In most modern multiplexes, there's only one projectionist running all the booths simultaneously. The films are run from giant platters to allow fast -- and consequently, often sloppy -- reloading. Next time tell one of those kids and they'll probably pass the word along. If no one complains, nothing get fixed.Petty Bourgeoisie wrote:... in the lobby I looked around for somebody in charge and all I could see was teenagers behind the concessions counter.
The Indiana Jones Franchise (Steven Spielberg/James Mangold, 1981-2023)
- Faux Hulot
- Jack Of All Tirades
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moviscop
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noelbotevera
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- Orphic Lycidas
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Darn. It's gone now. Has anyone read it? What do you think?John Cope wrote:This is for exte.
Here is a review of the Darabont script.
Last edited by Orphic Lycidas on Thu Jun 12, 2008 5:21 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Cold Bishop
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I have it. I haven't finished reading it yet, but so far it is better overall but still suffers from the same stupid problems that originally plagued the '95 Jeb Stuart draft and the released film.
Are we allowed to open up a thread so that we can do script trading in here? I have all kinds of stuff, old and new, and would like to know if anyone else has anything worth trading for in here, old and new in .pdf format.
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Re: Indiana Jones and the KOCS (Steven Spielberg, 2008)
Spielberg: all of the alien nonsense was George's idea. But he does accept responsibility for nuking the fridge.
- knives
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Re: Indiana Jones and the KOCS (Steven Spielberg, 2008)
I never understood why the fridge thing was such a no-no.
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Re:
"Make me another billion, BITCHES!" - George Lucasexte wrote:LMAO! "I'd rather eat dog shit!"chaddoli wrote:"Fucking terrible!"
The concept has been done before, most notably in this episode of Batman. Spielberg just changed it into a fridge and a nuclear explosion.
- knives
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Re: Indiana Jones and the KOCS (Steven Spielberg, 2008)
And? I would think that would only go on to prove that the idea isn't something to treat as a negative. More a neutral I would think.hearthesilence wrote:The concept has been done before, most notably in this episode of Batman. Spielberg just changed it into a fridge and a nuclear explosion.
- colinr0380
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Re: Indiana Jones and the KOCS (Steven Spielberg, 2008)
Someone has been watching the DVD extras to come up with this story!
Lucas seemed very present from the moment an overly cute gopher turned up at the opening of the film (only Caddyshack has been able to use that animal correctly!)
I'm still of the camp that would have preferred a live action adaptation of The Fate of Atlantis, which would have been mythical and spooky without featuring aliens, but then I also don't think Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was a bad film, just a deeply unnecessary one, as any Indy film after the Last Crusade would have to have been (though I suppose it does fit the title character more fully into the theme of Spielberg's films from the late 80s on being about grown men, fatherhood and/or mentoring rather than the kids and man-children of the films up to and including Empire of the Sun - with Hook being the exception that proves the rule).
Lucas seemed very present from the moment an overly cute gopher turned up at the opening of the film (only Caddyshack has been able to use that animal correctly!)
I'm still of the camp that would have preferred a live action adaptation of The Fate of Atlantis, which would have been mythical and spooky without featuring aliens, but then I also don't think Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was a bad film, just a deeply unnecessary one, as any Indy film after the Last Crusade would have to have been (though I suppose it does fit the title character more fully into the theme of Spielberg's films from the late 80s on being about grown men, fatherhood and/or mentoring rather than the kids and man-children of the films up to and including Empire of the Sun - with Hook being the exception that proves the rule).
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Re: Re:
I think Spielberg "borrowed" the idea from another film he produced...hearthesilence wrote:The concept has been done before, most notably in this episode of Batman. Spielberg just changed it into a fridge and a nuclear explosion.
The time machine has been through several variations. In the first draft of the screenplay the time machine was a laser device that was housed in a room. At the end of the first draft the device was attached to a refrigerator and taken to an atomic bomb test. Robert Zemeckis said in an interview that the idea was scrapped because he and Steven Spielberg did not want children to start climbing into refrigerators and getting trapped inside.
- hearthesilence
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Re: Re:
I didn't say it was a bad idea, it just didn't do much for me because I had seen it before. As soon as he eyed the fridge, the first thought I had was that Batman cartoon.knives wrote:And? I would think that would only go on to prove that the idea isn't something to treat as a negative. More a neutral I would think.
Yeah, probably more likely, but as an escape device, the idea was already done, whether or not he knew it.Roger Ryan wrote:I think Spielberg "borrowed" the idea from another film he produced...hearthesilence wrote:The concept has been done before, most notably in this episode of Batman. Spielberg just changed it into a fridge and a nuclear explosion.The time machine has been through several variations. In the first draft of the screenplay the time machine was a laser device that was housed in a room. At the end of the first draft the device was attached to a refrigerator and taken to an atomic bomb test. Robert Zemeckis said in an interview that the idea was scrapped because he and Steven Spielberg did not want children to start climbing into refrigerators and getting trapped inside.