First Clip of Nicolas Cage in Left Behind
Emma Stone Hints At Gwen Stacy’s End For Amazing Spider-Man 2
Emma Stone discusses the fate of Gwen Stacy in the upcoming The Amazing Spider-Man 2.
New Trailer For Guy Pearce and Robert Pattinson In The Rover
Check out the new trailer from Animal Kingdom's David Michod about what happens in the Australian outback when society collapses.
The Monuments Men Review
Director/star George Clooney struggles to tell the story of a little-known piece of World War II heroism in The Monuments Men
“Noble failure” is the best way to describe The Monuments Men, director and star George Clooney’s new World War II drama. Noble because the story the film tells is absolutely an important one, and also because Clooney attempts to present an old-fashioned, earnest tale of heroism that is sorely needed in these cynical times. But the movie ultimately fails because the director cannot keep a tight grip on the narrative and the tone, resulting in a sprawling, ramshackle mess whose positive attributes cannot overcome its many weaknesses.
Who were the Monuments Men? According to the book by Robert Edsel on which the film is based, they were a group of art historians, museum curators and other like-minded individuals who went voluntarily to the front lines of World War II in Europe – long after many of them were of fighting age or shape – to track down and reclaim the countless numbers of works of art that had been stolen by the Third Reich, either from museums or private collectors. With the Nazis in retreat, the task of the Monuments Men – as the team was called – became even more urgent as the Germans were destroying everything in their wake as they fled.
The movie creates fictionalized versions or composites of real members of the Monuments Men, starting with Frank Stokes (Clooney), a Harvard art historian who, as the film opens, makes the case to President Roosevelt that 1,000 years of human culture is in danger of being lost unless action is taken. With the president’s approval, Stokes assembles a team that includes art restoration expert James Granger (Matt Damon), architect Richard Campbell (Bill Murray), sculptor Walter Garfield (John Goodman), art dealer Jean Claude Clermont (Jean Dujardin), art historian Preston Savitz (Bob Balaban) and an Englishman named Donald Jeffries (Hugh Bonneville), whose job is never quite made clear.
The film’s first problem surfaces right away: the paragraph I wrote above is pretty much all we get to know about the seven Monuments Men (we also find out that Jeffries is an alcoholic with unresolved father issues – but that’s all that defines him). Little attempt is made to flesh out these men at all, save for a passing reference here or there to their lives back home. We know that Murray has grandkids; we learn that Damon is a faithful husband. But these are just broad strokes that don’t add any real depth or complexity to these men. They go about their mission, once they get to Europe, with hardly a complaint, doubt or sense of fear – despite the fact that none of them are exactly what you would call battle-hardened. In fact, we barely even know their names; I didn’t realize that Clooney’s character was called Stokes until about two-thirds of the way through the film, and had to look up Balaban’s in the press notes later on.
To be fair, there have been great war movies that don’t spend a lot of time exploring characters’ histories, and it’s clear from the get-go that Clooney wants to make something in the vein of The Bridge Over the River Kwai or The Guns of Navarone or Kelly’s Heroes – a big, old-fashioned war movie right down to the nostalgic score from Alexandre Desplat. Yet Clooney and Grant Heslov, who wrote the film together, can’t decide if they want a jauntier tone or something with more gravitas, like Saving Private Ryan. They end up with a jarring mix of episodic sequences, some played half-heartedly for laughs while others are meant to be stirring or moving – one sequence in which the team discovers barrels of gold teeth taken from Jews and hidden in a mine seems to have been dropped in from a far more solemn picture.
The movie also lacks a clear goal for the men. In The Guns of Navarone, the German fortress had to be destroyed; the quest of The Great Escape was right there in the title. Yes, the Monuments Men were in Europe to rescue as many works of art as they could, but their objectives are so spread out, so vague (many of the treasures were tucked away in mines or keeps) that the screenwriters narrow it down to two: the Bruges Madonna by Michelangelo and the Ghent Altarpiece, a priceless, historic panel painting housed in a Belgian church. There’s little suspense or doubt about whether the men will find either. The movie’s finale seems so anticlimactic that Heslow and Clooney tack on a contrived race to get out of a mine before some Russians show up – but it’s not even clear what will happen if they don’t get out in time.
Also contrived is the subplot involving Granger and Claire Simone (Cate Blanchett in a thick French accent), a curator at the Jeu de Paume museum in Paris who ends up secretly keeping a record of all the loot that the Nazis move in and out of the place during their occupation. Granger shows up to ask her for her records, which could be key to knowing what was stolen and where to look for it; Simone is so stubborn and unreasonably angry at Granger – she seems to think that the Americans will just steal the art again – that you would almost think she was trying to protect the Nazis. Sure, maybe you don’t trust the Americans, but whose hands would you prefer to have the art in? By the time she abruptly has a change of heart and even makes an attempt at seducing Granger, you have to wonder what the hell the writers were thinking.
I’ve seen three out of Clooney’s four previous pictures as a director (Leatherheads has eluded me, or perhaps it’s the other way around), and he does his best work – in Good Night, and Good Luck and The Ides of March – with tight, small, character-driven pieces. This time around, he attemped to make an epic and just couldn’t get his hands and head completely around the material. The Monuments Men is technically proficient, well-photographed by Phedon Papamichael, and boasting that excellent score. All the principal cast members do the best they can with the thin material they’re given. But it’s edited like a montage of scenes from a much larger piece of material and never takes on a life or energy of its own.
Perhaps The Monuments Men should have been, ironically, even bigger: not a two-hour movie in which the filmmakers try to cram in too much information, too many emotions and too many incidents, but a 10-or-12-hour cable miniseries, with each episode focused on finding a different work of art and the whole thing giving the story and characters room to breathe and develop. That would have been just as noble, and perhaps might have saved this ambitious but deeply flawed film from its own uncertain and disappointing fate.
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!
Forest Whitaker Is Finding Taken 3
Forest Whitaker is in talks to star alongside Liam Neeson and Maggie Grace for Taken 3.
Bruce Willis and M. Night Shyamalan Reteam For New Film
The creative collaborators of The Sixth Sense and Unbreakable are in talks to reteam for a film based on an early Shyamalan screenplay.
Thor 3 pressing ahead, writers hired
Writers have been hired by Marvel for the follow-up to Thor: The Dark World...
Just over a day since we heard that Marvel was already at work on Captain America 3 - you can read that story here - comes the news that Thor 3 is already in the works as well. It's not the most surprising story of the year, as around the release of Thor: The Dark World there was already chatter of a further sequel. Furthermore, Thor 2 went on to outgross its predecessor by nearly $200m at the worldwide box office.
Marvel itself has broken the news that not only is Thor 3 happening, but it's also got a pair of screenwriters on board. The new film is set to be penned by Craig Kyle and Christopher Yost. Kyle was one of the producers of Thor: The Dark World, whilst Yost co-penned the script for it.
That's three of Marvel's phase three movies pretty much confirmed then. Ant-Man is the first, Captain America 3 is coming, and now Thor 3 is in place. We just need the confirmation of Doctor Strange, and we'll have the set (given that they'll lead up to the already-confirmed The Avengers 3).
We would imagine that Thor 3 will be a 2016 release, but don't hold us to that. Here's the full story over at Marvel.
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!
Fight Club Comic Book Sequel Gets Matt Fraction Involved
One of the hottest comic book writers around is on board for the Fight Club sequel.
Fight Club 2 is coming...but not in the way you might expect. Announced in 2013, the sequel to Fight Club is coming in graphic novel form. And now, Fight Club author Chuck Palahniuk is ready to take the project to the next step. Who has he chosen to make this happen? One of the hottest writers in comics, Hawkeye, Sex Criminals, and (until recently) Fantastic Four writer, Matt Fraction. An update posted on Mr. Palahniuk's official website reads:
The graphic novel "script" for the Fight Club sequel has gone off to the writer Matt Fraction and to an unnamed publisher for review. Matt writes his own series, called Sex Criminals and does very well. He's been my go-to advisor about format and other considerations of graphic scripts. I'll be choosing an illustrator based on their response to the script. The sequel will consist of seven issues [...] more than 210 pages. Fingers crossed.
Now, who might that artist end up being?
We owe a hat tip to SlashFilm for tipping us off to this!
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!
Watch Tom Hiddleston's Thor Audition
Tom Hiddleston wasn't auditioning for the role of Loki...watch Tom as Thor!
Tom Hiddleston immediately won fans over with his portrayal of Loki in Thor, Avengers, and Thor: The Dark World. We presume we'll be seeing lots more of him. But originally, he auditioned for the part of the God of Thunder himself! While we're sure you'll agree that he was more suited to the part of the God of Mischief, it's still plenty cool to see the film in this early stage!
Tom Hiddleston's audition can be seen on the Thor: The Dark World bluray special features. Well, you can also watch it right here...so what are you waiting for?
Like us onFacebook and follow us onTwitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. AndGoogle+, if that's your thing!
Kevin Costner’s Draft Day Super Bowl Spot Online
Watch the Super Bowl spot for Kevin Costner and Jennifer Garner's Draft day right now!
3 New Posters For Captain America: The Winter Soldier
Check out new character one-sheets of Captain America, Black Widow, Nick Fury, plus our first look at Batroc!
Sony Teases The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Super Bowl Spot
Check out two teaser images from Sony in anticipation of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Super Bowl TV Spot.
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing.
X-Men Producer Wants Channing Tatum as Gambit
Shuler Donner wants Channing Tatum to play Gambit in a future X-Men movie...
Is Channing Tatum going to play Gambit in a future X-Men movie? He just might if Lauren Shuler Donner gets her way! "I'm dying to do a Gambit movie with Channing Tatum,"Shuler Donner tells Empire."That doesn't have to be a great big movie. It's a thief in New Orleans, it's a whole different story. He's on board, and I have to get the studio on board. How can anyone resist Channing? He's such a sweetheart."
Regardless of your feelings about Channing Tatum in the role, she's right on the money about one thing. A Gambit film doesn't have to be an insane nine figure budget superhero movie. If the X-Men film universe is going to expand outside of immense team films (and solo films focusing on Wolverine), there are plenty of options available for comparatively low-key individual movies. Gambit would certainly be one of them.
For his part, Mr. Tatum has made no secret of his desire to throw some cards around. "Gambit’s my favourite. I’m from New Orleans, around that area. My dad’s from New Orleans, and I like to do a Cajun accent. I could do it for real."
There's more on Channing Tatum's Gambit chances over at Empire!
Like us onFacebook and follow us onTwitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. AndGoogle+, if that's your thing!
The Lego Movie Makes Man of Steel Spoof In New Preview
Watch the latest The Lego Movie video spoof one of WB's biggest 2013 films. You'll really believe a Lego can divinely fly!
The Lego Movie is only a week away, but for some it is the biggest event of 2014. And why not? After all, this will be the FIRST theatrically released movie to feature Batman and Superman teaming up. That’s right, Man of Steelwill meet the Dark Knight first right here, and Man of Steel is the subject for the latest preview (released via Fandango).
Complete with soaring Hans Zimmer music, the latest Lego Movie preview offers fans a glimpse into the epic quest of one ordinary dude who must become extraordinary, especially since he is voiced by Chris Pratt. Video below.
This Warner Brothers 3D animated event follows Emmet, a play-by-the rules kind of toy until he is mistaken as the savior of the world in a race against time. Featuring the voices of Pratt, Elizabeth Banks, Will Arnett, Channing Tatum, Will Ferrell, Alison Brie, Liam Neeson, and Morgan Freeman, The Lego Movie opens on February 7, 2014.
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing.
Justice League: War - Wonder Woman in Action, and Michelle Monaghan Interview
Wonder Woman comes to the rescue of Batman, The Flash, and Green Lantern in this clip from the new Justice League animated movie!
You should never doubt why Wonder Woman is a member of the Justice League. In this latest clip from Justice League: War, Diana takes out a stack of parademons before Batman, Flash, and Green Lantern can even act! We're suitably impressed. You should be, too.
Now, if only they didn't leave Green Lantern's line about calling "dibs" on Wonder Woman in there, we might feel a little better about the whole thing. Justice League: War is the first DC animated film to focus on DC's New 52 universe, and segments like this certainly look faithful to the comic series that it's based on. Justice League: War arrives on bluray and DVD on February 4th.
But that's not all the Justice League: War goodness we've got for you. True Detective star Michelle Monaghan, the voice of Wonder Woman, has a little insight into her character to share with viewers!
Like us onFacebook and follow us onTwitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. AndGoogle+, if that's your thing!
A Million Ways To Die In The West Red Band Trailer
Seth MacFarlane's 'A Million Ways to Die In The West' gets a very NSFW red band raunchy trailer...
The Old West was a dangerous, dangerous place. Heartless outlaws, weary Natives, and an unforgiving countryside. Thus, it’s also rife for raunchy comedy gold, as Seth MacFarlane steps into the director’s chair for his second feature film, following 2012’s Ted, with A Million Ways to Die in the West. You can watch the NSFW red band trailer about the baddest (taste) outlaw this side of Sheriff Bart right below.
In this newest film, MacFarlane drops the Teddy Bear CGI to also star in the picture as a cowardly sheep farmer named Albert. After he backs out of a gunfight with the toughest hombre in the territory (Liam Neeson), his golddigging girlfriend (Amanda Seyfried) leaves him for a real lady killer (Neil Patrick Harris). Fortunately, a mysterious beauty who’s quick with a gun (Charlize Theron) shows up just in time to teach him the true way of the West as he seeks his revenge.
…Plus a lot of people die. Like, A LOT.
A Million Ways to Die in the Westopens May 30, 2014.
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing.
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Super Bowl TV Spot (Part I) Is Here
Check out the first 30 seconds of the Super Bowl TV Spot for The Amazing Spider-Man 2 right here!
3 Days to Kill Super Bowl Spot
Check out this new Super Bowl XLVIII spot for 3 Days to Kill before it premieres on Super Bowl Sunday!
3 Days to Kill, Relativity's upcoming action thriller starring Kevin Costner and directed by McG, hits theaters on Feb. 21. To celebrate Super Bowl Sunday, Relativity will release a brand new TV spot in which retired CIA agent Ethan Runner (Costner) is introduced to the boyfriend of his teenage daughter amidst a terrorist plot.
Here's an early look:
In this heart pounding action-thriller, Kevin Costner is a dangerous international spy, who is determined to give up his high stakes life to finally build a closer relationship with his estranged wife and daughter, whom he's previously kept at arm's length to keep out of danger. But first, he must complete one last mission- even if it means juggling the two toughest assignments yet: hunting down the world's most ruthless terrorist and looking after his teenage daughter for the first time in ten years, while his wife is out of town.
Looking forward to 3 Days to Kill? Let us know in the comments!
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!
Anson Mount Cast in Blumhouse's Visions
Anson Mount and Gillian Jacobs have joined the cast of the new horror thriller from Blumhouse.
Anson Mount, the Hell on Wheels star, has been cast in Blumhouse's upcoming horror thriller, Visions. Working opposite Isla Fisher (The Great Gatsby), Mount plays her husband.
Visions is about Julia (Fisher) a soon-to-be mother who is haunted by harrowing visions of an evil hooded figure only she can see when she and her husband (Mount) move to the countryside. To protect her unborn child, Julia must discover the truth behind her visions while her husband becomes increasingly concerned for her safety.
The film also stars Ellen Barkin (Hands of Stone), Jim Parsons (Big Bang Theory) and Gillian Jacobs (Community).
Visions is set for a 2014 release.
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!
The Indiana Jones films that never were
There are currently four Indiana Jones movies, and some might say that's one too many. But what about the Indy movies that never were?
For a new Indiana Jones movie to go forward, it requires a degree of agreement amongst three people who don't seem to have a habit of agreeing very much. Basically, Steven Spielberg, Harrison Ford and George Lucas all have to say yes, else the project stalls, and a different approach is taken.
As a consequence of this, there's a trail of unmade Indiana Jones films that failed to get the necessary unanimous agreement. The ingredients of some of them would find their way into others, and some ideas would never be returned to. Here then is a whistle-stop tour of the Indiana Jones movies that never were...
Indiana Jones and the Haunted Mansion
We'll start with the one we know the least about. One of George Lucas' suggestions for a third Indiana Jones movie was to send Indy into a haunted mansion. Full details of this never really came to light, but a screenplay was written for it. That was done by Diane Thomas, who had penned Romancing The Stone.
Spielberg resisted this approach in the end though, feeling that it went too close to one of his earlier films, Poltergeist. It wasn't that Indiana Jones movies hadn't done ghosts and the supernatural to some extent before. For Spielberg, it just felt like retreading old ground. The haunted house idea was nixed.
Indiana Jones And The Monkey King (aka Indiana Jones And The Garden Of Life)
This was another idea initiated by George Lucas for a third Indiana Jones movie, and Chris Columbus - at the time hot off his work penning Gremlins and The Goonies - was ultimately hired to tackle a couple of drafts of the film.
This particular adventure would have kicked off in Scotland in 1937, with Indy investigating ghostly murders. But it would be a conversation with Marcus Brody that really set things in motion, as he points Indy towards Africa, to meet with a zoologist called Clare Clarke. In turn, she happens to have discovered a 200-year old pygmy by the name of Tyki. Tyki would go on to give Indy a scroll with the directions to a lost city on. Naturally enough, Nazis block the way to said lost city. The plan for the lost city was for it to contain the Fountain of Youth.
Indy actually gets killed in this one, only to be brought back to life by Tyki in what's called the garden of immortal peaches (and if you're not pure of heart and eat a peach, then death awaits). Also, in one draft, Indy is forced by the Monkey King, who had migrated into a villain by that point, to play chess with real people as the pieces.
One nice addition to this, that ties back into Indy's teaching, is that the plan was to have one of his students stow away with him on the trip. That was one of the ingredients that never found its way into a future Indy movie, however.
This one did get to the point of location scouting, but eventually, Lucas and Spielberg would shelve the idea, feeling that the script was a little too far-fetched, and in danger of racially stereotyping some of its characters. Stung in particular by such accusations against Indiana Jones And The Temple Of Doom, this was something that Spielberg and Lucas were both particularly sensitive to.
Furthermore, the draft of the script that would go on to leak online suggested a very, very expensive movie. On the upside, Chris Columbus' writing was praised for capturing the tone of Indy (although his character work wasn't), but Spielberg admitted that when he read the script "I began to feel very old - too old to direct it anyway".
(Daily Script has a link to an apparent draft of the film, here.)
Indiana Jones And The Saucermen From Mars
Following the success of Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade, George Lucas would develop an idea or two that could have seen a fourth Indy adventure in cinemas in the 1990s. One that got quite far into the writing process was Indiana Jones And The Saucermen From Mars, an idea that Lucas started working on in 1993. He hired Jeb Stuart originally to write the script for him, before passing on the mantle to the late Jeffrey Boam (who had co-written The Last Crusade).
In this one, Indy very nearly gets married at the start to a linguist by the name of Dr Elaine McGregor. Amongst the guests at the wedding would have been Marion, Willie, Sallah and his father, but McGregor, instead of walking down the aisle, hops into a car on the big day and disappears. The search is thus on to find her.
Turns out she's working on the discovery of alien bodies and a strange stone cylinder. Indy and McGregor crack the code on said cylinder, which turns out to be coordinates leading them to a mountain. Russian spies want in though, and as Indy tries to rescue Elaine from one of their planes, a flying saucer appears. A further alien encounter sees a truck being lifted off the ground. Meanwhile, a mysterious countdown ticks down, with the assumption being it's a bomb.
And so the story progresses, until the eventual departure of the flying saucers and aliens - after teaching some nasty people lessons by, er, killing them - leaving Indy and Elaine free to go off and get married. Short Round was set to give them a lift in a car at the end of the film too.
A couple of things, then. Firstly, this shows that aliens were part of the thinking long before the script to Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull was completed. Secondly, in George Lucas' defence, that does tie in to the kind of serials he was watching that influenced him to come up with the Indiana Jones adventures in the first place.
So why did this one fall apart, while Crystal Skull didn't? Notwithstanding the fact that it migrated in part into what would be the fourth Indiana Jones film (the aliens, the fact that it opened in Nevada), it was more a case of timing. Both Spielberg and Ford weren't said to be keen on using aliens as a plot device, but by 1995, Jeffrey Boam had shaped it into a script that convinced them it might work. However, then Independence Day happened, and almost instantly killed the project. The similarities were too great.
Lucas would, as history shows, hold onto the idea of those aliens though. Jeffrey Boam would sadly pass away in 2000, at the age of just 53.
Indiana Jones And The Lost Continent
Rumours suggesting that a big screen Indiana Jones movie would see him on a quest to find the lost city of Atlantis were not in short supply in the 1990s, primarily because, we'd suggest, of the excellent computer game, Indiana Jones And The Fate Of Atlantis, that was released in 1992.
It was wrongly assumed that this would be the precursor for a movie, but the closest Indy got to exploring Atlantis on the big screen was in a project with a slightly different name.
Indiana Jones And The Lost Continent was a rumoured project for which little substantive evidence exists. The story goes that Spielberg and Harrison Ford wanted the narrative to go one way, whilst George Lucas wanted it to go the other. Given that this was after the success of Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade, all three needed to be in agreement for the project to progress. That weren't, so it didn't.
There were casting rumours for this one, but again, we've nothing of substance to support them. Indy was set to have a brother according to one or two reports (I seem to remember Kevin Costner's name being mooted in a tabloid once upon a time, but that might just be my Kevin Costner fetish at work again). Tom Selleck's name was banded about too, although that's likely to be something to do with the fact that he was the original choice for Indiana Jones more than anything concrete. Another story suggested that Sandra Bullock would play an archaeology student in the movie, and that it was set to be her character who came across, by accident, the path to Atlantis.
From what we can tell, this all never got much further than web chatter though...
Indiana Jones And The City Of Gods
If there's one potentially great Indiana Jones movie that never was, then perhaps this is it. Penned by Frank Darabont, this was Steven Spielberg's favoured option for the fourth Indiana Jones movie, but it wasn't one - as we'll come to see - that found favour with George Lucas. That's a shame, as it did tie together lots of Lucas' suggestions and wishes, but eventually, he'd reject Darabont's work after two or three drafts have been written. The script was being worked on from mid-2000 through until the end of 2003. It also picked up elements of Indiana Jones And The Saucermen From Mars.
Across the drafts that Darabont wrote, at one stage he reportedly - and this wasn't confirmed - included a 13-year old daughter for Indy and Marion. Spielberg had introduced such a character for the first Jurassic Park sequel, and didn't want to go down that particular avenue again.
Darabont set his script in the 1950s, and introduced us to an Indiana Jones who was 20 years past his best days. He still conducts research expeditions, and thanks to the antics of a Russian colleague by the name of Yuri, he finds himself in possession of one of the infamous 13 crystal skulls. Yep, those ones.
Darabont brought back Marion, as the person who recruited Yuri to try and get hold of said skull in the first place. And we learn that Marion is married, and on a quest to find the lost City of the Gods. The skull is the key to getting at said city's secrets.
At the City of the Gods, aliens appear when the skull is attached to the necessary skeleton. But here, the aliens anoint Indy and the four people accompanying him 'the five chosen ones'. As thanks for helping bring some mummified remains back to life, they get one wish granted each.
In true Indiana Jones movie style, some of them pick the wrong wish and end up dead. Indy, meanwhile, wishes for Marion, and ends up alive. Cue everything starting to disintegrate, the survivors pegging it, and a flying saucer coming out of the ground. When it subsequently crashes, it takes the City of the Gods with it in the explosion that ensues. Indy and Marion go back to America and then get married. Nobody called Mutt is ever mentioned.
One of Darabont's drafts leaked online. Well, it's assumed to be his, and he's never denied or admitted it either way. It's been praised for its fast-moving actions sequences, and for successfully bringing the alien story into Indiana Jones in a far less clunky way than we'd eventually see. Former Nazis were in the mix too, as well as a Cold War feel.
So why didn't this one happen? That'd be down to George Lucas this time. Whilst Harrison Ford and Steven Spielberg were said to love what Darabont had done, Lucas was never sold on it. He took over the script himself, and brought other writers on to work with it too. Darabont would describe his time on the project as "a tremendous disappointment and a waste of a year", noting that "suddenly the whole thing goes down in flames because George Lucas doesn't like the script".
According to an interview he gave to MTV back in 2007, Darabont confronted George Lucas over the matter. "I told him he was crazy", Darabont said. "You have a fantastic script. I think you’re insane, George... You can say things like that to George, and he doesn’t even blink. He’s one of the most stubborn men I know". When asked whether he'd publish his script, he said that "at this point I don't give much of a damn what George thinks, but I wouldn't want to harm my friendship with Steven".
Darabont did still introduce ingredients that would make it into Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull. But it's clear it was very far removed from the version he'd originally drafted.
Indiana Jones 5
Since Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull was released, going on to become the biggest grossing movie in the series at the box office, there's been no shortage of speculation with regards a fifth movie. The rights now fully reside with Disney, and the earliest we'd see another movie is in two to three years time. And clearly, it's a project that's had some work done on it.
That work has been done behind closed doors however, and so whilst George Lucas, producer Frank Marshall and Harrison Ford have all admitted in interviews over the years that development work is underway, nothing concrete has emerged. The main story rumour cropped up a few years back, when it was suggested that the MacGuffin this time had something to do with the Bermuda Triangle. However, Alan Horn - the chairman of Walt Disney Studios - said as late as December 2013 that there was still no story in place.
The Fakes
There have been a few fan scripts that arrived online over the years, that for a while were regarded as the real deal. The most prominent was perhaps Indiana Jones And The Sons Of Darkness, which would have been Indy versus the Russians in the race to discover Noah's Ark's remains. The closest Indy will ever get to that story is if Harrison Ford buys a ticket to see Russell Crowe's next movie. Another fake script turned out to be an adventure about Indy finding the Garden Of Eden. Several more would crop up, and we suspect will continue to do so...
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!
Disqus - noscript
I've read a draft of Darabont's, it was still a bit weird (Indy battling spider like aliens) but was more exciting than KOTCS. I would like to read Columbus' script seeing as he wrote it right after Goonies. Any have a link?
I think some of those ideas have real potential. I'd love to see Indy head to Atlantis or the Garden of Eden. Maybe Disney should look a little in to the video game realm for a new adventure. Something like a Tomb Raider and Assasin's Creed mix could be a lot of fun.
Disqus - noscript
Robert's acting here looks the same in Bel Ami which means really bad.