AG Monday! “Temple of Doom” Time

This week: “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.”

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Of course there was going to be a sequel…

We had high hopes for the second Indiana Jones movie, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Spielberg, Lucas, Ford…How could it go wrong?

As it turns out, it could go very badly. We debate how badly, and what were the reasons why this sequel failed to come close to the original. 

Was this Tom’s first case of sequelitis? Leaving all the criticisms aside, what did we enjoy about the movie? How much better or worse did this movie seem, on rewatching it decades later? And what kind of archaeologist is Indiana Jones anyway?

Bugs! Child endangerment! Colonialism! Screaming! More screaming! How about some more screaming! Unbelievable action scenes! Drab villains! Faceless goons! It’s all here.

Ancient Geeks is a podcast about two geeks of a certain age re-visiting their youth. We were there when things like science fiction, fantasy, Tolkien, Star Trek, Star Wars, D&D, Marvel and DC comics, Doctor Who, and many, many other threads of modern geek culture were still on the fringes of popular culture. We were geeks before it was chic!

For feedback, contact someancientgeeks@gmail.com. You can also find us on Facebook, Reddit, and Bluesky. Also, check out the Ancient Geeks blog on Substack! And if you like what you hear, please tell a friend. Also, we always appreciate a review on the podcast platform of your choice.

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3 responses to “AG Monday! “Temple of Doom” Time”

  1. Some months ago I had the TV on, and there was this movie with Harrison Ford wearing a white tux in some kind of fancy restaurant or night club. I wondered “what movie is this”?

    That’s about how much I recall about this movie: almost nothing.

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  2. Not coincidentally, I’m also reading The Final Reflection (slowly). I looked it up after Tom’s mention of it in the substack.

    About poison, there are several kinds of poison that act in different ways. Some poisons do have antidotes. For instance, snake bite venom is made up of proteins and peptides. These cause an immune reaction, which is not fast enough to save most victims.

    However, as poison is sometimes a matter of dosage, injecting a small amount of venom into a large animal, say a horse, won’t be fatal but it will let the animal produce antibodies for it. These can then be collected and filtered out of the animal’s blood, and used as antivenom for snake venom.

    It has to match a particular species. Venom from even related species is not the same, and antivenom for one may not work for the other.

  3. In my household, it was known as the Kitchen of Doom.

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