Episode 104: Monday, June 2, 2008
posted on Jun 2, 2008 | Comments (4)

In this episode:
- our review of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008),
- its rewatchability,
- Harrison Ford’s age,
- Karen Allen,
- ridiculously picky fans,
- the use of computer graphics and humor,
- the alien at the end,
- the 1950s setting,
- Shia LaBeouf swinging from vines,
- women waiting in line to see Sex and the City (2008),
- the Star Wars prequels,
- directors reediting their movies,
- Hayden Christensen’s horrible acting,
- ideas for the next Indiana Jones movie,
- the upcoming movies Death Wish (2009) and Rambo V (2009) both starring Sylvester Stallone,
- wondering what Scott C. Clements thinks about Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,
- Lauren’s review,
- summer movies she’s looking forward to (Sex and the City, You Don’t Mess with the Zohan, Tropic Thunder, The Dark Knight, Step Brothers, Hamlet 2, etc.),
- Charlotte Rae,
- and What Ever Happened To? (Sarah Michelle Gellar and Freddie Prinze, Jr.).
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So combined, we’ve spent a small fortune on Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull already. I hope Lucas is happy!
PS: Rob they took out the Hamlet 2 trailer from when we saw Indy and when I had seen it. Still the worst movie trailer I’ve ever seen.
Howard Stern kept calling her Gellaaar. I am still waiting for Scooby Doo 3.
[...] we mentioned in episode 104, we were interested to see what filmmaker and Paunch Stevenson Show guest Scott C. Clements thought [...]
i didn’t mind the new ‘indiana jones’ film. about two-thirds of it was reminiscent of the classic trilogy, but the other third was a trite unnecessary – the CGI animals for example – but it didn’t bother me too much; i suppose that’s what the filmmakers thought to do to make the film relevant for the young modern audience. nothing can top ‘raiders of the lost ark’ anyway, and the fans can still go back to that.
Well unfortunately you and I and Rob are in the minority because most people hated it. It won’t stop them from doing another, George Lucas’s worthlessness will.