The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Hollywood Follies
- Filme para televisão
- 1994
- 1 h 34 min
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaIn Chapter 22 from the complete adventures of Indiana Jones, Indy takes on his most ruthless and cunning foe: Hollywood studio executives.In Chapter 22 from the complete adventures of Indiana Jones, Indy takes on his most ruthless and cunning foe: Hollywood studio executives.In Chapter 22 from the complete adventures of Indiana Jones, Indy takes on his most ruthless and cunning foe: Hollywood studio executives.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Ganhou 1 Primetime Emmy
- 2 vitórias e 1 indicação no total
- Abe
- (as Andrew Gorman)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
It wasn't ALL bad -- actually, the sets and costuming were excellent (the 1920s - such an aesthetically pleasing time period!). And the bits of the actual movie "Foolish Wives" were good, because they had the authentic Erich in them. The most painful parts seemed to occur whenever the main characters had dialogue. Some of the lines exchanged between young Indiana Jones and the heroine made me want to retch. There are some actors whose delivery and skill can make a cheesy piece of dialogue work -- these two do not belong to this group. They were trying to be youthfully cutesy, and the results were not pretty. The heroine says things you'd never expect anyone to say in normal conversation, lines that sound clumsy and forced, especially out of her mouth -- she doesn't seem comfortable in her role.
And then there's Erich von Stroheim. True, the guy did seem to be having a lot of fun playing the role -- and the back of his head was identical to Stroheim's (you couldn't really expect much more; Stroheim was unique, no conventional Hollywood pretty-boy, and you'd be hard-pressed to find someone whose looks were remotely similar). Actually, the scenes with Stroheim would have been enjoyable IF he hadn't used that overdone corny fake German accent. Did he do any research at ALL? Did he bother to look at any of the talkies Stroheim was in? Erich von Stroheim was Austrian. Austrian! Austrian!! And there's a huge difference between an Austrian and a blatantly false German accent. It was embarrassing -- I might have been able to enjoy it and root for him if he had been a bit more convincing, but I couldn't get over the way he was mangling Stroheim's delicate growl, with that lilting Austrian twang, into the voice of a hysterical cartoon Nazi.
Whew, I needed to get that off my chest.
Indiana Jones is asked by the owner of Universal Pictures to make a director rap up his production. Indiana has to use clever tricks to make a pretentious director give up his picture. Jones is also approached by a Western director to help him out.
This is a look at the 20s cinema first and foremost. The black and white silent era and how it was made. Sure this is not a real look, but it gives you an idea of what it was like and what movements was about to be made. In the era of studios vs artist, reality vs fiction, long form movies vs short form movies. It is clear this is a love letter to this era of film and why it worked back then and what people were going though,. It is more real and risky. It was more daring and visionary, all to make a few frames and accidents were a part of the process. This is a fun little look into that era and again, I think anyone that likes movies love to see a "behind the scenes movie" even if this is a bit of a messy one. The name dropping of old movies, directors and stars of the era is also fun.
Because this is not really much of a story and much of an Indiana Jones one at that. There is not really a plot the second half of the movie and the first half is not really connected to the second half and could frankly be removed and had a more well-made story. Indiana Jones seems like a side character in his own show here and everyone else is more important than him here. There is not really any Indiana Jones escapades here either and Jones could be replaced by anyone and it would make the same story.
The first half is more camp and fun and has a bit of a story to it that really could not go on for too long I agree, but the shift is to a more grounded filmmaker movie plot that works, but don't have a lot of stakes for Jones like the first half. It seems a bit of a nothing story, but once again, the premise makes it work.
The acting is a bit all over the place. Our German villain is camp and it works, but our female lead is rather flat in her delivery. Ford is probably the most fun and confidant actor here, given a fun yet charismatic and unique role. He also really looks like Ted Nivison
Yes I am mainly drawn in by the premise more than anything here. It is a fine little episode but there is not much meat on the bone at all. But overall everything is fun and fine to the point I liked it. I think it is just because I have watched a lot of 20s cinema lately and that is just a fun era of cinema. A more raw one that is shown here in a fun and interesting way.
In actual fact, the total cost of production wasn't even $900 000, the studio just wanted to market it as "the first million dollar picture," which created the impression Stroheim was wasteful, which dogged him the rest of his short career. But never mind that, and never mind the fact that there is no pistol duel in Foolish Wives, or that Stroheim was from Austria not Germany (therefore did not sound like the "was ist das?" charicature we get here), or that Ford's first feature "Straight Shooting" was made in 1917, six years before Stroheim's Foolish Wives! Everything is simplified in this picture for consumption by a pre-teen audience. So bearing that in mind, its all fairly good-natured and harmless fun.
The makers of his picture had great love for Stroheim's picture: at one point they are looking at a scene from Foolish Wives and they say, quitely rightly, how wonferful it is, and that it could be one of the best ever, and therefore its "worth saving". They seem to indulge in the persona he created for himself in a loving way. Stroheim loved playing the villain, but he did it with more of a sense of humour than the hard-faced man who plays him here. Stroheim has to be a formidable villain here, to create enough conflict for Indy to go up against in getting him to finish the picture.
It looks like a midday movie/tele-feature, and Jason Patrick Flanery has the corny do-gooder persona of a children's television host, so the main appeal in this is for fans of the silent days. Its an ode to classic cinema, with swiring romantic scores behind love scenes and bouncing fun music to other scenes. Its really two TV episodes knitted together in the middle: Indy trying to get Stroheim to finish his picture in ten days and Indy working as John Ford's assistant. The two halves have little in common with each other, save the fact that they're both Hollywood-related.
John Ford, Erich von Stroheim and Irving Thalberg are the three major figures who are played with plenty of screen time, but also included are glimpses of Gloria Swanson, Rudolph Valentino, Pola Negri, Carl Bernstein and Carl Laemmle.
If you see this in the TV guide, its worth at least an hour of your time, as long as you don't expect historial accuracy. Especially fun if you're a fan of the silent era, or Stroheim and Ford in particular. Juvenile and simplistic, but lots of fun.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesWhile serving as a stunt man on a Western film directed by John Ford (played by Stephen Caffrey), young Indy performs a stunt where he hangs onto the bottom of a speeding, runaway stagecoach. The real John Ford used this stunt in No Tempo das Diligências (1939) (performed by Yakima Canutt), and it became George Lucas and Steven Spielberg's inspiration for the stunt in Os Caçadores da Arca Perdida (1981) where Indiana Jones hangs onto the bottom of a speeding truck. The joke then, is that Indy is "inspiring himself" by performing the stagecoach stunt in this episode.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe story takes place in 1920. The song sung by the chorus at von Stroheim's pool, "O Fortuna" by Carl Orff, was not put to music until 1935, although the lyrics are about 750 years old.
- Citações
Indiana Jones: Where do I come in?
Carl Laemmle: You don't come in. You go out.
Indiana Jones: Go out, where?
Carl Laemmle: To Hollywood. As my personal representative. I want you to get out there and take charge. Tell that lunatic Von Stroheim he finishes the picture in ten days, or else you pull the plugs.
- ConexõesEdited into The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Hollywood Follies (1999)
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- Também conhecido como
- Приключения молодого Индианы Джонса: Голливудские капризы
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