Director James Mangold on why Indiana Jones is relatable yet a heroic character
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Harrison Ford’s Indiana Jones is a charismatic explorer who never settles at anything. The 80 - year old adventurer still has one last quest to conquer before putting the iconic whip, hat, and khaki to rest. Fighting unimaginable threats like Nazis, blood-thirsty cult leaders, psychics, and greedy chasers of ancient relics is no regular task, yet how do generations of action connoisseurs relate deeply with Indy?
According to director James Mangold, the difference between Harrison Ford and Indy is what builds elation amongst the audiences, the circumstantial tension which force Harrison to switch between his two personas is what would elate the audiences. Sharing his vision of adding up to Indy’s relatability, Mangold recalls “I wanted to start Harrison’s character as far from being Indy as we could, so that the audience would feel the elation when circumstances force him to pull that hat on again. 1969 is a time where no one really believes in heroes like Indiana Jones anymore. In many ways, the adventure we’ve concocted is a reckoning between an old-school hero and an ambivalent and ever more cynical modern world."
Apart from countless hours of heart-pumping action, Indiana Jones has treated us with globe-trotting adventures for decades. Along with his heroics, Indiana Jones is also a regular archeology professor, who also reflects the normal, mundane life. But his whip-cracking pursuits always add an exciting twist to the relatably normal archeologist!
Witness Indy’s final adventure in Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny starting June 29th, a day before the global premiere only in theatres, in English, Hindi, Telugu and Tamil.
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Rhea Dhanya
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