Indiana Jones Gets Standing O At Cannes – With Trailers

May 19th, 2008 (6) Posted By ticticboom.

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I lived on Kauai when the very first film “Raiders of the Lost Ark” came out. I’ll never forget it. Back in the 70′s they filmed a lot of stuff in Hawaii, especially Kauai. Fantasy Island, for example, if I watch old reruns I see classmates there who were always amongst the band that played with Mr. Roarke’s nod and gave out leis to the guests.

The opening scene where Indy exchanges the bag of sand for the little statue thing and runs through the cave and is chased by all those natives was filmed on Kauai, you can even see my buddy’s face for about 2 seconds, LOL. It’s when they all stop and see he has jumped into the river.

I’ll never forget my buddy Leon coming over one night going “Eh brah, you know dat guy from Star Wars that was Han Solo? Well the guy that made Jaws is making a movie with the guy from Star Wars.”

I distinctly remember asking, “Han Solo? Which one was he?”

Leon went on to say that he was getting paid like $45 a day to be an extra, they were going to be chasing this guy through the jungle and he was going to jump into the river and get away. “What’s the movie called” I asked.

He shrugged, “I dunno, Raiders something…”

Raiders? WTF?

He wasn’t the first guy I knew to be an extra in movies, I also knew some guys that were extras in King Kong, the Jessica lange one, and several others.

Anyway, the movie ended up being nothing at all like Leon was telling us about. Dude, that was over 25 years ago. Geez, I’m getting old, thankfully, it sure doesn’t feel like it.

Anyway I guess the latest one did well at Cannes, which isn’t saying much, with those people, you never know how they’re going to react, and sometimes, they’re way off. Let’s hope this time they’re right on…below is an excerpt from an article in Variety, and a couple of trailers for “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull”…sounds cool.

Come on! You can’t tell me one of the greatest scenes in all of cinema isn’t the one with the swordsman throwing all those moves with that scimitar, and then Indy just pulling out his pistol and shooting him. That was great! Totally unexpected the first time you see it, too…

Cannes obviously has a jones for “Indiana.”

The Sunday night premiere of “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” met with a 3½-minute standing ovation — nowhere near a festival record, but a reaction of respect, appreciation for the film’s craftsmanship and its nostalgic sensibility and style.

Paramount’s gamble in bringing the film here seems to have paid off and the pic avoided what has become known as “the ‘Da Vinci’ syndrome.”

The mood — a cross between goodwill and acceptance of the pic’s inevitable success — began Sunday afternoon at the press screening, as jaded media members whooped when the lights dimmed. Later, reporters asked fawning questions at the press conference and hundreds of onlookers began gathering early in the day in front of the Palais, eventually creating an enthusiastic gridlock that far surpassed the energy of any event so far during the 61st festival.

Even Mother Nature seemed primed for the preem: Though torrential rains were forecast for Sunday evening, clear sunshine greeted the filmgoers, while a nearly full moon shone as the exited.

The crowd went nuts at the arrival of Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Harrison Ford.

At a press conference following the afternoon screening for the media, Spielberg said bringing the film to Cannes seemed the right thing to do. The pic was developed and filmed in secrecy, so they wanted to unveil it to the world’s press all at once, rather than giving a series of regional review screenings.

Coming to Cannes, he said, seemed “the fair thing to do and the fun thing to do.”

Though critical reaction is not likely to be unbridled enthusiasm, it won’t matter. The film is critic-proof and the brickbats thrown at “The Da Vinci Code” two years ago didn’t dent that film’s box office.

At the press gathering, Ford shrugged off thoughts of the critics’ reaction. “I’m not afraid at all. I expect to have the whip turned on me.” It’s not unusual for something popular, he said, “to be disdained by some people.” But this film is “a celebration of the movies and I feel inured to professional criticism.”

The press conference began with a lengthy question in French asking Spielberg if he’d received any communist pressure to create the movie. (He assured that he hadn’t.) One Japanese correspondent pointed out that atomic bombs — the film takes place during the ‘50s Cold War — are still a very sensitive subject to the Japanese.

Those were the only hints at negativity in the 40-minute sesh, with most of the time taken up with softball questions. Ford was asked to compare Spielberg’s directing now to the 1981 original (Ford’s answer: “As brilliant as he was 20 years ago, he is even better now”) and if he is flattered by the fans’ enthusiasm (“I am very gratified”), while Spielberg was asked if Ford is his “secret weapon” (the filmmaker said he’s so good, he’s a secret weapon for any director).

Spielberg was also asked about a fifth edition and he said it depends on reactions to this film (“We will keep our ears to the ground”).

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