This t-shirt is guaranteed to give you all the nostalgic vibes with it’s comfortable fit and bold colors.Ĭurl up like a cat in this cozy pink flannel, inspired by Disney's The Aristocats! Featuring Marie’s quote, ‘Ladies don’t start fights but they can finish them’. The whole DuckTales squad is here in our classic all-over print featuring Huey, Dewey, and Louie in action. Live out all your 90’s television dreams with our latest tee. Today we’re exploring the bright and bold apparel from the following films: Disney’s Ducktales, Aristocats, A Goofy Movie and The Muppets-all featured in Cakeworthy’s latest Disney 2021 Spring collection. Filled to the brim with nostalgia, this collection will allow you to rock all your best memories from these loveable films, in style. Odie Henderson is the Boston Globe's film critic.Cakeworthy’s Disney Spring 2021 collection is filled with so many childhood favourites like Disney Beauty and the Beast, Alice in Wonderland and more. PG-13 (far less gruesome than its predecessors) At AMC Boston Common, Landmark Kendall Square, suburbs. Starring Harrison Ford, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Mads Mikkelsen, Toby Jones, Ethann Isidore, Antonio Banderas. Written by Jez Butterworth, John-Henry Butterworth, David Koepp, and Mangold. If you need me, I’ll be in my room sulking.ĭirected by James Mangold. Truthfully, I should be punished for being so forgiving, so I’m grounding myself. And yet, I find myself feeling more generous than I should toward “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” if only because its last shot makes for a nice, sweet coda to the series. We age, but our childhood heroes should stay encased in their prime. After all, I never wanted to see Indiana Jones as an old man. I should be angrier about this movie than I am. Mikkelsen is a good villain, and the dial itself is a cool premise that pays off almost as well as the original’s Ark of the Covenant. Mangold keeps the film moving, and Ford seems truly engaged. It’s all wrapped up in a package that’s too neat to leave an impression. Along the way, he crosses paths with old friend Renaldo (a delightfully loose Antonio Banderas) and Helena’s teenage partner-in-crime, Teddy (Ethann Isidore), who is clearly a stand-in for Ke Huy Quan’s fan-favorite character, Short Round, from “Indiana Jones and The Temple of Doom.”Ī lot of people die, much danger is averted, and we’re once again treated to a grand spectacle at the film’s climax. Voller again, Indy must confront his own aging as well as the lifestyle he has chosen for himself. “Dial of Destiny” presents her as a frenemy to Indy, and while Helena is portrayed as an amoral hustler instead of as a damsel in distress like Kate Capshaw in “Temple of Doom,” she reminded me of Cate Blanchett’s villain from the last Indiana Jones movie, “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.”Ĭhasing Helena across several countries (don’t ask) and encountering Dr. She’s part of the new generation of explorers seeking treasure so hot it might melt your face off. Jones is retiring from those college archeology classes we barely ever see him teaching in this series.Įnter Helena Shaw (Phoebe Waller-Bridge), Basil’s daughter whom Indy last saw when she was 12. Voller, but the quest for the other half of the dial drives Basil Shaw mad. Or perhaps he just knew it would be used as the MacGuffin in an Indiana Jones movie so he made finding it a challenge. This is why Archimedes broke the damn thing into two pieces after he invented it and hid one of them using a series of riddles and impossible feats of derring-do. The contraption may have the power to drop people into the past, allowing them to wreak the kind of havoc Cher never thought about when she sang that “If I Could Turn Back Time” song. Voller (Mads Mikkelsen), a Nazi with designs on the titular dial, which was invented by the famous ancient Greek mathematician Archimedes in Syracuse. For the love of Ponce de León, stop using this technology until it’s perfected, Hollywood!Ĭlaymation Jones, I mean Indy, is on a quest with fellow researcher Basil Shaw (Toby Jones). While the digital effect looks better than usual, there are still several moments when Ford looks as if he were made out of Silly Putty. The opening of “Dial of Destiny” is a callback of sorts to the opening of “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.” Once again, we find a younger Indy on a train, but instead of getting an age-appropriate actor to play him (see: “Crusade” with the late River Phoenix), we spend nearly a half hour with a CGI de-aged Harrison Ford. Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) in Lucasfilm's "Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny." Lucasfilm Ltd.
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