So, first off, I think I'm just gonna give this one a miss. I've still never seen Crystal Skull (or whatever the free coaster was that came with my Indiana Jones Bluray Trilogy set). I'm happy to treat this franchise as a trilogy and leave it at that.
I think the only reason people are surprised with these reviews are (1) it's directed by a guy who has previously been quite good at taking on the concept of the aging hero, and (2) they cut a pretty good trailer.
That said, Harrison Ford is 80 GODDAMN YEARS OLD. And I'm sorry, but my brain simply will not accept him as an action hero. He's in AMAZING shape for an 80-year-old. We should all be so lucky. But "amazing shape for an 80-year-old" is still one slip and fall away from a broken hip. Even if he's supposed to be playing 70, I
still don't buy it. There shouldn't be 70-year-old action heroes. It'd be different if he were a wizard or Jedi or whatever, where he doesn't have to rely on brawn, but punchin' Nazis means you gotta be able to do so without worrying about your arthritis.
So, yeah, skipping this one. Was planning to do so originally, thought maybe it'd be ok from the trailer, then read some reviews and decided "Nope. I was right the first time."
You can't go home again, kids. The past is a foreign country. Put it to rest, and embrace the present and the future.
All that said...
While I know a film studio needs to cast a wide net with its releases, we here at TheRPF are the CORE TARGET AUDIENCE for an Indiana Jones film. This forum has writers, musicians, painters/artists/animators, architects, machinists, programmers, modelers, engineers, pilots, physicians, mechanics, attorneys, makers, even people with TV and film experience... all gathered together for our love of the "Great Adventure" that TV and film have brought into our lives. More than anyone else outside the production studio, we are the ones who would MOST love to see Ford one last time in a solid, well written adventure (and yes, TLC was the best sendoff for the character but Ford WANTED more Indy films, so it was going to happen anyway). Heck, we have the talent to make the film ourselves and hand it to Disney to rake in the $$$.
Why aren't there any talented, like-minded RPF type individuals in upper levels of creative control at Disney/Lucasfilm now? If there are, I can only assume the top management is shouting them down, to keep pumping out this kind of disappointment.
We aren't actually the "Core target audience." General moviegoers who don't know what a greeble is are the core audience. People just looking for something to do on the weekend with their kids are the core movie audience.
Studio execs -- rightly, I'd actually say -- recognize that hardcore fans fall into two categories: (1) the ones who'll watch anything with the brand name on it, and (2) the ones who'll never be satisfied with what you put out because it isn't the thing it was before. Either way, it's a waste of time and resources to try to build your franchise to target them. From a business perspective, you want to
target the people who are casual viewers.
As for why there aren't creative types in control at big studios, there are to some degree, but it's worth bearing in mind a few things about the filmmaking business.
First, it's a
business. Second, as we've seen in recent years, it's a business that is driven by
investment. Even if you have creatives heading a studio, the creatives are funded by investors, and the investors are basically just rich people parking their money somewhere where they think it will grow. And ultimately, that is what is driving
all of Hollywood right now. There is a perpetual drive not simply to make profits, ot to show growth (those are different things), but rather to
constantly grow profits. It's not enough to make money. You always need to be making
more money than you were before, and as soon as that stops being true, the rich investors will shift their money to another industry that they think they can strip-mine for perpetual growth of profits. And for the investor class, any dollar that goes to somewhere other than their pockets is a dollar they
lost not a dollar they
didn't make.
All of that drives the decisionmaking in Hollywood. It's why writers are getting screwed. It's why AI is so attractive to them (because you don't have to pay it, so more profits can go back to the investors). It's why studios are perfectly willing to make a whole-ass movie and then shelve it forever for "tax benefits." Because it's got zero to do with storytelling or art or moviemaking from a purely mechanical standpoint. It's just about growing profit. Always. Forever.
If Disney keeps removing content, it's Disney+ that's going to run out...of subscribers. Who wants to pay more for less?
They're merging Disney and Hulu into a single platform soon, and that'll mean they can retire content that only serves one platform. This is happening elsewhere. HBOMax merged with Discovery and has been removing content and is becoming MAX, a new platform where you can watch Sopranos reruns (for now, anyway) alongside a slew of crappy reality programs. Hell, it's happened in platforms that cater to niche audiences. Funimation, Crunchyroll, and VRV have all merged into Crunchyroll, with VRV's live-action content and licensed stuff from Shout Factory being cut out of the new platform which is going back to focusing on anime stuff. This means VRV original content will either disappear or just go up for sale on VOD sites.
Again, it's aaaaaaall about growth of profits.
Personally, I'll keep a Disney/Hulu subscription because (1) we already subscribe to both, and (2) my kid LOVES Bluey and that's the only place to get it. I've personally very much enjoyed the D+ original Star Wars and Marvel shows (I recognize that puts me in the minority of active posters here...), so I've gotten my money's worth and hope to get more, but I'm cautious about these merges and the dilution of brand identity and what that'll mean for the content.
There are lots. Robert Eggers, Ari Aster, Alex Garland, Greta Gerwig, Dennis Villeneuve, Jordan Peele, Bong Joon-ho, David Robert Mitchell, Drew Goddard, David Lowery, Todd Field...
However, in terms of the names themselves carrying a big four-quadrant movie like in the old days while also pushing for original content it's another story.
This happens because brands have replaced names, and people keep consuming subpar franchise flicks one after another regardless of outcome. It's a difficult conversation because, well, I guess some people do like those movies and saying these things feels like looking down on them. But this stuff has been killing commercial cinema for years now. The success of Jurassic Park 8 or The Hulk vs Superman 5 - Part IV is what keeps studios from financing the type of creative-led original content that Raiders of the Lost Ark was back in 1981. And if legacy sequels were stuff like Mad Max: Fury Road or Top Gun: Maverick it'd be one thing, but generally speaking they're broken and soulless. Yet they make millions. How many times does one need to see something like Jurassic World to go "eh, maybe there's no need to keep coming to these"? It makes you feel like all people got out of movies like Jurassic Park or The Empire Strikes Back was "dinosaur chomping" and "lightsaber woosh", while every level of artistry that made those films what they were completely flew over their heads.
Looks like this new Indy will be joining the ranks of the cynical cash grabs soon after all, which will be sad to witness if true. On one hand, it's unsurprising. Again, it's a product of that world and no longer in the hands of its creators. But oh well, there will probably be some leftovers in there from when Lucas and Spielberg were developing it that should make for an interesting watch, academically speaking at least.
Bingo. This really all got started with the earliest days of the new comic book films, and the smash success of the Pirates of the Caribbean film. Suddenly, studios realized that it wasn't big
star or
director names that would bring people in, but rather
recognizable brands. So you got the G.I. Joe movie that had sod all to do with the actual franchise material, and you got the Transformers movie which, again, had little to do with the original material. And you got movies like Battleship, which was based on a friggin' boardgame. AND you got more comic book movies.
It's all because the studios recognized that the path of least resistance ran thru recognizable brand names, and that was enough. You could reduce your risk if you could package your film with an easy-to-recognize name. Strip the name out, and now your film is a generic pile of crap. I've said for years that if you simply changed the names of all the characters and renamed G.I. Joe to American Commandos, it would've been totally ignored.
This is just super depressing. It cannot be that hard to make an Indiana Jones movie with the resources they have at their disposal. There had to be better ideas that were trashed in favor of this script. Argentina Nazi’s kidnap Shortround’s family so he’ll have to turn to Indy for help to retrieve an artifact they need to blah blah blah. The moment Shortround is introduced by saving Indy from some other adventure he has in progress brings out the feels. There. That was 2 minutes of me making crap up on the spot. No need for any political statements except Nazis suck.
I’m not saying the stuff I said is awesome, but I’d watch it, ha. Not sure I want to watch the movie they made over all the others they could have is my point I guess.
It
is that hard because
your star is still 80 goddamn years old.