Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
Directed by: Steven Spielberg
Premise: Indiana Jones must rescue his father (Sean
Connery) from the Nazis and then race them to the Holy Grail.
What Works: Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is the most satisfying of the sequels to Raiders
of the Lost Ark, primarily because of the relationship between Indiana
and Henry, his father. Like the three men in the boat in Jaws,
there is no beating the father-son relationship in Last Crusade and it
comes to define the movie. The casting here is perfect with Sean Connery as
Jones senior, and together Connery and Ford play father and son like the odd
couple, mining lots of laughs but also using their conflicts to explore the
character of Indiana Jones and how he came to be the man he is. Last Crusade also has the most interesting love interest of the series as Indiana finds
himself in a complicated relationship with archeologist Elsa Schneider (Alison
Doody). As an archeologist with compromised ethics, she is similar to Belloq
(Paul Freeman) of Raiders of the Lost Ark and her love-hate relationship
with Indiana gives their scenes a lot of tension. Between the father-son
relationship, the love interest, and the film’s step into matters of faith,
something avoided by all other entries in the series, Last Crusade has
much more substance to it than any other Indiana Jones film. This substance
informs the action sequences, putting much more at stake as Indiana develops and
mends his relationship with his father while trying to stop the Nazis. The
ending is the strongest in the series, with Indiana forced to make choices that
define him as a character and bringing his character to a new place spiritually,
emotionally, and intellectually.
What Doesn’t: Last Crusade’s only viable
weaknesses are a middle portion that gets bogged down in places and the lack of
a coherent villain. Julian Glover is not particularly menacing as an
unscrupulous artifact collector and Michael Byrne does not get enough screen
time as a Nazi colonel.
DVD Extras: Photos, featurettes, storyboards.
Bottom Line: Although it does not have the manic
energy of Temple of Doom or the novelty of Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade does have some of the best scenes in the series and one of the most
memorable father-son relationships on film.