Film Snail

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

7.8

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

PG-13·1989·127m

Summary

In 1938, an art collector appeals to eminent archaeologist Dr. Indiana Jones to embark on a search for the Holy Grail. Indy learns that a medieval historian has vanished while searching for it, and the missing man is his own father, Dr. Henry Jones Sr.. He sets out to rescue his father by following clues in the old man's notebook, which his father had mailed to him before he went missing. Indy arrives in Venice, where he enlists the help of a beautiful academic, Dr. Elsa Schneider, along with Marcus Brody and Sallah. Together they must stop the Nazis from recovering the power of eternal life and taking over the world!

Cast

Harrison Ford

Harrison Ford

Indiana Jones

Sean Connery

Sean Connery

Professor Henry Jones

Denholm Elliott

Denholm Elliott

Marcus Brody

Alison Doody

Alison Doody

Elsa Schneider

John Rhys-Davies

John Rhys-Davies

Sallah

Julian Glover

Julian Glover

Walter Donovan

River Phoenix

River Phoenix

Young Indy

Michael Byrne

Michael Byrne

Vogel

Kevork Malikyan

Kevork Malikyan

Kazım

Robert Eddison

Robert Eddison

Grail Knight

Richard Young

Richard Young

Fedora

Alexei Sayle

Alexei Sayle

Sultan

Alex Hyde-White

Alex Hyde-White

Young Henry

Paul Maxwell

Paul Maxwell

Panama Hat

Isla Blair

Isla Blair

Mrs. Donovan

Vernon Dobtcheff

Vernon Dobtcheff

Butler

J.J. Hardy

Herman

Bradley Gregg

Bradley Gregg

Roscoe

Jeff O'Haco

Jeff O'Haco

Half Breed

Vince Deadrick Sr.

Rough Rider

Marc Miles

Sheriff

Ted Grossman

Ted Grossman

Deputy Sheriff

Tim Hiser

Young Panama Hat

Larry Sanders

Scout Master

Will Miles

Scout #1

David Murray

Scout #2

Frederick Jaeger

Frederick Jaeger

World War One Ace

Jerry Harte

Professor Stanton

Billy J. Mitchell

Billy J. Mitchell

Dr. Mulbray

Martin Gordon

Man at Hitler Rally

Paul Humpoletz

Paul Humpoletz

German Officer at Hitler Rally

Tom Branch

Hatay Soldier in Temple

Graeme Crowther

Zeppelin Crewman

Luke Hanson

Principal SS Officer at Castle

Chris Jenkinson

Officer at Castle

Nicola Scott

Female Officer at Castle

Louis Sheldon

Young Officer at Castle

Stefan Kalipha

Stefan Kalipha

Hatay Tank Gunner

Peter Pacey

Peter Pacey

Hatay Tank Driver

Pat Roach

Pat Roach

Gestapo

Suzanne Roquette

Suzanne Roquette

Film Director

Eugene Lipinski

Eugene Lipinski

G-Man

George Malpas

George Malpas

Man on Zeppelin

Julie Eccles

Julie Eccles

Irene

Nina Armstrong

Flower Girl

Vic Armstrong

Vic Armstrong

German Soldier (uncredited)

Roy Beck

Roy Beck

German Customs Official (uncredited)

Dickey Beer

Dickey Beer

German Agent (uncredited)

Jack Carter

SS Soldier (uncredited)

Graham Cole

Graham Cole

Henchman (uncredited)

Bert Crome

Zeppelin Passenger (uncredited)

Peter Diamond

Peter Diamond

German Soldier (uncredited)

Hugh Elton

Zeppelin Passenger (uncredited)

Albert Evansky

Librarian (uncredited)

Norman Gay

Zeppelin Passenger (uncredited)

Nick Gillard

Nick Gillard

Tank Crewman Hit by Periscope (uncredited)

Martin Grace

German Soldier (uncredited)

Paul Heasman

Paul Heasman

Castle Brunwald Officer (uncredited)

Barrie Holland

Airport Customs Official (uncredited)

Colin Hunt

German Officer (uncredited)

Ronald Lacey

Ronald Lacey

Gestapo (uncredited)

Derek Lyons

Derek Lyons

German Soldier (uncredited)

Paul Markham

Airport Passenger SA Officer (uncredited)

Wayne Michaels

German Agent (uncredited)

Orla Pederson

Gestapo (uncredited)

Lee Richards

Zeppelin Passenger (uncredited)

Michael Sheard

Michael Sheard

Adolf Hitler (uncredited)

Lee Sheward

Radio Op (uncredited)

Tip Tipping

Tip Tipping

Tank Crewman (uncredited)

Chris Webb

Chris Webb

Castle Brunwald Radio Officer (uncredited)

Sheb Wooley

Sheb Wooley

Screaming Soldiers (archive sound) (uncredited)

Crew

Director

Steven Spielberg

Characters

Philip Kaufman

Characters, Story

George Lucas

Screenplay

Jeffrey Boam

Story

Menno Meyjes

Reviews

John Chard

John Chard

December 27, 2015

9

Raiders Of The Last Crusade.

Indiana Jones teams up with his father to try and locate the Holy Grail. Something that the Nazis are again particularly interested in themselves.

We didn't know it at the time, but every Indiana Jones fan on the planet presumed that The Last Crusade was to be the final film to feature the intrepid archaeologist. As it turned out, another film would surface in 2008, but casting that aside (as many would like to do), Last Crusade should, and is, judged as the trilogy closer it was meant to be.

In 1988 Steven Spielberg was deep into bringing Rain Man to fruition, all thoughts of Indiana Jones had gone by the wayside with the harshly judged part two, Temple Of Doom. In stepped George Lucas to politely remind Spielberg that they had an agreement to make another Indiana Jones picture, Spielberg no doubt obliged and humble, passed on his Rain Man work to Barry Levinson who promptly bagged himself an Oscar for the film. It can be guessed that Spielberg was probably grouchy around this period, but he needn't have worried, because The Last Crusade provided a much needed hit for not only himself (post Empire Of The Sun), but also Lucas (Willow) and Harrison Ford (Frantic).

I mention the run up to this picture because it explains a lot on why the film is pretty much a retread of Raiders Of The Lost Ark, something that some detractors find unforgivable. Yet Last Crusade is still an immensely enjoyable adventure picture, with Spielberg proving that he was still capable of a popcorn bonanza. Using the Raiders formula and moving away from the dark flourishes of Temple Of Doom, Last Crusade is actually the simplest film of the three, but still it manages, courtesy of a sparkling casting decision, to become the most entertaining of the original trilogy. Is it better than Raiders? Of course not, but it positively rips along with sparky dialogue and an agenda of cliffhanging suspense like the adventure films of yore.

In comes Sean Connery as Dr Jones Senior, and its the picture's trump card, because the magnificent interplay and obvious rapport with Ford (cool as a cucumber) is there for all to see. It's this what drives the film on through the more mundane and picture filler sequences, showcasing two top wily professionals with care and consideration to their craft. The casting of Alison Doody as the main female is a poor one, and one only has to look at her subsequent career post Crusade to see she wasn't up to the task here. Bonus comes in the form of the River Phoenix prologue, Phoenix as the young Indiana paves the way for the jaunty path that Crusade takes, whilst simultaneously giving us a nice little back story from which to launch the adventure.

Made for $48 million, the film went on to gross $474,171,806 Worldwide, now that's a lot of people who evidently were happy with Raiders Of The Lost Ark 2! And I gleefully count myself amongst that number. 9/10

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$48,000,000.00

Revenue:

$474,171,806.00

Keywords

saving the world
nazi
holy grail
venice, italy
entrapment
crusader
germany
riddle
brotherhood
zeppelin
tank
book burning
nazi officer
boat chase
gestapo
single father
traveling circus
archaeologist
bible quote
medieval
boy scouts
german soldier
motorcycle chase
hindenburg
german agent
1930s
biblical archaeology
father son relationship
adolf hitler
knights templar
nazi germany
the crusades