10 April 2014

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Inner Journey (2)

indy 3 screenshot: father and son tied back to back
This is what "watching movies back to back" actually means...

This is the second and final part of the post. After having studied the characters' flaws, in the first part, it is time to see how these flaws get healed, as the story progresses. We will study the father-son subplot, which is the main vehicle for this healing process, and the ways it blends in with the main plot. Plus, we will pin down the film's thematic statement, which is the lesson the characters have learnt, after all this inner process.

PLOT & SUBPLOT

The film's main plot is the story of Indiana Jones going out to find his father, who disappeared while searching for the Holy Grail. Somewhere along the way, some Nazis join in, and Indy has to stop them from obtaining the Grail or "the armies of darkness will march all over the face of the earth," as Henry says -and we take his word for it, in order to follow the story.

The film's main subplot is the parallel story of the relationship between father and son, with all its conflict. This story (which Blake Snyder calls the B-Story) gives the characters the opportunity to deal with their flaws (see first part of this post) and heal the wounds of the past.

Indy 3 screenshot: Indy and Henry on the biplane
Indy and Henry: the B-Story

This film has some very inspired moments when plot and B-Story intersect.

First of all, the whole subplot premise of Indy dealing with his dad (at this age) is very satisfactorily justified by the specific main plot: Indy learns that his father has disappeared and goes out to find him. Even though they don't get along well, now, they are forced into a situation where they have to solve their differences and collaborate, in order to save themselves.

The same applies to several of the scenes shared by the two of them. One can trace beats of plot and beats of B-story, within each scene.

Here are some examples:

The zeppelin scene

Indy 3 movie still: Henry and Indy in the zeppelin.
Indy: "Do you remember the last time we had a quied drink? I had a milkshake."

This scene, in the zeppelin, is a typical B-story moment, traditionally known as the "Sex at Sixty" moment: placed around the film's midpoint (60 minutes, more or less), comes a breather from the main action, where the duo can get a little more intimate.

Since the specific subplot is not a romantic one, there is, of course, no sexual intimacy. Indy does attempt emotional bonding with his father, though. This B-story moment doesn't last long, though, since Henry nudges Indy to get back to the main plot: "We have work to do..."

You have zhe diary in your pocket

A team of SS soldiers hold Indy and Henry at gunpoint, demanding Henry's diary. This plot point and its dramatic tension have to do with the main plot and the quest for the Grail.

Subplot complications arise when this tension stirs up the chronic conflict of Indy and Henry's relationship: Henry reprimands his son for not keeping the diary safely hidden away -showing again the same disapproval that has haunted Indy since childhood.

Indy 3 screenshot: Indy and Henry at gunpoint
Henry: "I should have mailed it to the Marx Brothers..." The disapproval that grinds Indy's gears since childhood.

Scratching the same unresolved issue, Indy gets enraged. His daddy issue proves to be more important than the threat of the SS soldiers (who, by the way, watch the father-son conflict, amazed).

Indy's anger (and zeal to prove himself to his father) resolves the main conflict: he grabs a machine gun and shoots out the SS men.

An excellent example of a plot and subplot intersection!

There is even a punchline; Henry, not believing his eyes, continues preaching to his son, over the dead bodies: "Look what you did!"

Indy 3 screenshot: Indy with machinegun
Don't call me "Junior!"

She's one of them

The SS officer holds Elsa as hostage, demanding the diary. Again, dramatic tension having to do with the main plot.

Then, Henry introduces a twist, advising Indy to ignore the threat, as Elsa, too, is a nazi.

Indy doesn't believe it. He decides to ignore his dad and act on his own impulse.

When Elsa proves Henry right (being a nazi), she tells Indy: "You should have listened to your father," a classic phrase told to a little boy who has messed something up, which hits Indy where it hurts.

A NOTE ON ELSA

Although audiences are used to romantic subplots in action movies, the love story between Indy and Elsa is not the primary subplot (or B-story).

Elsa serves several functions in the story, including the love interest, the shapeshifter, and -most importantly- the catalyst.

Indy 3 screenshot: Elsa in the shadows
Shadowy Elsa: femme fatale, shapeshifter, and a catalyst.

She is a catalyst for the plot, helping or betraying Indy, depending on the situation, but she is also a catalyst for the B-story, complicating the father-son conflict: Indy sleeps with her and later finds out that his father has also done the same. Indy's awe towards his father gets even more intense -and awkward.

INNER JOURNEY'S RESOLUTION

The B story concists of a series of scenes, where father and son clash. After several moments of lesser or greater conflict between the two, it seems that they will never get over their issues.

As the movie progresses, though, come three moments where Indy and Henry almost lose each other. Let's see them, one by one:

The tank - At first, Henry almost loses his son, when the tank falls over the cliff. "I've lost him. And I haven't told him anything. Five minutes would have been enough."

Indy 3 screenshot: Henry mourns on top of the cliff
Screenwriting textbook: an "all is lost" moment, just before the break into Act III. Indy's death gives Henry an opportunity for introspection.

What could he have said in five minutes? How much he loved him? Or some parental advice? Who knows? When Indy climbs back the cliff, reconciliation lasts only a few seconds, before dad orders his son to get back to his feet and to the quest.

Donovan's bullet - Later, Indiana almost loses his father, when Henry gets shot.

Donovan's bullet gives Indy a serious reason to get the Grail: his father's life.

YI can almost reach it - Finally, Henry almost loses Indiana, again, when the latter makes a last effort to retrieve the Grail from the crack in the floor.

Indy's last effort to win his father's approval: he must get him his trophy.

This last moment is the most critical. It is the moment when Henry chooses his son over the Grail, showing that he has learnt his lesson. He calls his son "Indiana," instead of Junior, asking him to let go of the Grail. He doesn't need this obsession; neither does Indiana need to win his father's approval.

With this, Indiana takes the satisfaction he has been after for decades; he immediately lets go of his efforts to impress his father and becomes an adult, again.

During the aftermath scene, at the very end, Henry summarises the lesson learnt: the Grail had been an obsessive trophy for him, just as it was for Elsa. After this adventure (and after almost losing his son), though, Henry has realised the its true meaning: a symbol of illumination; knowing of what is truly important in life.

Indy, too, has grown. When his father calls him "Junior," again, Indy gets his ultimate lesson: the knowledge that some things -like his father's habits- just don't change. He has still gotten in touch with his father, during this adventure. "Yes, sir!" he smiles, riding with Henry into the sunset.

THEME

Every film's theme is a summary of the lesson learnt (or not learnt) by the characters. Just like the moral of a bedtime story, the theme is what the audience takes home, after the credits, along with the choice to apply it to their own lives or not.

Thus, we can figure out the theme of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, by summarising what Henry and Indy have learnt.

Is it a lesson about parent-child relationships? Does it have to do with obsessions versus things that truly matter? Perhaps, people that truly matter? How obsessions stand in the way of our getting in touch with these people?

At the end of the film, Henry speaks about "illumination," as he has learned to put his son before his obsessions. His lesson can be stated as:

"Our obsession for trophies stands in the way of our connecting with now and what truly matters."

His choice acts as a catalyst to Indy's problem, too, who finally sees that his father loves him. Immediately, Indy abandons his struggle to impress him.

Indiana's lesson can be summarised as:

"Our obsession for our parents' approval stands in the way of our growth as adults."

Now, if we consider that Henry's approval was a special Holy Grail to Indiana, we can combine the lessons of both Henry and Indy into the one thematic statement of Henry's lesson, on trophies.

A trophy can be anything: a Grail, a car, a promotion, or the approval of others.

AFTERWORD: A NOTE ON KASIM

Kasim is the character who carries the film's theme.

He tells Indy: "Ask yourself: why do you seek the cup of Christ? Is it for His glory or yours?"

In other words, why are you doing what you are doing? Are you after after your inner truth or simply another trophy?

Unconsciously, Indy gives a true answer: "I didn't come for the cup of Christ. I came to find my father."

It is up to him, however, to make his own message clear to himself: is he after saving his father or after proving that the son is worthy enough to save the father?

 

03 April 2014

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Inner Journey (1)

Henry and Indiana Jones at gunpoint.

This is an analysis of the characters' arc in the third Indiana Jones film.

The article will span in two parts. In this, first part, we will analyse the character flaws of Indiana and Henry Jones, as well as the armour that Indiana has developped, to keep his flaw hidden.

In the second part, next week, we will go deeper into the father-son subplot and how it interweaves with the main plot, as well as discover and state the film's theme.

 

BACKSTORY WOUNDS & CHARACTER FLAWS

Henry Jones has a flaw: he is obsessed with the Holy Grail, an obsession that excludes any meaningful communication with his son, Indiana. The search for the Holy Grail has taken such mythic a size in his mind, that he is unable to experience the upbringing of his son and be a father to him.

Indiana Jones's wound is a chronic one: because of Henry's obsession, he was always ignored by his father.

We see this in the film's first sequence, when Indy risks his life to save the Cross of Coronado from antiquity smugglers. When he takes the cross home, his father completely ignores him, absorbed into his studies.

Young Indy takes the Cross of Coronado to his busy father.
Indy: "What you taught me was that I was less important to you than people who'd been dead for five hundred years in another country and I learned it so well that we've hardly spoken for twenty years."

As the story unfolds, we understand that, even more than his father's attention, Indiana begs for his approval. Henry's indifference has left him with a serious flaw: even as an adult, he makes great effort to impress his strict father.

A remarkable element of irony is the heredity the two Jones share in regard to obsessions of archeological interest. They both seek trophies, perhaps forgetting their deeper meaning. The fact that, in his forties, Indy is still chasing the Cross of Coronado, is an indicator of how deeply rooted this tendency is. Henry, on the other hand, has devoted his whole life to the search of the Grail.

Note: We don't know what wound has caused Henry's obsession. We can only speculate as to whether his own father had played some part to it.

 

ARMOUR

In order to cover up his flaw, Indy wears the armour of his own adulthood. Of course all these issues belong to the past; he is not a child anymore. His father can't tell him what to do. He is a scientist and an academic. And an adventurer. And he flirts and sleeps with women. He is a grown man!

Indy and Marcus meet Elsa
When introduced to Elsa, Indy flirts with her, without expecting what's coming...

This armour doesn't take much to get slammed, though. Firstly, every time he gets close to his father, Indy turns into "Henry Jones Junior," a boy living under the shadow and struggling to win the approval of a self-absorbed father figure.

Secondly, we never know whether his choice of profession is another way of proving himself to his father.

Finally, in regard to the ladies, Indy will soon find out that he and his dad share more than the passion for archeology, making their relationship even more awkward.

 

INDY'S STRENGTH

There is one element of Indy's personality that does actually help him (and Henry) in their quest: his being an adventurer. This makes him very different to his father, who is a bookworm (and hates rats). Without Indy's adventurous personality, Henry would have never gotten to see the Grail.

--

The second and final part of this analysis is here.