Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
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Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom |
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Directed by | Steven Spielberg |
Produced by | Robert Watts |
Written by | George Lucas (story) Willard Huyck Gloria Katz |
Starring | Harrison Ford Kate Capshaw Ke Huy Quan Amrish Puri |
Music by | John Williams |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | May 23, 1984 |
Running time | 118 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $28,000,000 |
Preceded by | Raiders of the Lost Ark |
Followed by | Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade |
IMDb profile |
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom is a 1984 action/adventure film directed by Steven Spielberg. First released on May 23, 1984, it is a prequel to the hugely successful action movie Raiders of the Lost Ark. This film is the second released, though the twenty-third chronologically, in a series of film and TV productions about the adventures of the heroic fictional archaeologist Indiana Jones.
Like the first, it starred Harrison Ford as Jones, was directed by Steven Spielberg and based on an original story by George Lucas. Many members of the original crew returned, including cinematographer Douglas Slocombe, editor Michael Kahn and composer John Williams. The film is darker in tone than its predecessor. The film was always intended to be a horror movie as well as a remake of elements of Gunga Din (1939). The original title was "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Death."
Indiana Jones is named after George Lucas's dog. In this film, all three leads are named after dogs. Willie was the name of Spielberg's dog, and Short Round was the name of the dog belonging to scriptwriters Gloria Katz and Willard Huyck.
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[edit] Synopsis
The film is set in 1935 — a year before Raiders of the Lost Ark. The film opens with Indiana Jones in a Shanghai nightclub attempting to trade the remains of Nurhaci for a large diamond (possibly "The Peacock's Eye"[1]) with a gangster named Lao Che. When the deal goes bad and Indy's friend Wu Han is killed, Indy and the club's singer Willie escape the pursuing criminals in a car driven by a 7 year old boy named Short Round, an ally of Indy. They board a cargo plane not knowing that it is owned by Lao Che.
As Indy, Willie, and Short Round nap during the flight, the pilots dump the fuel and parachute out of the plane. Indy and the others use an emergency raft to safely descend from the plane's altitude, eventually arriving near a village in India. The people there enlist his help in retrieving a sacred stone, the Sankara Stone or the Siva linga, and the community's children from the forces of an evil palace nearby.
Initially the palace seems normal enough; they act insulted by his questions about the village's claims. Indy is later attacked in his room by an assassin, which leads him to find a secret door in Willie's room. Beneath the palace is a vast underground chamber where the village rock and two more are held by Thuggees. An evil cult (who worship the goddess Kali with human sacrifice) uses the village's children to dig for the remaining rocks within the mines of the palace in the hope that with all of them they can rule the world. The cult is led by the villainous cult leader Mola Ram (Amrish Puri).
Indy, Willie, and Short Round are captured by the Thuggee and separated: Indy sides with the Thuggee after being forced to drink the "blood of Kali Ma", Willie is kept as a human sacrifice, and Short Round is put in the mines alongside the village children. Short Round escapes and helps Indy return to his normal self, which allows him to save Willie, take the Sankara stones, and free the children. In the fight to escape the palace, Indy and company make it outside, but trapped on a rope bridge with the Thuggee on both sides. Taking a desperate gamble with a warning in Chinese to his friends to brace themselves, Indy cuts the bridge in half leaving Mola Ram and a few of his minions on the heroes' side. Eventually, Mola Ram fights for the stones, but Indy invokes the magic of the stone and causes Mola Ram and all but one of the stones to fall into the river where the nefarious priest is devoured by crocodiles. Just at that moment, British troops appear to subdue the Thugs.
The heroes triumphantly return to the village with their sacred stone and their children.
[edit] Production
Besides Ford, the actors included Kate Capshaw (Spielberg's second wife, whom he first met while casting this film), Ke Huy Quan, Amrish Puri, Roy Chiao as Lao Che, and a cameo by Dan Aykroyd. Indiana Jones artist Drew Struzan created the film's distinctive artwork.
Most of the filming was done on location in Sri Lanka and at Borehamwood Studios in Hertfordshire, England.Even though the film is set in the Himalayas, the locals are speaking Sinhala. The "crocodiles" are actually American Alligators from Gatorland in Florida. [2]
When Indy is about to cross the rope bridge, he is stopped by a sabre-wielding Thuggee. He attempts to draw his gun a la Raiders of the Lost Ark but finds that he has lost his gun. A musical cue from Raiders is played. However, the opening of Temple of Doom establishes that the film occurs one year before the events of Raiders. Also, the scene where Indy chases a lone Thuggee and is then sent running when he encounters a larger group is similar to the scene in Star Wars: Episode IV when Han Solo chases a stormtrooper through the Death Star and is then ambushed and sent fleeing.
[edit] Reaction
Temple of Doom made $179,870,271 ($30 million less than Raiders) when it was released theatrically in the United States in 1984. When adjusted to 2006 ticket prices, this comes to a domestic total of $342,610,040. The movie received mixed reviews from critics such as Leonard Maltin who claimed the film was "headache inducing" and Roger Ebert who believed the film was "...one of the greatest Bruised Forearm Movies ever made." [2]
Some fairly gruesome scenes in Temple of Doom, as well as, to a lesser extent, other PG-rated films of the time such as Gremlins caused a significant public outcry. Spielberg spoke to the MPAA about creating a new rating that would cover the middle ground between a clear PG and a clear R that his films often found themselves on. This led to the creation of a new rating category: PG-13. (See: History of the MPAA film rating system)
The movie was also banned in India at the time after the film was accused of having a "racist portrayal of Indians and overt imperialistic tendencies".[3]
[edit] Awards
The film won an Academy Award for Visual Effects. Indeed, both Lucas and Spielberg have stated that Temple of Doom was focused on effects to a higher degree than either Raiders of the Lost Ark or Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
[edit] Cast
Actor/Actress | Role(s) |
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Harrison Ford | Indiana Jones |
Kate Capshaw | Wilhelmina 'Willie' Scott |
Jonathan Ke Quan | Short Round (as Ke Huy Quan) |
Amrish Puri | Mola Ram |
Roshan Seth | Chattar Lal |
Philip Stone | Captain Blumburtt |
Roy Chiao | Lao Che |
David Yip | Wu Han |
Ric Young | Kao Kan |
Chua Kah Joo | Chen |
Rex Ngui | Maitre d' |
Philip Tan | Chief Henchman (as Philip Tann) |
Dan Aykroyd | Weber |
Dr. Akio Mitamura | Chinese Pilot (as Akio Mitamura) |
Michael Yama | Chinese Co-Pilot |
D.R. Nanayakkara | Shaman |
Dharmadasa Kuruppu | Chieftain |
Stany De Silva | Sajnu |
Stunt actor Pat Roach — who appeared in two roles as large, muscular henchmen who fight Indy in Raiders of the Lost Ark — also appeared twice in this film: first as the assassin in Jones's room and again as the slavemaster in the mines. Besides Ford, he is the only cast member to return for the second film. (He also had a cameo appearance in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.)
[edit] Soundtrack
Indiana Jones And The Temple Of Doom: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | ||
Soundtrack by John Williams | ||
Length | 40:13 | |
Label | Polydor |
Indiana Jones And The Temple Of Doom: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
The album is currently out of print and is no longer available. Due to the short nature of the soundtrack (approximately 45 minutes), numerous cues from the film were cut. After the production of the extended Raiders of the Lost Ark soundtrack, there was some hope that the future might hold a more complete release of the Temple of Doom score. As of 2006, this has not come to fruition.
- "Anything Goes"
- "Fast Streets Of Shanghai"
- "Nocturnal Activities"
- "Short Round's Theme"
- "Children In Chains"
- "Slalom On Mt. Humol"
- "The Temple Of Doom"
- "Bug Tunnel And Death Trap"
- "Slave Children's Crusade"
- "The Mine Car Chase"
- "Finale And End Credits"
[edit] DVD release
The film was released on VHS in the 1990s and then on DVD in October 2003, digitally remastered. It was packaged with the previous and later films in the series. However, the Region 2 version of the film was heavily censored. The BBFC says that this was because they didn't get Spielberg's permission to restore the edited footage, which includes more violence and gore.
[edit] References
- ^ Treasure Map from Treasure of the Peacock's Eye. Retrieved on 2006-06-27.
- ^ [1] - Review by Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, January 1, 1984
- ^ Trivia for Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. IMDb. Retrieved on 2006-09-13.
[edit] External links
- Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom at the Internet Movie Database
- Temple of Doom at The Indiana Jones Wiki
The Indiana Jones series | |
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Films | Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) | The Temple of Doom (1984) |The Last Crusade (1989) | Indiana Jones 4 (2008) |
Television | The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles (1992-1996) |
Theme Park Attractions | Indiana Jones Adventure (Disneyland, Tokyo Disney Sea) | Indiana Jones et le Temple du Péril (Disneyland Paris) |
Characters | Indiana Jones | Willie Scott | Marion Ravenwood | Elsa Schneider Marcus Brody | Sallah | Short Round | Henry Jones, Sr. |
Cast | Harrison Ford | Sean Connery | Corey Carrier | Sean Patrick Flanery | George Hall River Phoenix | John Rhys-Davies | Denholm Elliott |
Crew | George Lucas | Steven Spielberg | Frank Marshall | John Williams |
Films directed by Steven Spielberg |
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Duel • The Sugarland Express • Jaws • Close Encounters of the Third Kind • 1941 • Raiders of the Lost Ark • E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial • Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom • The Color Purple • Empire of the Sun • Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade • Always • Hook • Jurassic Park • Schindler's List • The Lost World: Jurassic Park • Amistad • Saving Private Ryan • Artificial Intelligence: AI • Minority Report • Catch Me If You Can • The Terminal • War of the Worlds • Munich • Indiana Jones 4 • Lincoln • Interstellar |