Tag Archives: Indiana Jones

Choose Wisely: Selecting the Right Channel at the Right Time

By Vick Vaishnavi, Contributor

Detroit Electric SP:01 - front three-quarter view, blue

Name an Indiana Jones villain.  No? How about Walter Donavon? He was the Aryan who was warned by one of the knights of the roundtable to “choose wisely” before selecting a chalice in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. You know; he hastily chose the gaudy, gold chalice immediately before turning into Betty White?  Donavon was so enamored with the possibility of fame, fortune and the good life with his fellow blonde-haired, blue-eyed fascists that he neglected to mull the consequences of his choice in Holy Grails.  However our eponymous hero was much more deliberate with his choice. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Stuck? Can't Solve That Knotty Problem? Indiana Jones and Lara Croft Can Show You What To Do (Honest)

By Paul B. Brown, Contributor We have talked a lot about why figuring what to do with your working life is a lot harder today than it used to be—how it has moved from navigating in an extremely stabile environment to moving about in a world that seemingly has no rules.  (Note that word “seemingly,” because there are rules. There are just new ones. More in a minute.) …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Tomb Raider Is Brilliant, Brutal Bliss

By Daniel Tack, Contributor

Tomb Raider is that rare and impossible gem.  It feels just enough like an interactive movie without moving into the realm of “watching, not playing”.  Tomb Raider somehow manages to mix the best elements of a survival horror game with the thrills of a bustling Indiana Jones adventure, and the result is an immersive trek through an unforgiving and downright brutal world.  Warning: Minor spoilers may be ahead. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Hey LucasArts, Get Your Act Together

I’ve had it with LucasArts. The publisher/developer’s latest head-scratching move, allegedly pumping the brakes on the promising third-person next-gen Jedi action game Star Wars 1313, leaves me to wonder if – or rather, why – the once-proud subsidiary of Lucasfilm has now become a joke that gamers are the butt of.

This is a studio sitting on a treasure trove of beloved brands, and yet, when was their last Indiana Jones game that didn’t star a Lego figure? Or a Star Wars title in the marketplace’s most popular genre, first-person shooters? Only the big-budget MMORPG Star Wars: The Old Republic can be considered a bold effort. In fact, their triple-A (read: Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and/or PC) output during this console generation can be generally summed up as: three Lego Star Wars games, Two Lego Indiana Jones titles, a pair of Star Wars: The Force Unleashed releases, The Old Republic, and Kinect Star Wars. And of those, only the original Force Unleashed (six-plus million copies sold) made any substantial impact at retailer cash registers. That potential franchise withered on the vine after Force Unleashed II fizzled with both critics and consumers.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

How science debunked the ancient Aztec crystal skull hoax

They may have gained fame in the Steven Spielberg adventure film “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” but those quartz-crystal skulls that once ranked as a great enigma of archaeology are certifiably fake. And the current edition of Chemical & Engineering News, (C&EN) the weekly news magazine of the American Chemical Society, the world’s largest scientific society, recalls the details of their rise and fall. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Chris Kilham, Medicine Hunter, Meets With Harvesters And Trade Officials In Search Of Potent Herbs

By The Huffington Post News Editors

From Mother Nature Network’s Jennifer Nelson:

“We’re here in the middle of the Amazon jungle today,” booms Chris Kilham, an adventurer and medicine hunter, as he’s about to show us the benefits of maqui berries or green coffee bean extract or any number of up-and-coming plants in medicinal healing.

Kilham, whom the New York Times calls part-David Attenborough, part-Indiana Jones, is an ethnobotanist who travels the world hunting for medicinal plants that can be used in novel ways. More than anything, he’s an expressive, talk-with-his-hands pulpit-pounding advocate for herbs.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

The 10 Most Badass Couples in Movie History

For the cinema-going romantics among you, Valentine’s Day might be a time to rest your head against your significant other’s shoulder, sup upon a glass of the bottle shop’s third most expensive Riesling and watch a bunch of Richard Curtis-conceived-Brits awkwardly talk about their feelings. For others, the somewhat treacly prospect of watching Notting Hill for the fifth time might feel a little tiresome; after all, some of us enjoy a little spice alongside our romance, a little danger and anarchy with our Hallmark card.

So for all you lovers out there – or just lovers of good cinema – here are our top ten badass movie couples. Happy Valentine’s Day, suckers!

Marion Ravenwood is Indiana Jones‘ true love, his somewhat deflated taste in women in subsequent films notwithstanding. Marion’s a hard-drinking woman of the world while Indy is the kind of roguish, impulsive ladies man only the ‘80s could dream up. Their relationship is a tumultuous one – their first onscreen encounter involves her socking him in the face – but rings true even in the cacophony that was Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

The Last of Us: 3 Minutes of Spine-Tingling Gameplay

By Carol Pinchefsky, Contributor With their Uncharted series, Naughty Dog proved they could do Indiana Jones-style adventures right. After watching these particular three minutes of gameplay of The Last of Us, which will be released on May 7, 2013, it doesn’t take long to see that the game company will be conquering the zombie apocalypse genre too.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Remember This Big Halftime Show?

Wanna See Harrison Ford's Raiders Script?

This is great. An old Raiders of the Lost Ark script has popped up online that purportedly shows Harrison Ford‘s handwritten notes from the making of the film, as he worked with Steven Spielberg and George Lucas to create Indiana Jones.

The script can be seen at Cinephilia & Beyond, but check out some pages below:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

Indy 4 Whips Up an Honest Trailer

There isn’t much to be said about Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull that hasn’t been said already, but the latest Honest Trailer puts that notion to the test. In honor of Steven Spielberg’s Oscar nomination for Lincoln, check out this teaser parody of one of the director’s… not quite as acclaimed feature films:

Via Screen Junkies

Max Nicholson is a writer for IGN, and he desperately seeks your approval. Show him some love by following @Max_Nicholson on Twitter, or MaxNicholson on IGN.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

Struzan Doing Episode VII Artwork?

Over the course of his long career, artist Drew Struzan has worked on some of Hollywood’s most beloved franchises, including Indiana Jones, Back to the Future and Harry Potter. Of course, he’s perhaps best known for his promotional work on Star Wars — he designed the posters for the Prequel Trilogy and Special Editions, as well as numerous album, novel and comic book covers.

In a recent interview, Struzan revealed that he’s already been asked by Disney to do the art for Star Wars: Episode VII. While nothing’s been officially set, the artist said he’s open to making a return to the sci-fi property, despite his planned retirement.

“I got a couple calls already this week on Star Wars from Disney,” Struzan revealed to Fanhattan. “Oh my god, I’m trying to be retired! You know, I spent 35 years painting Star Wars.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

Report: Bentley Continental GT Speed Convertible photos hit web early

By Jonathon Ramsey

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It was Indiana Jones and that whole ark episode that gave us the best example of what happens after leaks: once you break the seal, all hell breaks loose and there’s no way you’re putting it back. We aren’t sure who lifted the lid, but official photos of the 2013 Bentley Continental GTC Speed Convertible showed up on Flickr last week, and so here we are presenting them to you.

If it follows the Bentley playbook as the last GTC Speed – and we have no reason to believe it won’t – beyond the lack of a top there won’t be much difference between it and the coupe than a few minor numerals. There will be a W12 in front with 616 horsepower and 590 foot-pounds of torque running through an eight-speed transmission, and the dash from standstill to 60 miles per hour will clock in somewhere around four seconds. That’s some 21-inch rolling stock setting up the stance, and unless it’s gotten slower than the last GTC Speed, ultimate velocity with the top up should be at least 200 mph.

It will be undeniably fast. As for the paint, you can make up your own minds about that while you peep its angles in the high-res gallery. We’ll find out the rest when the world’s purplest droptop is revealed at the Detroit Auto Show.

Bentley Continental GT Speed Convertible photos hit web early originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 26 Dec 2012 08:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: Autoblog

Mystery of the Indy Care Package Solved!

A mystery of Indiana Jones proportions hit the internet last week, as the University of Chicago was sent an awesome care package filled with all sorts of homemade Indy memorabilia addressed to one Henry Walton Jones, Jr. The problem? No one at the admissions office had any idea where it came from.

However, Movies.com reports that the conundrum has now been solved! As it turns out, the package was created by an amateur prop maker known as “Ravenbar,” aka Paul. The item had recently been sold on eBay and was in transit to its purchaser — that is until the fake package fell out of its genuine envelope. From there, the parcel went on its merry way to U of C, the school at which Dr. Jones studied.

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Source: IGN Movies

'Raiders of the Lost Ark' package mystery solved

First, there was “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” Now, there’s “Mailers of the Lost Package.”

Days after the University of Chicago announced it had received a replica of the journal from the film “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” the school says it has solved an international mystery with its roots in Guam.

A few weeks ago, a journal addressed to one Henry Walton Jones, Jr. — the given name of Hollywood’s Indiana Jones — was placed inside another package and mailed from Guam to Italy, where someone had bought it on eBay.

But the smaller package fell out and was spotted by a U.S. postal worker, who saw it was addressed to Jones at the University of Chicago. The worker added the Chicago zip code and sent it on its way.

Upon its arrival at the school’s admissions office, officials didn’t know what to make of the package. There is no Henry Walton Jones Jr. on the faculty.

It took a student doing a bit of research on the Internet to discover that Jones was real — on big screen. Indiana Jones‘ character is said to be based loosely on two U of C professors. Abner Ravenwood was an Egyptologist and archeologist at the school about a century ago. In the movie, he is a mentor of Indiana Jones, and the journal is his.

Though the craftsmanship of the journal, chock full of maps and old photographs, was impressive, a spokesman for the school’s admissions office said, there were clues that indicated Ravenwood was not the author.

“The photos were of Harrison Ford during filming,” said spokesman Garrett Brinker.

The school found out the journal was the work of a Guam man whom Garrett described as a “prop replicator.”

“Apparently, it takes him two weeks to make one of these replicas and then he sells them to people all over the world,” Brinker said. “He says they usually go for about $200 (but) I believe this one went for $177.”

Brinker said that the Oriental Institute, the university’s famed museum and organization devoted to the ancient Near East, likes the journal and asked to display it in its main lobby.

“They asked for it and now it is in their possession,” he said.

Source: Fox US News