MikeKardec
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,157
- Location
- Los Angeles
I enjoyed the change in pace of Indy when he shifted to the fifties and the story became a pastiche of the fifties sci-fi that was the equivalent by then of the pulp stuff in the 30s.
Actually I loved that too but, as you've probably guessed, I'd have greatly appreciated a more period and 'serious' take on the 1950s stuff. Have you noticed that whenever there is a movie within a movie, the movie with in the movie is stupid and poorly made. It's as if filmmakers have an unbelievably low opinion of their own product or their audience. I found the later Indy films to have a touch of this style. As if they couldn't take what they were doing seriously. I ran into a lot of this when I produced The Diamond of Jeru. My producing partner and I wanted to create a much grittier picture but we were forced into the sort of Disney-fied version that appeared on USA by the people at USA and the director. Now that I think of it, a different interpretation of Jeru, given it's 1955 time frame, would have been the whole Men's Adventure "Jaguars Ripped My Flesh" approach. That might have been droll but I really thing only about four people in the whole world would have understood what we were up to.