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Review

"Indiana Jones 5": messed up is different - but so is great

Luca Fontana
28/6/2023
Translation: machine translated

The last great hurrah for the iconic film character? While Harrison Ford is still unbeatably good as Indiana Jones, the rest of the film suffers - and collapses completely at the end.

One thing first: there are no spoilers in this review. You will only read information that is known from the trailers that have already been released.


Conclusions are difficult. They always are. After all, they leave the last lasting impression. The aftertaste on the tongue. Especially with film series. Should you play it safe and repeat the same familiar formula of the predecessors? Or risk the ultimate flop, but try something new instead?

Mangold only achieves a middle ground, however, because most of the time his film never really knows whether it wants to hide behind the shadow of its predecessors or step out of them. Until it does at the end - and flops.

This is what "Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny"

is about
It's not the past that drives mankind in 1969. It's the future. The many new possibilities. Man has only just set foot on the moon. The astronauts who were there were celebrated like war heroes. What will be next? Mars? The solar system? The whole universe?

Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) couldn't care less. History has long since overtaken him and left him like a pile of bones turned to dust in the middle of an archaeological dig. Gone are the days when he fought Nazis on breakneck adventures and rescued valuable artefacts - for museums, where they belong. Instead, the about-to-retire archaeology professor gets drunk in his dreary New York flat and gives lectures that bore his students almost to death.

A groundbreaking start - literally

Here, however, in what is now the fifth "Indiana Jones" adventure, Ford's digital rejuvenation looks surprisingly good. Mangold, undoubtedly one of Hollywood's most gifted directors, ensures that Ford's face is only vaguely illuminated in most scenes and is therefore rarely visible enough to see through the trick. And seeing Ford as a fit Indiana Jones again in 2023 is almost worth the price of admission alone. Trust me.

But then ... the best is already over.

Frolicking in mediocrity

Mangold is known for being able to keep the tension in his stories consistently high. Structuring the narrative in such a way that it captivates the audience until the end of the film. As seen in the drama "Walk the Line" or the thriller "Identity". Why the director doesn't succeed here of all places, in his most prestigious work to date, is beyond me. Even if Mangold is not the best-known director in Hollywood, he is not a newcomer.

The thing with the supporting characters

Luckily, there's someone else who enhances the supporting cast: Mads Mikkelsen. He plays Dr Völler, a Nazi who wants the wheel of fate to create a world order in which Germany has won the Second World War. Mikkelsen's performance is as good as ever. As if the Hollywood casting departments had said to themselves:

"We need a villain who doesn't actually do anything other than stoically recite his lines, and who nevertheless masters every single second in every single one of his scenes. Impossible to find someone like that, isn't it?" - "How about Mads Mikkelsen?" - "Oh, right, booked."

Mikkelsen is also the perfect antagonist in "Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny", with the defeat of Nazi Germany still gnawing at him 25 years after the end of the war. "You didn't win the war," he says to an American at one point, "Hitler lost it." I could watch the man be evil forever.

The cursed last act

The fact that "Indy 5" flounders around in its mediocrity most of the time is not the biggest problem I have with the film. It's the final act. Don't worry, I won't spoil anything. But don't be mad at me if my explanations remain a bit vague at this point for that very reason.

Remember the end of "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull"? With the aliens from another dimension? Well, if that ending already divided the audience back in 2008, then this ending will cause even more controversy. In any case, I'm curious to see what the audience's reaction will be. I didn't like it at all.

Conclusion: "Indiana, let it go..."

In 'The Last Crusade', Indiana Jones almost followed Dr Elsa Schneider's obsession with the Holy Grail and immortal fame - and thus to his death. It was his father, Sean Connery's Henry Jones, who admonished him to "let it go".

That was in 1989 and now, almost 35 years later, I wish they had stuck to Henry Jones' advice. In 2008, "Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" at least still seemed like the appendix to a good novel that you can read, but where you miss absolutely nothing if you don't. "Dial of Destiny", on the other hand, comes across like a summary of the original trilogy written by Chat GPT, with some fan fiction tacked on at the end.

Sound evil? Maybe it does. But Mangold's Indy adventure is only really good - outstanding even - in its prologue. That is, when Indy, once the invincible hero of my childhood, is not an old man drowning in self-pity. Maybe it's me who's not yet ready for Indiana Jones' final call of destiny. Who knows if one day I won't have a completely different opinion of the film?

Until then - in my mental canon at least - the last thing I want to remember about the archaeology professor with the fedora hat and whip is his heroic ride into the sunset. The film was called "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" for good reason.


"Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny" opens in cinemas on 29 June 2023. Running time: 154 minutes. Released from the age of 12.

Cover photo: Disney / Lucasfilm

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I'm an outdoorsy guy and enjoy sports that push me to the limit – now that’s what I call comfort zone! But I'm also about curling up in an armchair with books about ugly intrigue and sinister kingkillers. Being an avid cinema-goer, I’ve been known to rave about film scores for hours on end. I’ve always wanted to say: «I am Groot.» 


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