene, with a tile showing R2-D2 and C-3PO.  And production designer Guy Hendrix Dyas continued that tradition in the main temple of Akator in the 2008 film’s climax, with R2-D2 and C-3PO being included on a golden tile. He also took it a step further and included the titular alien from Spielberg’s “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.”

Shia LaBeouf trained for six weeks to film the bike chase in “Crystal Skull,” but found it hard because Harrison Ford kept moving on the back of it.

Early on in the film, Indy unwittingly meets his long-lost son, Mutt Williams (Shia LaBeouf), and they wind up having to flee Marshall University when the Soviets show up. Stunt coordinator Gary Powell explained that they started off with a “smaller bike” before giving the actor the Harley Davidson, and then they practiced the chase scene for six weeks. But LaBeouf found it hard because Harrison Ford kept moving while sitting on the back of the bike.  He said: “The bike was tough, only because when you have somebody moving on the back of a bike. It’s very different than just having someone hold you on the bike. But we’re shooting a movie and Harrison has to animate his character! And we’re on a bike through a lot of it, so a lot of it is the movement. All that stuff was pretty tough.”

SOURCE: BUSINESS INSIDER

Eammon Jacobs

5 thoughts on “Indiana Jones

  1. I liked the first couple of Indiana Jones movies but then it just went too far. Most of those movie series keep going and going and going and there comes a point where it just becomes silly and not worth watching any more.

    Just The News: “Country music singer John Rich said that he likes either Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, or Dr. Ben Carson as a potential vice presidential pick for presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump.

    “I think J.D. Vance is really strong,” Rich said on the “Just the News, No Noise” TV show. “I like what he’s done. I like where he comes from. If you ever read ‘Hillbilly Elegy,’ you understand what his background is. He knows America from the ground up in a very literal sense.”

    Trump is expected to formally receive the GOP’s nomination for president at the Republican National Convention next week in Milwaukee, Wisc. He is also expected to name his vice presidential pick. Among the speculated candidates are Vance, former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum. 

    Rich said he liked Carson’s demeanor and that he would balance Trump out on the world stage. “He would calm the Trump storm,” he said. “With those two guys in the room, you’ve got both sides of that equation covered.”

    Rich said that the GOP is fortunate to have so many good options while the Democrats don’t have a lot to pick from.”

    Liked by 1 person

  2. “Being Carter Page: The Trump campaign volunteer who became victim to one of the FBI’s most outrageous crimes hasn’t received so much as an apology”

    SHARYL ATTKISSON, JUL 13, 2024

    EXCERPT: “At the very beginning of the false Trump-Russia story, there was Carter Page. We are approaching eight years since Page, a Trump campaign volunteer who’d never met or spoken to Donald Trump, was targeted in a scheme by the FBI and Trump’s enemies.

    The scheme was to interfere in the 2016 election by convincing the public that Page and Trump were Russian stooges and spies. As part of this scheme, Page was unlawfully surveilled by our intelligence agencies. They leaked his name and false allegations about him to the media in order to intervene in the election on behalf of Hillary Clinton; and to destroy Page’s reputation and, by proxy, to taint Trump.

    Because of the latitude that our intelligence agencies have awarded themselves, they not only spy on secretly-targeted Americans, they have also granted themselves permission to spy on anyone who communicates with those targeted Americans, as well as people who communicated with those who communicated with the targeted Americans! No wiretap or court order necessary to surveil those in the extended categories…

    That means if Trump’s enemies in government could find an excuse to spy on someone around Trump, it would be easy to ensnare Donald Trump’s communications in the secret dragnet. Trump’s opponents could monitor everything from his plans and campaign strategies, to his confidential communications with his attorneys and others.

    By surveilling Trump in this way, through Carter Page, the FBI wouldn’t have to apply for a secret wiretap against Trump himself—an application likely to be scrutinized more carefully since it would have amounted to the Obama administration targeting a presidential candidate.

    The unlawful nature of the spying on Page was exposed years after the fact. To this day, Page has been barred from getting justice in court by unreasonable protections afforded to government officials who commit violations, ethical lapses, and crimes—and he hasn’t even received so much as an apology from the offending government agents.

    That could change in September. Why wouldn’t the government repeat the same unlawful surveillance and election interference in 2024, when there was so little accountability after one of the most egregious abuses we can point to?

    Read on for details…..”

    https://sharylattkisson.substack.com/p/being-carter-page

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  3. NF: Yep, we did it, too!

    “There was a time back in the ’50’s and ’60’s when housewives like my mother made their choice of which supermarket to shop at based on which one did S&H and which did the Plaid Stamps. I can remember sitting at our dining room table with her with a wet sponge sitting in a bowl doing the stamps to put in to the books. You guys do that too?”

    “Now, why would anyone even want to do something this despicable? The Post – along with other sources – is saying that there is a new documentary ‘coming out’ that insists – not suggests, insists – that Lincoln was gay. Although that would help to explain his incredibly ugly wife, I find it not only hard to believe, but also just fuckin’ mean spirited and wrong on so many levels. Besides who the fuck cares? The guy died and century and a half ago. If you really need to read more, it’s here…”

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I loved Raiders of the Lost Ark – but my favorite Harrison Ford movies were when he as the President in Patriot Games, Clear and Present Danger, and Air Force One.

    Liked by 2 people

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