*Deep Inhale*
I think Indiana Jones has got to be one of my favorite characters of all time. Itās not often something you watched as a kid is just as magical when you return to it as an adult. That said, I think the reason why I liked him has changed a bit over the years.
When I was quite young, I pretended to go on crazy adventures with my brothers. Most of these adventures were inspired by whatever videogames we were playing at the time, comic books, bad tv shows, and often included our stuffed animals as adventuring companions. Despite our adventures being filled with weapons (you know, the extra hard FF7 bosses?) We somehow found a way to work Indianaās more grounded style of adventuring into our play sessions. Without getting too philosophical, I think a lot of lifeās challenges can be summed up as adventures, and Indiana was just so cool when he was doing his thing. His outfit is iconic, and heās so badass that he can take on Nazis, cannibals, and ancient ruins with just his fedora and a whip. He couldnāt fling fireballs, he didnāt ride a motorcycle, he wasnāt anything like Spawn or Cloud, but he didnāt need to be. And he wasnāt just cool, he could be funny without reducing himself to a clown. I donāt think Iāll ever forget that scene where a big guy with a sword stands in his way, and Indie effortlessly dispatches him by drawing a gun and firing. I donāt even think I understood what an archaeologist was when I first saw the fedora-wearing adventurer.
As I grew older, I think I started to appreciate other aspects of Indieās character. I went through a period where I prized highly intelligent characters, and while Indie isnāt infallible, he is resourceful and uses his wits to overcome his opponents most of the time. This is what enables him to enter an area filled with Nazis, traps, and SNAKES, yet still come out on top. Weāve already talked about his whip, but have you seen his hands? His whip is a little hokey, but his hands mean business. Somehow, in an adventure where almost everyone has guns, he still finds time to regularly get into fisticuffs with his opponents. And when heās not punching people in the face, heās pointing at them. Seriously, Indie has so many scenes where he just points at people that are going to get their comeuppance. Go watch the original trilogy if you donāt believe me.
Harrison Ford is a person, and like all people, he has some flaws. Maybe you like him, maybe you donāt. But he was absolutely the right person to play Indie during the original trilogy. Few people can do roguish archetypes like he can. Just look at Han Solo from Star Wars if you donāt believe me. But you should, because that original trilogy was an objectively good series. If youāre going to argue that point just save your breath. But I digress. Harrison Ford has that cheeky little smirk and a slew of undeservingly ignored one liners. We all know āSnakes. Whyād it have to be snakes?ā but what aboutā¦
āI donāt know, Iām making this up as I go.ā
āItās not the years, honey, itās the mileage.ā
āFortune and glory, kid. Fortune and glory.ā
āWater, water, water! Water!ā
āIt belongs in a museum!ā
āX never, ever marks the spot.ā
āNo Ticket.ā (When explaining to everyone on a blimp why he threw someone overboard. Naturally, everyone pulls out their ticket to show Indie.)
But if it was just Indieās effortless cool, intelligence, and Harrison Fordās superb acting, he would have been a good character. But what makes him a great character is that the writers understand he needs to fail sometimes. He doesnāt always win, and when he does inevitably lose, its often for reasons way out of his control. One movie opens with him making ādealsā with some very dangerous people. While he plays all his cards right, he ends up drinking a poisoned drink. Indie then has to chase down the cure instead of what he initially came for. Though perhaps the best demonstration of an Indie failure is when he tries to recover an idol from a temple filled with booby traps. He gets by all but the last one. He correctly assesses that the idol he wants to take is on a weighted platform, but he guesses the wrong weight and it triggers a rolling boulder trap. What ensues is a dramatic escape scene in which Indie runs through pressure plate traps, gets betrayed, avoids falling to his death, and runs away from a boulder. The boulder scene in particular is iconic and Iām pretty sure every adventure movie was doing it for the next decade or so after that. But even after all that, Indie still doesnāt get to keep the idol. Because even though he did everything in the temple right, the whole business of raiding tombs is filled with unscrupulous individuals. As soon as he gets out, heās held at arrow point and made to surrender the idol he nearly died for. What makes Indie a great character is that he is flawed. His failures may seem unearned and even unfair, but thatās what endears us to him. If indie perfectly navigated all the traps, got out with the idol, or avoided the poison, there would be no stakes. Iād know that Indie was above and beyond everything around him. But itās these setbacks that makes him human. Heās often paired with people he doesnāt fully trust, which makes sense given his line of work.
And I really think thatās it. Heās got a cool factor that anyone can admire. Heās flawed and fails on occasion, but he always tries his best and rises above those failures. Heās funny and charismatic, and we can laugh at him without him becoming a clown.
Heās cool, heās funny, heās flawed and relatable.
Heās Indiana Jones.