"If I die because of this, I'll kill you."
STEVEN SPIELBERG - HIS DIRECTINGS
PART ONE
by Richard Karsmakers
What follows are extended details of all films Steven Spielberg
has ever directed. In case of him being the only director, this
is not mentioned. Only shared directors' credits are supplied.
The projects are offered in chronological order.
All of this information came from the Movie Database on the
Internet, movie@ibmpcug.co.uk. Thanks to Alan!
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NIGHT GALLERY (1969) (TV)
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Directors: Boris Sagal, Barry Shear and Steven Spielberg
Writer: Rod Serling
Composer: Billy Goldenberg
Director of Photography: Richard Batcheller
Editor: David Rawlins
Costume Designer: Burton Miller
Cast:
Barry Atwater....................Carson
Tom Basham.......................Gibbons
Tom Bosley.......................Resnick
Norma Crane......................Gretchen
Joan Crawford....................Miss Menlo
Ossie Davis......................Portifoy
Shannon Farnon...................First Nurse
Garry Goodrow....................Louis
Richard Hale.....................Doctor
Sam Jaffe........................Bleum
Richard Kiley....................Strobe
George Macready..................Hendricks
Roddy McDowall...................Jeremy
Byron Morrow.....................Packer
George Murdock...................First Agent
Barry Sullivan...................Dr. Heatherton
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DUEL (1971) (TV)
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Summary: David Mann is trying to drive his car across
California. When he tries to pass a gas tanker, the
driver somehow takes offence. At first the unseen
driver just annoys David by continually passing him and
slowing down. Then he starts playing mind games with
David, tempting him to pass the tanker, only to prevent
him when he tries. The story is seen from David's point
of view, with commentary as he thinks to himself.
Writer: Richard Matheson
Composer: Billy Goldenberg
Director of Photography: Jack A. Marta
Production Designer: Robert S. Smith
Cast:
Lucille Benson...................Lady at Snakerama
Amy Douglass.....................Old Woman in Car
Gene Dynarski....................Man in Cafe
Eddie Firestone..................Cafe owner
Tim Herbert......................Gas station attendant
Alexander Lockwood...............Old Man in Car
Carey Loftin.....................The Truck Driver
Shirley O'Hara...................Waitress
Charles Peel
Charles Seel.....................Old Man
Dale Van Sickel..................Car Driver
Dennis Weaver....................David Mann
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SOMETHING EVIL (1972) (TV)
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Writer: Robert Clouse
Composer: Wladimir Selinsky
Cast:
Margaret Avery
Ralph Bellamy
Jeff Corey
Sandy Dennis
Darren McGavin
John Rubinstein
Steven Spielberg
Johnny Whitaker
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SAVAGE (1973) (TV)
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Writers: Richard Levinson, William Link and Mark Rodgers
Composer: Gil Melle
Cast:
Barbara Bain
Michele Carey
Dabney Coleman
Will Geer
Pat Harrington Jr.
Susan Howard
Martin Landau
Paul Richards
Barry Sullivan
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SUGARLAND EXPRESS, THE (1974)
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Writers: Hal Barwood and Matthew Robbins
Composer: John (II) Williams
Director of Photography: Vilmos Zsigmond
Editors: Edward M. Abroms and Verna Fields
Production Designer: Joe Alves
Cast:
William Atherton.................Clovis Poplin
A.L. Camp........................Mr. Nocker
Jessie Lee Fulton................Mrs. Nocker
Ted Grossman.....................Dietz
Goldie Hawn......................Lou Jean Poplin
Ben Johnson......................Captain Tanner
Steve Kanaly.....................Jessup
Louise Latham....................Mrs. Looby
Michael Sacks....................Maxwell Slide
Dean Smith.......................Russ Berry
Bill Thurman.....................Hunter
Gregory Walcott..................Mashburn
Harrison Zanuck..................Baby Langston
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JAWS (1975)
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Summary: The peaceful community of Amity island is being
terrorised. There is something in the sea that is
attacking swimmers. They can no longer enjoy the sea
and the sun as they used to, and the spreading fear is
affecting the numbers of tourists that are normally
attracted to this island. After many attempts the great
white shark won't go away and sheriff Brody, with
friends Hooper and Quint decide to go after the shark
and kill it.
Writers: Peter Benchley and Carl Gottlieb
Composer: John (II) Williams
Director of Photography: Bill Butler
Editor: Verna Fields (AA)
Production Designer: Joe Alves
Cast:
Susan Backlinie..................Chrissie
Peter Benchley...................Interviewer
Richard Dreyfuss.................Hooper
Lee Fierro.......................Mrs. Kintner
Jonathon Filley..................Cassidy
Lorraine Gary....................Ellen Brody
Carl Gottlieb....................Meadows
Ted Grossman.....................Estuary Victim
Murray Hamilton..................Vaughan
Craig Kingsbury..................Ben Gardner
Jeffrey Kramer...................Hendricks
Jay Mello........................Sean Brody
Dr. Robert Nevin.................Medical Examiner
Chris Rebello....................Michael Brody
Roy Scheider.....................Brody
Robert Shaw......................Quint
Jeffrey Voorhees.................Alex Kintner
Trivia:
- Sterling Hayden was the original choice for the role of
Quint. Hayden, however, was in trouble with the Internal
Revenue Service for unpaid tax. All Hayden's income from
acting was subject to a levy by the IRS, so there was an
attempt to circumvent that: Hayden was also a writer, so
one idea was to pay him union scale for his acting, and buy
a story from him (his literary income wasn't subject to
levy) for a large sum. It was concluded that the IRS would
see through this scheme, so Robert Shaw was cast instead.
- The live shark footage was shot at Seal Rocks, Australia. A
real white pointer was cut up and 'extended' for the close-
up shots.
- The helicopter used for flying patrol is an Enstrom
'Tigershark'.
- A midget in a miniature cage and a real shark were used to
get some shots correct.
- Cameo appearance by Peter Benchley (reporter on the beach).
- Apparently, technicians lost control of one of the
mechanical sharks, and it was lost at sea.
- In many scenes, actors Roy Scheider, Richard Dreyfuss, and
Shaw had to look in amazement at the shark, when it was not
there are all.
- Preview audiences screamed when the head of a shark victim
appears in the hole in the bottom of the boat. Spielberg
re-shot the scene in his swimming pool because he wanted
them to 'scream louder'.
- Spielberg says that Dreyfuss is his alter ego.
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CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND (1977)
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Summary: Roy Neary sets out to investigate a power outage when
his truck stalls and he is bathed in light from above.
After this, strange visions and five musical notes keep
running through his mind. Will he find the meaning of
the visions, and who - or what - placed them in his
mind ?
Planes reported missing in 1945 suddenly appear in the
Mojave desert. A commercial flight is buzzed by a
'bright' object that the pilot 'wouldn't know how to
describe'. Roy Neary, while working one night, has a
Close Encounter...
PL: The US Government determine where the visitors plan
to land and create an elaborate cover-up to keep people
away. However, a group of people, including Neary,
share a vision which draws them to the place and a
meeting with new, and old, friends.
Writer: Steven Spielberg
Composer: John (II) Williams
Director of Photography: Vilmos Zsigmond
Editor: Michael Kahn
Production Designers: Joe Alves and Dan Lomino
Cast:
David Anderson...................Air Traffic Controller
Keith Atkinson...................Dirty Tricks #2
Bob Balaban......................David Laughlin
Norman Bartolo...................Ohio Tolls
Hal Barwood......................Returnee #2 Flt. 19
Shawn Bishop.....................Neary Children
Roberts Blossom..................Farmer
Robert Broyles...................Dirty Tricks #3
Adrienne Campbell................Neary Children
Merrill Connally.................Team Leader
Luis Contreras...................Federale
George DiCenzo...................Major Benchley
Melinda Dillon...................Jillian Guiler
Philip Dodds.....................Jean Claude
Amy Douglass.....................Implantee
Justin Dreyfuss..................Neary Children
Richard Dreyfuss.................Roy Neary
Gene Dynarski....................Ike
Matt Emery.......................Special Leader
Roger Ernest.....................Highway Patrolman
John Ewing.......................Dirty Tricks #1
Mary Gafrey......................Mrs. Harris
Teri Garr........................Ronnie Neary
Cary Guffey......................Barry Guiler
Richard L. Hawkins...............Air Traffic Controller
Lance Henriksen..................Robert
Randy Herman.....................Returnee #1 Flt. 19
Tom Howard.......................Radio Telescope Team
John Dennis Johnston.............Special Forces
James Keane......................Radio Telescope Team
Warren J. Kemmerling.............Wild Bill
Alexander Lockwood...............Implantee
Dennis McMullen..................Radio Telescope Team
J. Patrick McNamara..............Project Leader
Daniel Nunez.....................Federale
F.J. O'Neil......................ARP Project Member
Gene Rader.......................Hawker
Kirk Raymond.....................Dirty Tricks #4
Roy E. Richards..................Air East Pilot
Matthew Robbins..................Returnee #3 Flt. 19
Craig Shreeve....................Air Traffic
Josef Sommer.....................Larry Butler
Richard Stuart...................Truck Dispatcher
Galen Thompson...................Special Forces
Bill Thurman.....................Air Traffic
Francois Truffaut................Claude Lacombe
Carl Weathers....................Military Police
Bob Westmoreland.................Load Dispatcher
Cy Young.........................Radio Telescope Team
Trivia:
- The working title was 'Watch the Skies'; the closing words
from "The Thing From Another World".
- Barry is shown to be surprised by the extraterrestrials.
Director Steven Spielberg dressed up in a gorilla suit and
was off camera while actor Carey Guffey's surprise reaction
was filmed.
- In the original version, there is a long scene of Roy Neary
tears up his and a neighbour's back yard for materials with
which to build a model of Devil's Tower. This scene is not
in 'The Special Edition' but was replaced by a scene (the
night before) in which his wife discovers him crying, fully
clothed, under a running hot shower. A family fight ensues,
but this entire scene was not seen in the original version.
Also, additional footage was shot for 'The Special Edition'
that shows Roy Neary inside the alien mothership at the end
of the movie.
- SFX man Douglas Trumbull created the cloud effects by
injecting white paint into tanks of salt and fresh water.
- It is possible to see an upside down R2-D2 (from "Star
Wars", etc) in part of the large spacecraft that flys over
Devil's Mountain. The SFX people needed more detail, and so
supposedly there are many more such items, such as a shark
from "Jaws" (Also directed by Spielberg), etc. R2-D2 is
visible as Barry's mother first sees the mothership up close
from her hiding place in the rocks.
- The watch that Roy Neary wears only shows the time when he
presses a button on it. During filming the watch remains
blank. This is to avoid continuity errors.
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1941 (1979)
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Writers: Bob Gale, John Milius and Robert Zemeckis
Composer: John (II) Williams
Director of Photography: William A. Fraker
Production Designer: Dean Edward Mitzner
Cast:
Nancy Allen
Dan Aykroyd
Ned Beatty
John Belushi
John Candy
Elisha Cook Jr.
Eddie Deezen
Bobby DiCicco
Lorraine Gary
Murray Hamilton
Dianne Kay
John Landis
Christopher Lee
Patti LuPone
Penny Marshall
Tim Matheson
Toshiro Mifune
Warren Oates
Slim Pickens
Mickey Rourke
Wendie Jo Sperber
Robert Stack
Dub Taylor
Treat Williams
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RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK (1981)
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Summary: Renowned archeologist and expert in the occult, Dr.
Indiana Jones, is hired by the U.S. Government to find
the Ark of the Covenant, which is believed to still
hold the ten commandments. Unfortunately, agents of
Hitler are also after the Ark. Indy, and his ex-flame
Marion, escape from various close scrapes in a quest
that takes them from Nepal to Cairo.
Writer: Lawrence Kasdan
Composer: John (II) Williams
Director of Photography: Douglas Slocombe
Editor: Michael Kahn
Production Designers: Leslie Dilley and Norman Reynolds
Cast:
Karen Allen......................Marion Ravenwood
Ishaq Bux........................Omar
Anthony Chinn....................Mohan
Patrick Durkin...................Australian Climber
Denholm Elliott..................Brody
Don Fellows......................Colonel Musgrove
Harrison Ford....................Indiana Jones
Christopher Frederick............Otto
Paul Freeman.....................Belloq
Anthony Higgins..................Gobler
William Hootkins.................Major Eaton
Wolf Kahler......................Dietrich
Ronald Lacey.....................Toht
Tutte Lemkow.....................Imam
Souad Messaoudi..................Fayah
Alfred Molina....................Satipo
Bill Reimbold....................Bureaucrat
John Rhys-Davies.................Sallah
Pat Roach........................Giant Sherpa
Kiran Shah.......................Abu
Fred Sorenson....................Jock
Vic Tablian......................Barranca
Trivia:
- Begins with a shot of a peak in the jungle which is
reminiscent of the Paramount Pictures logo. See also
("Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom", and "Indiana Jones
and the Last Crusade").
- Tom Selleck originally cast as Indiana Jones.
- Frank Marshall (the film's producer) played the airline
pilot.
- Jock's airplane at the beginning has the registration number
"OB-3PO", referring to Obi-wan and C-3PO from "Star Wars".
- Script originally included a long fight between a swordsman
and Indiana with his whip. Actor Harrison Ford was
suffering diarrhea at the time, and asked "Why don't I just
shoot him?", so they filmed this instead.
- The truck that didn't have Marion in it was flipped over by
firing a section of a telephone pole through the
floorboards.
- The hieroglyphics in the map room include engravings of R2-
D2 and C-3PO (from "Star Wars", etc), however they do not
appear on film.
Goofs:
- In the scene where Indy is driving the truck carrying the
Ark, he collides with an elevated water irrigation channel.
One view of the truck shows that a luggage rack on the top
of the cabin comes loose. The next scene shows the luggage
rack firmly attached. One of the German escorts uses this
rack when he swings through the door and kicks Indy in the
shoulder.
- In the scene where Indy and Marion emerge from their
entombment in the crypt after crashing through a wall with a
statue. Indy pushes a massive stone block out of the outside
wall - and you can see from the block's shadow that when it
hits the ground, it bounces!
- Note the tell-tale reflection of the glass pane that keeps
Harrison Ford safe during his tete-a-tete with the cobra.
- Indy goes to Marion's bar to get the medallion. She tells
him to get lost. After he leaves she sits down and pulls
the medallion, which she is wearing on a chain around he
neck, out of her blouse. Straight-on shot of Meriam looking
at the medallion with the chain still around her neck. Cut
to a profile shot where she is still looking at the
medallion and the chain is no longer around her neck.
- When the truck explodes, you can see the pole shooting out
of the bottom of it to make it tip over as if the explosion
was real.
- When Indy finds Marion in the tent after he thinks she is
dead, he unties the gag in her mouth. He then ties it back
catching a lot of her hair in it. The camera changes, and
there is no more hair caught in the gag.
- When they go to see the old man about the writing on the
medalion, he tells them that the staff should be 6 kadams to
which Indy states that is about 72 inches. Then the old man
says to remove 1 kadam. Simple math dictates that the staff
should be 60 inches or 5 feet tall. When Indy is later in
the map room, he inserts the staff into the hole and the
mounted medalion is over his head. I don't think Harrison
Ford is less than 5 feet tall. (Editor's note: This is true.
People have written to me saying that he could be on the
steps when he puts the staff into the hole. Actually in the
letterboxed version of the film, you see his feet on the
platform when he sicks the staff in the hole proving that
this is indeed a goof)
- When Indiana leaps aboard the German submarine on its way to
the island to open the Ark, he is on the outside. Then the
Uboat captain shouts "tauchen, tauchen" meaning "dive,
dive"! (Editor's note: In the original script, the submarine
made it all the way to the island with its periscope up
which is how Indy made it there)
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E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL (1982)
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Summary: A group of aliens visit earth and one of them is lost
and left behind stranded on this planet. The alien is
found by a 10 year old boy, Elliot. Soon the two begin
to communicate, and start a different kind of
friendship in which E.T learns about life on earth and
Elliot learns about some new values for the true
meaning of friendship. E.T. wants to go home, but if
Elliot helps him, he'll lose a friend...
Writer: Melissa Mathison
Composer: John (II) Williams
Director of Photography: Allen Daviau
Editor: Carol Littleton
Production Designer: James D. Bissell
Cast:
Drew Barrymore...................Gertie
Robert Barton....................Ultra Sound Man
Peter Coyote.....................Keys
Michael Durrell..................Van Man
Erika Eleniak....................Pretty Girl
Sean Frye........................Steve
C. Thomas Howell.................Tyler
Robert MacNaughton...............Michael
K.C. Martel......................Greg
David Odell......................Schoolboy
Richard Swingler.................Science Teacher
Henry Thomas.....................Elliott
Frank Toth.......................Policeman
Dee Wallace-Stone................Mary
Debra Winger (voice).............Voice of E.T. (uncredited)
Trivia:
- ET's face was modeled after poet Carl Sandburg and Albert
Einstein.
- Harrison Ford played the school principal, but his scenes
were cut. There is a rumour that you can still see his
back. Ford's wife Melissa Mathison wrote the screenplay.
- The M&M's people refused to allow their product appear in
the film, so the producers got "Reese's Pieces" instead.
Sales for "Reese's Pieces" skyrocketed after the movie's
release.
- The extraterrestrial's plant collection includes a triffid
(from "The Day of the Triffids").
- ET's voice was performed by Debra Winger.
- This movie has earned a total of $965 million by 1989. As a
token of their appreciation for the movie's success,
Universal Studios gave Spielberg some studios in California,
which are now occupied by Amblin (Spielberg's production
company).
Goofs:
- Did anyone else notice in E.T. that for about one second,
you see Ellioit wreck his bike? He has E.T. in the front
and everything. It flashed really quick, and most people
didn't see it. I only saw it the second time I saw it
because a friend had noticed it the time before, so I was
looking. The guy I was with didn't catch it though.
- When Eliot first sees ET in the storage shed, watch him and
the boy sitting next to him at the table after he runs in to
tell his brother's friends. As he's telling them of his
amazing discovery, the boy next to him is mouthing the lines
along with Eliot.
- Last scene, E.T. getting on ship and waving goodbye: <om
kneels down - twice. Kid standing next to dog, cut to ship,
kid holding dog by collar, cut to ship, kid standing next to
dog.
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Twilight Zone - The Movie (1983)
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Directors: Joe Dante (segment 3), John Landis (segment 1), George
(II) Miller (segment 4) and Steven Spielberg (segment 2)
Writers: George Clayton Johnson, John Landis, Richard Matheson
and Josh Rogan
Composer: Jerry Goldsmith
Directors of Photography: Allen Daviau (segment 2,4) and Stevan
Larner
Cast:
Domingo Ambriz...................G.I.
Dan Aykroyd......................Passenger
Jeffrey Bannister................Charlie
Patricia Barry...................Mother
Stephen Bishop...................Charming G.I.
Peter Brocco.....................Mr. Mute
Albert Brooks....................Driver
Thomas Byrd......................G.I.
Nancy Cartwright.................Ethel
Larry Cedar......................Creature
Annette Claudier.................French Mother
Scatman Crothers.................Mr. Bloom
Cherie Currie....................Sara
Selma Diamond....................Mrs. Weinstein
Donna Dixon......................Jr. Stewardess
Eddy Donno.......................K.K.K.
Sue Dugan........................Waitress No. 1
Christopher Eisenmann............Young Mr. Mute
Tanya Fenmore....................Young Mrs. Weinstein
Margaret Fitzgerald..............Young Girl
Eduard Franz.....................Old Man
Martin Garner....................Mr. Weinstein
Charles Hallahan.................Ray
Alan Haufrect....................Mr. Conroy's Son
Joseph Hieu......................Vietnamese
Vincent J. Isaac.................G.I.
John Dennis Johnston.............Co-Pilot
Charles Knapp....................Sky Marshall
Jeffrey Lampert..................Mechanic No. 1
Abbe Lane........................Sr. Stewardess
John Larroquette.................K.K.K.
Al Leong
Jeremy Licht.....................Anthony
John Lithgow.....................Valentine
Murray Matheson..................Mr. Agee
Kevin McCarthy...................Uncle Walt
Byron McFarland..................Pilot Announcement
Doug McGrath.....................Larry
Burgess Meredith
Michael Milgram..................K.K.K.
Dick Miller......................Walter Paisley
Laura Mooney.....................Young Mrs. Dempsey
Vic Morrow.......................Bill
Bill Mumy........................Tim
Scott Nemes......................Young Mr. Weinstein
Christina Nigra..................Little Girl
Priscilla Pointer................Miss Cox
Debby Porter.....................Waitress No. 2
Kathleen Quinlan.................Helen Foley
Bill Quinn.......................Mr. Conroy
Elsa Raven.......................Nurse No. 2
Evan Richards....................Young Mr. Agee
William Schallert................Father
Lonna Schwab.....................Mother
Carol Serling....................Passenger
Helen Shaw.......................Mrs. Dempsey
Cheryl Socher....................Mr. Conroy's Daughter-in-Law
Richard Swingler.................Mr. Gray Panther
William B. Taylor................G.I.
Frank Toth.......................Mechanic No. 2
Norbert Weisser..................Soldier No. 1
Jeffrey Weissman.................Young Man
Margaret Wheeler.................Old Woman
Steven Williams..................Bar Patron
Kai Wulff........................German Officer
Trivia:
- Mention is made of Seargeant Neidermeyer getting 'fragged'
by his own troops. This was the fate given to Neidermeyer
in the ending of "Animal House", also directed by John
Landis.
- On 23rd July, 1982, actor Vic Morrow, plus two juvenile
Asian actors were killed during an accident on set. SFX
caused a helicopter to crash, killing all three instantly.
A decade later, director John Landis and four others were
found not guilty of involuntary manslaughter.
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INDIANA JONES AND THE TEMPLE OF DOOM (1984)
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Summary: Renowned archeologist and expert in the occult, Dr.
Indiana Jones, is back in action in the 2nd Indy film.
He teams up with a night club singer and a 12 year old
named Short Round. They end up in an Indian village,
where the people believe evil spirits have taken their
children away after a sacred stone was stolen.
Indiana agrees to try and retrieve the stone for the
villagers.
Writers: Willard Huyck, Gloria Katz and George Lucas
Composer: John (II) Williams
Director of Photography: Douglas Slocombe
Editor: Michael Kahn
Production Designers: Alan Cassie and Elliot Scott
Costume Designer: Anthony Powell
Cast:
Dan Aykroyd
Kate Capshaw.....................Willie Scott
Roy Chiao........................Lao Che
Harrison Ford....................Indiana Jones
Ke Huy-Quan......................Short Round
Dharmadasa Kuruppu...............Chieftain of the village
D.R. Nanayakkaru.................Shaman of the village
Amrish Puri......................Mola Ram
Jonathan Ke Quan
Pat Roach........................Chief guard
Roshan Seth......................Chattar Lal
Raj Singh........................Little maharaja
Philip Stone.....................Captain Blumburtt
George Wendt
David Yip........................Wu Han
Ric Young........................Kao Kan
Trivia:
- Begins with a shot of a mountain on a gong which is
reminiscent of the Paramount Pictures logo. See also
("Raiders of the Lost Ark", and "Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade").
- Short Round was named after screenwriter Willard Huyck's
dog, which was named after the orphan in "The Steel Helmet".
- The club at the beginning is called "Club Obi Wan", a
reference to a "Star Wars" character.
- Shots of mining-car roller-coaster ride done with models and
a 35mm camera modified to hold extra film.
- Rehash of the 'shooting the swordsman' joke from "Raiders of
the Lost Ark".
- Suspension bridge only shown from one side, to avoid showing
the Grand Coulee Dam.
- Kate Capshaw and Steven Spielberg are married.
- Cameo appearances of Dan Aykroyd (meets Indiana at the
airport at the beginning), producer Frank Marshall (a
tourist in the background in the airport scene at the
beginning) and Steven Spielberg (a tourist in the background
in the airport scene at the beginning).
Goofs:
- In the long shots of Indy on the rope bridge when he has
thugees on either side of him, the thugees are much further
from him than in the close up shots. Note that this is not a
deceptive camera angle, it is quite clearly the case.
- When the rope bridge is cut and Indy is climbing up, the
stuntman is far thinner than Harrison Ford.
- In the finale when the kids are returning to their mothers,
one kid is boosted up to his mother. You can see the
assistant's white hands for a second helping the kid up to
the mother.
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