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- Movie Review: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Movie Review: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
- By Smitty Wheeler
- Published 06/3/2008
- Movie Reviews
-
Rating:




Smitty Wheeler
For the last 24-years, Smitty has worked with middle school, high school, and college students as a mentor, coach, and volunteer youth pastor. Smitty also operates an advertising agency, business consultancy specializing in business turnarounds, is the Chief of Operations of Student Ministry Partners and an Advisory Board member for The Journal of Student Ministries. .
View all articles by Smitty Wheeler
PG-13, 124 min.
In 1920, a committee was formed to investigate allegations of the throwing of the 1919 world series by the Chicago White Sox. As “Shoeless” Joe Jackson – one of the most revered member of that infamous White Sox team – exited the hearing, a small young fan was waiting for Joe on the courthouse steps. The young boy, with tears in his eyes, looked at Shoeless Joe and uttered those now famous words, “Say it ain’t so, Joe. Say it ain’t so.” Joe never answered but his career was over.
Fast forward to opening night/morning, at 12:01 AM on May 2008. Nineteen years after the incredible, larger than life, Indiana Jones rode off into the sunset of my youth. Both of my boys and I, now loaded up with our large, double-butter popcorns and calorie balancing, extra-large diet cokes snuggled into our premium, center-screen seats. I was excited to be able to share the excitement and suspense that I remembered from the big screen and that they had only been able to partially capture from a VHS tape playing over the 32-incher in the playroom. It was going to be GREAT!
Two hours later, all I could think of was, “Say it ain’t so, Indy. Say it ain’t so.” The old thrills, the suspense and the potential of believability that Harrison Ford, and now Shia LaBeouff, could maybe, possibly be performing the feats that were projected in front of us had flown right off the first of the three 500 foot waterfalls we’re supposed to believe they somehow survived and were pulverized on the rocks below. Not that I believed the drama of the past flicks, but at least one could speculate that maybe, possibly the strapping Dr. Jones could survive that fall you saw, the punch that big guy threw or that he really could have defeated that big muscular German soldier (thanks to a conveniently located propeller blade).
Don’t get me wrong, there were some interesting scenes and the special effects and cinematography were outstanding. In fact, if you were a young kid and had never seen the first three movies, you’d probably give this movie a “B”...because the appropriate number of fists and bullets fly, plus lots of stuff blows up. In fact, Indy walks away from an atomic blast with only a bruise or two, an army of monkeys follow Shia through the trees and attack the evil Commies and an army of man-eating ants go after those the monkeys miss. You also get to see ancient ruins, obstacle courses with the obligatory booby traps, and viscous, blowgun wielding natives.
The problem for most of us previous Indy fans is that it’s just not our Indiana Jones anymore. They’d make better use of the Harrison Ford footage in an AARP commercial or the Shia LaBeouff’s clips of his vine swinging antics in yet another remake of Tarzan. Add in the X-Files angle that’s introduced and you get...not a great movie.
However, your kids will probably go see this in the theaters or rent it when their really bored this summer, so you best do the same. And, looking at it from a glass half-full perspective, the fact that they go see this latest edition may open the door for you to show some clips and create some teachings from both the old Raiders and The Last Crusade editions, both of which are filled with teachable moments.
Here’s a quick look at the movie:
This Jones’s adventure is set in the late 1950s, and things are a little different. There is a huge fear of the Soviet Union and McCarthyism is in full swing. We find that Indy's been kidnapped by Russian spies, led by the evil Irina Spalko (Cate Blanchett) who has an unnerving habit of flexing her gloved hands like my doctor does when he wants to do some invasive work. Spalko's a top Soviet agent who declares, "...I know things. I know them before anyone else. And what I do not know, I find out."
Driven by her desire for knowledge, Spalko uses Indy's brilliance to locate some buried treasure in a warehouse full of government secrets. She’s looking for the "mummified remains" of the aliens that were aboard the UFO that crashed in Roswell, New Mexico. She believes those remains will give her the ability to harness incredible psychic power that can be used to help the Soviets win the Cold War.
Indy, of course, escapes vis-à-vis the cover of a nuclear blast and returns to his classroom at Marshall University, where we learn that the last nineteen years have been a little tough on him. His friend Charles Stanforth (Jim Broadbent) says, "We've reached the age when life stops giving us things and starts taking them away.” Stanforth, is referring to the death of Marcus Brody and of Indy’s father and the fact that Indy is now under suspicion of working with the communists.
Enter Mutt Williams (Shia LaBeouf), a young punk who looks like a cross between Marlon Brando and Elvis Presley. Mutt is a tough-talking, Harley-riding teenager with a comb and a switchblade always at the ready. He and Dr. Jones team-up for a high-speed pursuit through the halls of Indy’s now former university. During this chase, Mutt informs Indy that Harold Oxley (John Hurt), a close friend of both he and Indy’s, has been kidnapped while in search of the legendary Crystal Skull of Akator.
Then, we're off on in pursuit of Oxley in an airplane with the mandatory red line trailing across a vintage map from the US down to South America. As they begin their search, they explore the history and mysteries of the crystal skulls. (Yes, we learn there are more than one). Each clue leads us closer to answering the question, are these from “the gods” of ancient cultures, or from interplanetary visitors?
Strangely, the one true God that is a focal point in Raiders and The Last Crusade never gets brought up in this latest version. In fact, when Mutt gets upset by one of Indy's stories about the Mayans and how they distorted the shape of their children’s skulls to resemble the elongated craniums of their gods. Mutt yells, “No, God's head is not like that." Indy then smiles and replies, "Depends on who your god is."
In the final act, the world begins to swirl in a vortex similar to the closing scene of The Mummy Returns. While the vortex removes all traces of the skulls, the secret they unlock and a hidden civilization, the poor writing and plot twists that we experience are mercifully buried along with them. And this viewer prays are never dredged up again.
Teachable Opportunities:
Unlike the Ark of the Covenant in Raiders and the Holy Grail in Last Crusade, the skulls, don't symbolize anything good or virtuous. However, the Soviets relentless pursuit of them does teach the same lesson that Raiders taught – That anything (other than Christ) pursued at all costs, ends in destruction.
Early in the movie, Indy tells Mutt there's nothing wrong with dropping out of school. Later, after he discovers that Mutt is his son, he changes his tune. Why?
Fast forward to opening night/morning, at 12:01 AM on May 2008. Nineteen years after the incredible, larger than life, Indiana Jones rode off into the sunset of my youth. Both of my boys and I, now loaded up with our large, double-butter popcorns and calorie balancing, extra-large diet cokes snuggled into our premium, center-screen seats. I was excited to be able to share the excitement and suspense that I remembered from the big screen and that they had only been able to partially capture from a VHS tape playing over the 32-incher in the playroom. It was going to be GREAT!
Two hours later, all I could think of was, “Say it ain’t so, Indy. Say it ain’t so.” The old thrills, the suspense and the potential of believability that Harrison Ford, and now Shia LaBeouff, could maybe, possibly be performing the feats that were projected in front of us had flown right off the first of the three 500 foot waterfalls we’re supposed to believe they somehow survived and were pulverized on the rocks below. Not that I believed the drama of the past flicks, but at least one could speculate that maybe, possibly the strapping Dr. Jones could survive that fall you saw, the punch that big guy threw or that he really could have defeated that big muscular German soldier (thanks to a conveniently located propeller blade).
Don’t get me wrong, there were some interesting scenes and the special effects and cinematography were outstanding. In fact, if you were a young kid and had never seen the first three movies, you’d probably give this movie a “B”...because the appropriate number of fists and bullets fly, plus lots of stuff blows up. In fact, Indy walks away from an atomic blast with only a bruise or two, an army of monkeys follow Shia through the trees and attack the evil Commies and an army of man-eating ants go after those the monkeys miss. You also get to see ancient ruins, obstacle courses with the obligatory booby traps, and viscous, blowgun wielding natives.
The problem for most of us previous Indy fans is that it’s just not our Indiana Jones anymore. They’d make better use of the Harrison Ford footage in an AARP commercial or the Shia LaBeouff’s clips of his vine swinging antics in yet another remake of Tarzan. Add in the X-Files angle that’s introduced and you get...not a great movie.
However, your kids will probably go see this in the theaters or rent it when their really bored this summer, so you best do the same. And, looking at it from a glass half-full perspective, the fact that they go see this latest edition may open the door for you to show some clips and create some teachings from both the old Raiders and The Last Crusade editions, both of which are filled with teachable moments.
Here’s a quick look at the movie:
This Jones’s adventure is set in the late 1950s, and things are a little different. There is a huge fear of the Soviet Union and McCarthyism is in full swing. We find that Indy's been kidnapped by Russian spies, led by the evil Irina Spalko (Cate Blanchett) who has an unnerving habit of flexing her gloved hands like my doctor does when he wants to do some invasive work. Spalko's a top Soviet agent who declares, "...I know things. I know them before anyone else. And what I do not know, I find out."
Driven by her desire for knowledge, Spalko uses Indy's brilliance to locate some buried treasure in a warehouse full of government secrets. She’s looking for the "mummified remains" of the aliens that were aboard the UFO that crashed in Roswell, New Mexico. She believes those remains will give her the ability to harness incredible psychic power that can be used to help the Soviets win the Cold War.
Indy, of course, escapes vis-à-vis the cover of a nuclear blast and returns to his classroom at Marshall University, where we learn that the last nineteen years have been a little tough on him. His friend Charles Stanforth (Jim Broadbent) says, "We've reached the age when life stops giving us things and starts taking them away.” Stanforth, is referring to the death of Marcus Brody and of Indy’s father and the fact that Indy is now under suspicion of working with the communists.
Enter Mutt Williams (Shia LaBeouf), a young punk who looks like a cross between Marlon Brando and Elvis Presley. Mutt is a tough-talking, Harley-riding teenager with a comb and a switchblade always at the ready. He and Dr. Jones team-up for a high-speed pursuit through the halls of Indy’s now former university. During this chase, Mutt informs Indy that Harold Oxley (John Hurt), a close friend of both he and Indy’s, has been kidnapped while in search of the legendary Crystal Skull of Akator.
Then, we're off on in pursuit of Oxley in an airplane with the mandatory red line trailing across a vintage map from the US down to South America. As they begin their search, they explore the history and mysteries of the crystal skulls. (Yes, we learn there are more than one). Each clue leads us closer to answering the question, are these from “the gods” of ancient cultures, or from interplanetary visitors?
Strangely, the one true God that is a focal point in Raiders and The Last Crusade never gets brought up in this latest version. In fact, when Mutt gets upset by one of Indy's stories about the Mayans and how they distorted the shape of their children’s skulls to resemble the elongated craniums of their gods. Mutt yells, “No, God's head is not like that." Indy then smiles and replies, "Depends on who your god is."
In the final act, the world begins to swirl in a vortex similar to the closing scene of The Mummy Returns. While the vortex removes all traces of the skulls, the secret they unlock and a hidden civilization, the poor writing and plot twists that we experience are mercifully buried along with them. And this viewer prays are never dredged up again.
Teachable Opportunities:
Unlike the Ark of the Covenant in Raiders and the Holy Grail in Last Crusade, the skulls, don't symbolize anything good or virtuous. However, the Soviets relentless pursuit of them does teach the same lesson that Raiders taught – That anything (other than Christ) pursued at all costs, ends in destruction.
Early in the movie, Indy tells Mutt there's nothing wrong with dropping out of school. Later, after he discovers that Mutt is his son, he changes his tune. Why?
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Comments
Comment #1 (Posted by Kit Ilardi)
Rating:








I saw the movie this weekend and while some of the scenes are over the top it seemed like an Indiana Jones movie to me. You have always needed to suspend disbelief to watch an Indiana Jones movie and this was even more true here. It is important to remember that this is a movie! It is not the Bible nor does it even pretend to have any great moral or religious teaching. Having lived through the 50's, I found the scenes about what America was like in that era to be accurate. All things change and evolve. The Indiana Jones of 1989 is not going to be the Indiana Jones of 2008. The world has changed and what we find terrifying has changed. In our fear driven life in 2008 we are more in fear of what our own government will do than in fear of any supernatural or alien forces. In some ways 2008 is more similar to the 50's than to 1989.
I go to the movies to be entertained and this movie was very entertaining and did not drag. If a movie has one thing to use as a teaching tool, great, but I do not go to the movies to find that.
Comment #2 (Posted by an unknown user)
Rating:








Thanks, I'll wait for the DVD.
Comment #3 (Posted by an unknown user)
Rating:








After watching this one it seems to me that it has a lesson in religious tolorence.
Comment #4 (Posted by Michael Stalls)
Rating:








Kit, I think the point of this review is to help us know if there is a "teachable moment" in the movies they're reviewing. I found this review very helpful and spot on. I therefore went to the movie minus any of my students. My wife's company and the popcorn were the best part of my $30 investment.

