List of Indiana Jones characters

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This is a list of characters in the Indiana Jones series.

[edit] Introduced in Raiders of the Lost Ark

[edit] Indiana Jones

Dr. Henry Walton "Indiana" Jones, Jr. (Harrison Ford), the titular character of the franchise, is an archaeologist and college professor leading a double life as a globetrotting explorer and mercenary nicknamed after his pet dog. Wearing a fedora and armed with only his wits, a pistol and a whip, Indiana is regularly confronted by villains and thugs seeking power via supernatural artifacts (the nature of which he is generally cynical), booby traps, and snakes, the last of which he is deathly afraid. Other actors have portrayed Indiana at different ages, including River Phoenix, Corey Carrier, Sean Patrick Flanery and George Hall.

[edit] Satipo

Satipo (Alfred Molina) is a guide that helps Indiana find the fertility idol in the film's opening. He follows behind him in the temple's traps. When Indy and Satipo reach a pit trying to escape, Satipo makes it over with Indiana's whip and Indy is stuck on the other side. Indy throws over the fertility idol to Satipo, who offered to throw him his whip for it, but he betrays Indy by stealing the Idol, dropping the whip, and making his escape. In his haste, he forgot to mind the wall trap he had witnessed Indy test before, and ends up being impaled by spears in his body, neck and face, pinning him to the wall, while Indiana makes it out.

He appears in the 1999 video game Indiana Jones and the Infernal Machine in the secret level "Return to Peru", where Indiana returns to the same temple and finds the second idol.

This was Molina's debut in film.

[edit] Jock Lindsey

Jock Lindsey (Fred Sorenson) was an American freelance pilot. Jock cut his teeth as a stunt pilot performing in Midwest airshows and relocated to Venezuela after a rumored flight-related tragedy. He frequently was hired by Indiana Jones to fly the archaeologist to remote parts of the world. Easygoing and affable, Jock only ever butted heads with Indiana on one subject: his pet snake, Reggie. According to the novelization of Raiders of the Lost Ark written by Campbell Black (1981), Jock is Scottish.

[edit] Barranca

Barranca (Vic Tablian) is the other Peruvian guide who turns against Indiana. When Barranca draws a revolver, Indy uses his famous bullwhip and wraps the whip around the gun. The gun is yanked from Barranca's hand and lands in a stream. Barranca then runs away but is later killed with poisonous darts by the Hovitos tribe.

[edit] René Belloq

Toht (left) and Belloq

René Belloq (Paul Freeman) is one of the film's three main antagonists. He is a French archaeologist who takes credit for Indiana's findings. In the film's opening, Belloq and the Hovitos tribesmen force Indiana to hand over a fertility idol he has braved numerous booby traps to obtain. Belloq aids the Nazis in finding the Ark of the Covenant, as he wants to use the relic to speak with God. The spirits within the Ark kill the Nazis and cause Belloq's head to explode, allowing Indiana to take the Ark back to the United States government. At one point in the film, Belloq says to Indy that they are very much alike and that he is Indy's "shadowy reflection".

The novelization reveals Belloq became Indiana's foe at graduate school, when he plagiarized his essay on stratigraphy, thus winning an award that rightfully belonged to Indiana. Another encounter in 1934 is detailed, when Indiana spends months preparing a dig in Rub' al Khali, only to arrive and discover Belloq has excavated the region.[1] Indiana also encounters Belloq in two novels by Max McCoy, set before the films, where he gives him information for locating a crystal skull.[2][3]

Belloq's first name was Emile in an August 1979 draft of the script,[4] and Marion was originally more infatuated with him.[5] Spielberg considered Jacques Dutronc and Giancarlo Giannini for the part before casting Freeman: he noticed that he had very piercing eyes while watching Death of a Princess.[6] Belloq was intended to appear in the prequel Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, but was written out for unknown reasons.[7] He was set to appear in The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, but the show was canceled: he and the 21-year old Indiana would have become friends in Honduras in 1920, although his ruthless traits would be exhibited by stealing and selling a crystal skull to F. A. Mitchell-Hedges. He would have aided Indiana and Percy Fawcett in Brazil in an episode set in 1921.[8] He was also intended to appear in the canceled Dark Horse Comics limited series Indiana Jones and the Lost Horizon, where he appears in the prologue discovering a fake Turin Shroud in New York City in 1926.[9]

Kenner released a 3.75" action figure (dressed in Jewish robes) in late 1982, which was available by mail order until 1983.[10] A Belloq figure in normal clothes was also released in 1983.[11] He was included in a TSR, Inc. collection of metal miniatures the following year.[12] Hasbro released a 3 ¾" Belloq in Jewish robes in 2008 (which comes with the fertility idol).[13][14] An Adventure Heroes figurine, which comes with the Ark and a murderous spirit, will also be released.[15] Lego made a Belloq figure for a playset based on the Raiders opening sequence.[16]

[edit] Marcus Brody

Marcus Brody

Dr. Marcus Brody (Denholm Elliott) is a museum owner and curator who has known Indiana since he was a child. Marcus was friends with Indiana's father, Henry Sr., and served as something of a surrogate father figure, as Indiana did not get along well with his own father. In the film, Brody makes a deal with government agents that Indiana will recover the Ark of the Covenant and put it in a museum, but the agents put it away in a top secret hiding place (Hangar 51), much to his disappointment. He reappeared in The Last Crusade (1989), aiding Indiana on the search for his father and getting captured by the Nazis. Jones says that Brody once got lost in his own museum. In 1940, Marcus Brody retired as curator of the National Museum and accepted a position as Dean of Students at Marshall College. After he died in 1952, Indy lobbied hard for the bronze statue of Brody featured in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull on the Marshall College grounds. The statue of Brody lists his years of service as Dean of Students from 1939 to 1944.[17] Denholm Elliot's death was written into Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull with the death of his character. Besides a painting of Marcus Brody in the hallway outside of Indiana Jones' classroom, during the motorcycle chase scene through campus in that film, the Russians chasing Mutt and Indiana crash into the statue of Dr. Brody and decapitate it.

Spielberg cast Elliott in the role because he was a fan. His return in Crusade was motivated by the director's desire to have the film hew closer to Raiders.[18] Brody has also appeared in Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, the Marvel Comics Indiana Jones series, a Young Indiana Jones book[19] and the Bantam novels series.

[edit] Marion Ravenwood

Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen) had an affair with Indiana in 1926, which ended abruptly when her father (Jones' mentor) discovered their romance. Ten years later, a resentful Marion is forced to aid Indiana to retrieve the Ark of the Covenant after her bar in Nepal is burned down by Nazi thugs. Marion was a regular supporting character in the Marvel Comics series set after the film, and Allen reprised the role for Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull in 2008.

[edit] Toht

Major Arnold Ernst Toht (Ronald Lacey) is the Gestapo agent who attempts to steal the medallion from Marion, but his hand is burned by it, due to the fact that the medallion had been engulfed in flames just a few minutes before he grabbed it. The scarred inscription on his hand is used by the Nazis to pinpoint the Ark's location, but as his hand lacks the code on its other side, they end up digging in the wrong area. His face is melted by the spirits in the Ark; in the novelization Toht dies when Gobler's car flies off acliff. In a sequel comic book, Indy is confronted by his vengeful sister Ilsa.[20]

Toht was known as Belzig in the August 1979 draft of the script.[4] The name "Toht" refers to "Tod," the German word for "death". Spielberg wanted him to be a cyborg, with a metal arm that could transform into a flamethrower and machine gun.[5] The 1979 script gave him a light in place of a right eye.[4] Lucas rejected these as too far-fetched.[5] Lacey was cast as Toht as he reminded Spielberg of Peter Lorre.[18] Klaus Kinski turned down the role as he hated the script.[21] Lacey later cameoed in The Last Crusade as Heinrich Himmler, opposite Michael Sheard (who auditioned for Toht) as Adolf Hitler.[22] A 3.75" figure was released in late 1982,[10] and he was part of a metal miniature collection in 1984.[12]

[edit] Sallah

Sallah Mohammed Faisel el-Kahir[19] (John Rhys-Davies) is a burly Egyptian excavator and a friend of Indiana. He reappeared in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. He also appeared in a Marvel comic,[20] a Young Indiana Jones book (which detailed his first meeting with Indiana in 1913), and two Bantam novels.[23][24][25]

[edit] Cairo swordsman

The Cairo swordsman (Terry Richards) appears when Marion is being kidnapped by Nazi forces. The entire crowd moves aside when the swordsman appears, swinging his scimitar and coercing Indiana into a battle. Jones sighs, pulls out his pistol and shoots him, causing the crowd to burst into cheers. The gag came about because Harrison Ford was suffering from dysentery and did not want to spend three days filming a "conventional" fight. On the first take, Richards "took a minute-and-a-half to die", so on the next take, Ford shot him so quickly that Richards fell over in surprise. Ford feels sorry for Richards now, because "he worked so hard on that swordplay".[26]

Richards feels "it turned out to be the funniest thing in the film", and was surprised he was not cut out of the picture.[27] Many including Lucas dislike the brutality of the gag,[28] and Richards concurs the joke is very morbid.[27] Nevertheless, it was placed 38th on Empire's Top 50 film gags list,[28] and it is one of Spielberg's favorite scenes in the series.[26] Kenner released a 3.75" figure of the swordsman in 1982.[10] Walt Disney Parks & Resorts released a figurine of the swordsman in a box set in January 2001 (to scale with the Micro Machines vehicles models),[29] and a 4.5" figure in August 2003.[30] In 2008, Hasbro released a 3 ¾" action figure,[13] an Adventure Heroes figure,[16] and a 12" figure.[31]

[edit] Herman Dietrich

Oberst Herman Dietrich (Wolf Kahler) is the Wehrmacht commander of the military contingent attached to the Tanis project. He is personally chosen by Hitler due to his ruthlessness and efficiency. Dietrich is practical and strict whereas Belloq is romantic, burying Marion alive although the French archaeologist has fallen for her. He also expresses doubt over Belloq's desire to perform a "Jewish ritual" on the Ark. His face is "petrified" by the spirits within the ark. The only piece of Dietrich merchandise has been a 1984 metal miniature.[12] The DK Indiana Jones guide established Dietrich's first name in the index.[32]

[edit] Gobler

Major Gobler (Anthony Higgins) is a German major of the military contingent attached to the Tanis project. He is personally chosen by Hitler due to his ruthlessness and efficiency. Gobler is strict whereas Dietrich is practical. He dies when the truck driven by Jones rams his car, sending it flying off a cliff.

[edit] Simon Katanga

Simon[32] Katanga (George Harris), is the captain of the Bantu Wind, a tramp steamer Indiana and Marion use to transport the Ark to the United States. He reappears in a Marvel Comics sequel, where Indiana bails him from a Panama City jail after being charged of rum-running. Katanga and his crew take Indiana to the Aleutian Islands, where they are attacked by pirates, who commandeer the Bantu Wind. Following a battle, Katanga regains his ship.[33]

[edit] Abner Ravenwood

Abner Ravenwood is Marion's father and an unseen character. He was Indiana's mentor at the University of Chicago, but the two split in 1926 when Indiana had an affair with the teenage Marion. The Ark of the Covenant was his lifelong obsession, and he owned the headpiece to the Staff of Ra, which could pinpoint its location. He is said to be dead when Indiana and the Nazis come to Nepal (where the Ravenwoods live) in 1936, to use it to find the Ark at Tanis. The novelization details he died in an avalanche in 1936.[1]

In Marvel Comics' The Further Adventures of Indiana Jones, it is hinted that Abner is alive when Indiana and Marion travel to the fictitious city Ra-Lundi to free its people from the power of a meteorite: Indiana is briefly aided by a masked man.[34] Abner is in the back-story to a gamebook, where he lost an ebony dove from Malakula after being chased off by the island's inhabitants in 1927; five years later Indiana and his cousin must retrieve it.[35] A supplement to a role-playing game said that Abner studied under Franz Boas, and disliked the British for their "armchair anthropology", in which they made assumptions about other cultures based on reports instead of exploring themselves.[36]

Abner was intended to appear in the canceled third season of The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, when a ten-year old Indiana meets him searching for the Ark on the Temple Mount.[8] The canceled Dark Horse Comics limited series Indiana Jones and the Lost Horizon was going to depict him and Indiana recovering the headpiece to the Staff of Ra in Tibet in 1926. Artist Hugh Fleming modeled Abner's appearance on actor Wilford Brimley, and the series would explain that Abner taught Indiana to behave cynically with others, so that they would not think he was crazy if he mentioned his encounters with the supernatural.[9] The character was also intended to appear in the 2003 video game Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb (set in 1935, before Temple of Doom) but the developers of the game deemed his role as Indy's partner "too unwieldy".[37]

In Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, "Fedora" was originally going to be Abner.

[edit] Introduced in Temple of Doom

[edit] Willie Scott

Willie (right) and Short Round (left) inspect Pankot Palace's cuisine

Wilhelmina "Willie" Scott (Kate Capshaw) is an American singer working at Club Obi-Wan in Shanghai who is caught up in Indiana's adventures and becomes his love interest in the film. Unlike Marion, she is more of a damsel in distress. The novelization details Willie was born in Missouri, and moved to Shanghai as she was unable to break into Hollywood during the Great Depression. She also claims to know Al Capone (who Indy met in 1920) and Frank Nitti. She returns to the United States following her adventure.[38] Spielberg liked the character of Willie:

"Willie has led this pampered life and feels that's what's due her — to be cared for and looked after. She meets Indiana Jones, a person unlike anyone she has ever been involved with, and ends up going off with him. In the course of all their adventures, all of her earlier life is stripped away from her, and Willie must fall back on her own resources. She discovers that she is a very strong woman, a gutsy lady. Willie is a much different character than the woman Karen Allen played in Raiders."[39]

Willie was named after Spielberg's dog. She was chosen from many actresses considered, including Sharon Stone. Spielberg wanted Willie to be a complete contrast to Marion, so Capshaw dyed her brown hair blonde for the part.[6] Spielberg married Capshaw in 1991.[18] A Willie figure was made by LJN in 1984, but was never released,[40] although an unpainted metal miniature of her was made for a TSR, Inc. collection that year. She has appeared in two Lego sets: Shanghai Chase, and The Temple of Doom.

[edit] Lao Che

Lao Che (Roy Chiao) is a Chinese gangster who promises Indiana a diamond in return for the ashes of Nurhaci but instead poisons him and offers the poison's antidote in exchange for returning the diamond. Indiana escapes with the antidote and leaves Shanghai unknowingly on a plane owned by Lao Che. Che orders the pilots to parachute out of the plane in hopes of killing Indiana when the plane crashes, but Indiana deploys a raft and lands safely on the ground. Che has two sons, Kao Kan and Chen, the latter of whom is killed by Indiana when Che and Indiana meet for the exchange.

[edit] Wu Han

Wu Han (David Yip), allies with Indiana during his battle with Lao Che. He is killed by Kao Kan. Max McCoy's prequel novel Indiana Jones and the Dinosaur Eggs detailed Wu first met Indiana in 1914, during his trip to China with his father. Years later, he is studying political science when his parents and sister die in an influenza outbreak. Their ashes wind up in the possession of Che, who uses the promise of a proper burial to force Wu into servitude. In 1933, Indiana meets Wu in Shanghai on his way to Mongolia, and steals his family's ashes from Che, securing his old friend's freedom. Indiana inspires him to study archaeology upon his return to school.[2] Wu also aids Indiana in the 2003 video game Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb, set just before Temple of Doom. He regularly arranges Jones's transportation.[41]

[edit] Short Round

Short Round (Jonathan Ke Quan), aka "Kennon Wong" was orphaned when the Japanese bombed Shanghai in 1932, and is a young taxicab driver in Shanghai, who helps Indiana escape from Lao Che. Despite being an eleven-year-old boy, he is able to stick by Indy through his adventures and is even able to drive (since he is "short", he wears wooden blocks under his shoes when driving). He is essential in freeing Indiana and Pankot's Maharaja from Mola Ram's psychic control. The novelization details Short Round was born Wan Li in 1927. Despite attending a Christian school, he respects Chinese mythology, and believes the baby elephant that transports him in India is a reincarnation of his brother Chu. He immigrates to the United States with Jones following his adventure.[38] In the film, Short Round is frequently heard speaking the Cantonese dialect of Chinese, as well as English.

Short Round was named after Temple of Doom screenwriters Willard Huyck and Gloria Katz's dog.[18] Lucas's initial idea for Indiana's sidekick was a virginal young princess, but Huyck, Katz and Spielberg disliked the idea.[42] The character's name may also have been an homage to the early Samuel Fuller film The Steel Helmet, in which a young Korean boy of the same name acts as a guide for the protagonist. Around 6000 actors auditioned worldwide for the part: Quan was cast after his brother auditioned for the role. Spielberg liked his personality, so he and Ford improvised the scene where Short Round accuses Indiana of cheating during a card game.[6] Quan had a martial arts instructor to help him on set.[18]

The character cameoed in an issue of Marvel Comics' The Further Adventures of Indiana Jones, rescuing Indiana from a pirate attack in the Caribbean, before he returns to boarding school.[43] The Lost Journal of Indiana Jones, published in 2008, detailed Short Round became an archaeologist and tracked down the Peacock's Eye (the diamond from Doom's opening sequence) to Niihau.[44]

He also appeared in the non-canonical crossover story in Star Wars Tales, where he and Indiana discover the remains of Han Solo in the crashed Millennium Falcon in the Pacific Northwest.[45] A Short Round action figure was made by LJN in 1984, but was never released,[40] although an unpainted metal miniature of him was released by TSR that year.[12] He is in the 2009 Lego set Shangai Chase. Empire named Short Round as their sixteenth favorite element of the films, explaining "you could argue that Shortie is the real hero of Temple of Doom — while the titular relic hunter is off searching for fortune and glory, it's Short Round's moral compass that keeps the adventure on the right track".[46] In 2008 a poll conducted by movietickets.com to coincide with the release of Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, named Short Round "favorite Indy sidekick".[47]

[edit] Chattar Lal

Chattar Lal (Roshan Seth) is the Prime Minister of Pankot Palace and personal representative of Maharaja Zalim Singh. He graduated from Oxford and speaks English extraordinarily well as a result, and also knows well Indiana's reputation. Like Indiana he was apparently forced to drink the Blood of Kali by Mola Ram, controlling him, and the young Maharaja. During the attempted sacrifice of Willie Scott, Lal is injured by Indiana when he gets caught in the wheel used to lower victims into the lava pit. He is last seen crawling away and collapsing, but disappears after this. It is unknown if he escaped. In the novelization, Chattar Lal is thrown into the lava pit while in the film he is injured but he doesnt die, whereas in Lego Indiana Jones: The Original Adventures, he is blown apart by a blast of heat caused by Indy and Short Round.

[edit] Little Maharaja

Maharaja Zalim Singh (Raj Singh) is the ruler of Pankot Palace. He is a very young boy, probably a year or two older than Short Round. Despite considering the Thuggee an evil cult and vowing that they would never return it is revealed that Singh is a member of their cult, albeit against his will. Like Indiana he was apparently forced to drink the Blood of Kali. During Indiana's fight against the chief Thuggee guard, Singh hinders Indiana by using a voodoo doll. He is stopped when Short Round battles him and burns him in the side with a torch, snapping him out of the Black Sleep of Kali. He atones for his crimes whilst under Mola Ram's influence by telling Short Round how he, Indiana and Willie can escape from the mines. He also apparently alerts the British troops in the area about the recent events as he is seen among them when they arrive to battle the remaining Thuggee after Mola Ram's death.

[edit] Mola Ram

Mola Ram holding a human's heart

Mola Ram (Amrish Puri) is the main antagonist and the Thuggee high priest. He has made Pankot Palace his lair and wants to use the five Sankara Stones to set up the reign of Kali. To that end, Mola Ram enslaves the children of a village that had one of the Stones (the taking of it bringing his total to three). They mine for the other two and for gems to fund his cause in catacombs underneath the palace. He also brainwashes humans, including local politicians and royalty, with the "blood of Kālī Ma" – a magic potion – to make them devout followers (unless they are exposed to extreme pain). Indiana eventually confronts Mola Ram over a nearby gorge, calling on Shiva to use the Stones against the evil cleric, who is burned by them and falls into the river where he is devoured by crocodiles. In the novelization, Ram's death is the same but he returns to normal when he burns his hand on the stone; Indy tries to pull him to safety but Ram falls to his death.

Mola Ram is named after a 17th-century Indian painter. Lucas wanted Mola Ram to be terrifying, so Huyck and Katz added elements of Aztec and Hawaiian human sacrificers, and European devil worship, to the character.[42] To create his headdress, make-up artist Tom Smith based the skull on a cow (as this would be sacrilegious) with a latex shrunken head. Puri was chosen as Spielberg and Lucas did not want to cast a European actor and apply dark make-up.[39] In the role, Puri resembles Eduardo Ciannelli, who played the cult leader in Gunga Din, an inspiration on the film.[48]

A 6" action figure and an unpainted metal miniature of Mola Ram was released in 1984.[12][40] In 2008, Hasbro released several Mola Ram items as part of their Indiana Jones toy line, including a 3 3/4" action figure, an Adventure Heroes figure, and a Mighty Muggs figure.[49] A "One Coin" (caricature) figure of Mola, standing 1.97" (5 cm.) will be released in Japan.[50]

[edit] Captain Phillip Blumburtt

Captain Phillip Blumburtt (Philip Stone) is a British Indian Army officer who commands the 11th Puma Rifles brigade, is frequently sent to inspect Pankot Palace on behalf of the British government. He is alerted to the evil of Pankot Palace apparently by Little Maharajah to deal with the remaining Thuggees as Indy and the others escape from the palace.

[edit] Introduced in The Last Crusade

[edit] Grail Knight

The grail knight was a guardian of the holy grail and was 700 years old (he was granted eternal life). He was presumably killed in the earthquake in the temple of the grail.

[edit] Herman Mueller

Herman Mueller (J. J. Hardy) is Indiana's fellow Boy Scout in the 1912 prologue, who brings Indiana to the Sheriff's attention after his battle with outlaws for the Cross of Coronado. He reappears as Indiana's sidekick in the English and French Young Indiana Jones novels, which introduces his archaeologist father Herman Senior.[51][52][53][54] In the PC / Video Game Lego Indiana Jones, he appears as a figurine, credited as "Boy Scout," much to his liking.

[edit] Henry Jones, Sr.

Dr. Henry Walton Jones, Sr. (Sean Connery) is Indiana's estranged father, who was distant from his son due to his obsessive study of the Holy Grail and its possible location. Kidnapped by Nazis in 1938, his son rescues him and in the process of racing the Nazis to the Grail's location, they become closer. Alex Hyde-White stood in for Connery in the film's 1912 prologue, and was played by Lloyd Owen in The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, which showed his anger at his son running away to fight in World War I. He also appeared in the Young Indiana Jones novels and the graphic novel Indiana Jones and the Spear of Destiny (set in 1945). At the time of the events of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull in 1957, it appears the elder Dr. Jones has already died in 1951.[17]

[edit] Walter Donovan

Foreground: Vogel (left), Donovan (right). Background: Elsa Schneider

Walter Donovan (Julian Glover) is the main antagonist of the film. He is an American businessman who desires the Holy Grail in order to achieve immortality. He secretly works with the Nazis, and sends both Indiana and his father on the search for the Grail without their knowledge of his ties to Germany. He shoots Henry and forces Indy to clear the traps for him. Indy does. When Donovan and Elsa follow Indy, Donovan drinks from the cup with jewels, and the color Gold. Donovan turns to dust and dies. The knight that appears said he chose poorly. Glover enjoyed playing the part because of the character's ambiguous nature:

"What would you do, if you had the chance of having eternal life? That's quite a question. Where would you draw the line? People say [Donovan] was a Nazi, he wasn't a Nazi, he joined the Nazi Party in order to investigate its property, and he bloody nearly got that. Only because he was greedy did he [fall]. This is an advice for you [the viewer]: always choose the pewter cup. It applies to everything. An allegory for life."[55]

Isla Blair, Glover's wife, cameoed as Mrs. Donovan in the scene where he and Indiana discuss the Holy Grail. The in-joke was conceived by one of the producers.[56]

[edit] Panama Hat

Panama Hat (Paul Maxwell) is a minor villain who appears in the prologue of the film. He hired grave robbers to dig up the Cross of Coronado, which is immediately stolen by a teenage Jones. A horse chase and pursuit on board a circus train follow. Indy escapes, returns to his home, and attempts to talk to his father, who rebuffs him. The Sheriff arrives and Indy is forced to give the cross back.

In 1938 Jones steals the Cross again, this time on a ship, but is caught. He struggles with the villain's men and gets the cross back. Indy jumps off the ship, which is struck by lightning and explodes killing Panama Hat and the people who were on board the ship when it exploded.

[edit] Elsa Schneider

Dr. Elsa Schneider (Alison Doody) is an Austrian art professor who desires the Grail, and like Donovan, she keeps her involvement with the Nazis a secret. She is revealed to have seduced both Joneses throughout the film, Henry first and then Indiana. Later, she picks out a grail for Donovan, choosing a false grail, forced to watch her employer decay before her eyes. Afterwards, she mistakenly crosses the temple's seal with the Grail in hand, causing the temple to collapse as she drops to her death in the resulting chasm when attempting to retrieve the Grail instead of holding onto Indiana. According to Doody, Elsa's role as a femme fatale was an attempt to distance the character from Willie.[57] IGN placed Elsa 33rd on their list of the best bad girls in film in 2008,[58] while Empire noted Doody "achieved the unlikely feat of making a Nazi sympathiser sympathetic".[46]

[edit] Kazim

Kazim (Kevork Malikyan) is the leader of the Brotherhood of the Cruciform Sword, an ancient organization protecting the secrets of the Holy Grail. Kazim initially attempts to kill Indiana and Elsa during a spectacular boatchase in Venice, but after recognizing Indiana does not want the Grail for selfish purposes, gives him the location of his father. Kazim later leads an attack on the Nazi convoy heading for the Grail's location, but is killed. When Kazim dies, it was intended that Elsa step away and see her hands covered in blood (as a homage to The Man Who Knew Too Much), but Spielberg was unsatisfied with each take.[57] Malikyan was once in the running for the part of Sallah in the first film, but missed the audition due to traffic.

[edit] Vogel

Standartenführer Ernst Vogel (Michael Byrne), is an SS officer who aids Donovan in finding the Holy Grail. His main objective is to kill the Joneses on direct orders from Adolf Hitler. Vogel discovers Jones Sr. on a German zeppelin bound for Athens, but Indiana throws Vogel out the window just as the zeppelin is taking off. Later, Vogel and Donovan are heading towards the location of the Grail when Indiana ambushes their convoy. Indy and Vogel struggle on the back of a tank, which goes over a cliff along with Vogel in the Novelization of Indiana Jones and the last crusade Vogel dies when he and Indy get caught in the chain Vogel was using to fight with Indy manges to take his pants off which results in Indy getting free from the chain while Vogel who remains tangled in the chain is dragged over the cliff with the tank .

[edit] Introduced in The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles

[edit] Remy Baudouin

Remy Baudouin (Ronny Coutteure) is a Belgian cook. He meets the 17-year old Indiana in Mexico in the pilot episode, serving Pancho Villa. He joins Pancho because his wife Lupe was murdered by Federales. He joins Indiana on the Western Front after seeing newsreel footage of the devastation in his country.[59] Latter in Africa he claims to have "a wife and kids" several times.

[edit] Anna Jones

Indiana's mother is first mentioned in passing in Raiders of the Lost Ark; Indiana remarks Brody "sound[s] just like my mother" when discussing the dangers of finding the Ark. In Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Indiana's father Henry mentions that her death drove him and his son apart. Indiana believes that his mother "never understood" his father's obsession with the Holy Grail, though Henry says she supported him fully.

The character debuted in the 1992-1996 television series The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, where she was portrayed by Ruth de Sosa. Her name is revealed to be Anna Jones. Very little had been established about the character prior to production, so de Sosa was allowed to create many aspects of the character, in addition to the basics that had been established by Lucas.[60] Previously, the Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure came with a replica of Henry's diary which named her Mary.[61] More recent publications, such as the Lost Journal of Indiana Jones, rectify this by making Mary her middle name.

In the series, Indiana is shown to have a strong relationship with his mother, whom he calls "the sweetest, smartest, most wonderful woman who ever lived".[59] In the unaired episode "Florence, May 1908" (later released as part of The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: The Perils of Cupid), Anna briefly has an affair with composer Giacomo Puccini. She also reveals she is from Virginia.[62] Although it is explained she died of scarlet fever in the series,[63] it is contradicted in new footage shot for the 1999 re-edit, where Indiana explains she died of influenza.[64] In The Lost Journal of Indiana Jones, it is stated that Anna died on March 3, 1912, aged 33 years.

[edit] T. E. Lawrence

A fictionalized version of T. E. Lawrence has a recurring role in the series. He first appeared in the pilot episode, Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal, and appears or is mentioned multiple times throughout the series. Lawrence is portrayed by Joseph Bennett and Douglas Henshall.

[edit] Helen Seymour

Miss Helen Seymour (Margaret Tyzack) is Indiana's tutor, having taught his father at the University of Oxford.[59] In one of the final episodes broadcast in 1996, she dies after World War I, before Indiana returns to Oxford to be at her side. Her maid gives him her final letter, in which she urges him to finish his education and reconcile with his father.[65]

In a comic book adaptation of the first episode, it is explained she dislikes her old classmate T. E. Lawrence due to their divided religious beliefs (her father was a minister).[66] Seymour also appears in three books based on the series. In one, she inherits a fortune, and is courted by a Colonel (whom Indiana is suspicious of) aboard the RMS Titanic.[53][67][68]

[edit] Gray Cloud

Gray Cloud is apparently a friend and sometimes sidekick of Indiana Jones. He is played by Saginaw Grant. He enlists Indy's help in 1950 when an ancient pipe is stolen from his tribe; a deadly chase through the snowy mountains of Wyoming ensues. Indy eventually retrieves the pipe for Gray Cloud.[69]

[edit] Introduced in Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

[edit] Mac

George "Mac" McHale[44] (Ray Winstone) is an anti-hero who is a friend with Jones. He is a spin on Sallah and Belloq.[70] Mac served in MI6 during World War II, working with Indiana (who worked for the Office of Strategic Services).[71] Writer David Koepp said Mac represents the confusion of the Cold War, with Winstone concurring "figuring out who you were working for and who you were working against must have been crazy".[72] Mac's look was inspired by a photo of Ernest Hemingway wearing boots, so Winstone was told to tuck his pants into his boots and "rock" them throughout the film.[72] Mac calls himself a "capitalist", and frequently makes his decision based upon what he gets in return. Mac is also extremely greedy, enthusiastic to accompany Indy to Akator, a "city of gold", and expresses clear frustration when Akator doesn't turn out to be what he expected, calling the venture a "waste of [his] time." Mac is eventually sucked into a vortex created by aliens to another dimension. It remains unknown whether he is dead or just in another dimension, as he purposefully lets go of Jones's whip that he was holding and lets himself get sucked into the portal, perhaps out of guilt for betraying his friend.

Mac will reappear in the novel Indiana Jones and the Army of the Dead, due for May 2009. Set after the second World War, he and Indiana battle German and Japanese agents, a voodoo priest and legions of the undead for the Heart of Darkness, an object made of pearl and ebony in Haiti.[73]

[edit] Irina Spalko

Colonel Dr. Irina Spalko (Cate Blanchett) is the primary antagonist of the film. A Soviet agent born in a small mountain village in the eastern regions of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, she was believed by those in her village to be a witch as her apparent psychic powers began to manifest themselves through animal control. An impressed Joseph Stalin inducted her into researching psychic warfare, awarding her with the Order of Lenin three times.[32] She is skilled in fencing and hand-to-hand combat and is Indiana's main antagonist as she brings the crystal skull to Akator to utilize the power there for her country's militant purposes. Ironically, her desire for knowledge proved her undoing when the crystal skull entity grants her desire to know everything, overloading her mind and causing her to disintegrate as her scattered essence is teleported to another dimension.

Frank Marshall said Spalko continued the tradition of Indiana having a love-hate relationship "with every woman he ever comes in contact with".[74] Blanchett had wanted to play a villain for a "couple of years" before being cast.[75] Spalko was modeled on Marlene Dietrich,[72] while her bob cut was George Lucas' idea and was inspired by Louise Brooks.[71]

A 3 ¾" figure was released,[76] as well as an Adventure Heroes figurine that depicts her duel with Mutt.[77] Spalko is available in three Lego playsets.[78]

[edit] Antonin Dovchenko

Colonel Antonin Dovchenko (Igor Jijikine) aids Spalko on the quest for the crystal skull. He is ruthless and despises weakness. Dovchenko is large in stature and a brutal hand to hand combatant. The character is a tribute to the muscular henchman Pat Roach played in the first three films.[72] He fights Indiana several times until Indy finally beats him and his dazed body gets carried off and eaten alive by siafu ants in the jungle. Hasbro released 3 ¾" and 12" action figures as well as an Adventure Heroes model,[76][77][79] and is available in two Lego playsets.[78]

[edit] Dean Charles Stanforth

Dean Charles Stanforth (Jim Broadbent) is Indiana's friend at Marshall College. The character replaces Marcus Brody following Denholm Elliott's death in 1992.[72] Stanforth resigns to protect Indy from government agents who want him on trump Communist charges, and is later reinstated, with Indy joining him as the Associate Dean.

[edit] Mutt Williams

Mutt Williams (Shia LaBeouf), born Henry Jones III,[32] is a motorcycle-riding greaser and Indiana's son with Marion Ravenwood. However, she told him his stepfather, Royal Air Force pilot Colin Williams, was his biological father, until they met up with Indiana Jones in 1957. Mutt goes to Peru with Indiana in search of his mother, his surrogate father Harold Oxley, and the crystal skull. Mutt has travelled extensively with his mother, and has never graduated from school – any school. (He appears to have sampled several.) Unlike many film sidekick roles, Mutt is highly intelligent, follows a strong line in deductive reasoning, and excels at fencing (which proved useful in his duel with Spalko) and other practical adventuring skills.

George Lucas was briefly interested in producing a spin-off about Mutt and his own adventures, with Indiana in a supporting role.[80]

[edit] Harold Oxley

Harold Oxley (John Hurt) born in Leeds, England, is a colleague of Indiana who broke off contact with him in 1937 while searching for the skulls. Both Oxley and Indiana studied under Abner Ravenwood. Oxley was a close friend of Ravenwood's daughter, Marion, and hence became a surrogate father for her son Mutt, following the death of Mutt's stepfather. Oxley's wits have been addled by long exposure to one of the crystal skulls.[32] As soon as the skull is returned to Akator, Oxley regains his sanity, and is last seen at Indy and Marion's wedding, clapping enthusiastically. The character was inspired by Ben Gunn from Treasure Island.[72]

[edit] Introduced in other media

[edit] Sophia Hapgood

Sophia Hapgood debuted in the 1992 video game Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis and its comic book adaptation. Sophia's backstory in Fate of Atlantis explains she was born in Boston and became briefly romantically involved with Indiana while accompanying him on an expedition in Iceland. Afterwards, she becomes a psychic giving lectures on Atlantis, and accompanies Indiana on his quest to stop the Nazis harnessing the lost city's power in 1939. Sophia wears a necklace containing the Atlantean King's consciousness: although Indiana frees her from its power, an alternate ending depicts her being consumed and dying.[81]

The Thunder in the Orient comic, set in 1938, has Sophia asked for Indiana's help securing a tablet by Buddha, which can help the reader achieve nirvana: The Empire of Japan wants it to unify Asia's 500 million budhists under its rule. Sophia is briefly captured by bandits in Afghanistan, before battling Japanese soldiers for the tablet on the Yangtze River and losing it.[82] In the 1999 video game sequel Indiana Jones and the Infernal Machine, Sophia is a Central Intelligence Agency officer in 1947. She accompanies Jones during his search for the Babylonian Infernal Machine. In the game's finale, she is possessed by the god Marduk, but Indiana frees her.[83]

In The Lost Journal of Indiana Jones, it states that around 1939, Sophia Hapgood retired from her archaeological career and traded her tools for a crystal ball. She claimed to possess the ability to contact the spirits of Atlantis, and curious historians became very interested in her.

[edit] Mei Ying

Mei Ying debuted in 2003 video game Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb for PC, PS2, and Xbox. She is voiced by actress Vivian Wu.

[edit] References

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