JoBlo:
I'll warn you up front that the audio and video quality of this clip is far from pristine but considering how rare this footage is, I hope you'll appreciate nonetheless.
As the Hollywood rumor went, Barbra Streisand showed up on the set of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and Steven Spielberg and crew hatched a plan for a little practical joke. While Harrison Ford was chained to the stone in Mola Ram's temple, about to be whipped (with his own whip) by the giant Thuggee goon, Barbra Streisand instead stepped in wearing a dominatrix outfit and begin whipping Ford.
From Cinelinx:
Is Kingdom of the Crystal Skull really the worst Indiana Jones movie out there? We dive into the beloved franchise to see and make the argument that Temple of Doom is as bad—or worse—than Crystal Skull is.
Personally speaking, I dislike Temple of Doom far more than Crystal Skull. I can sit through Crystal Skull and enjoy myself...while I get bored with Temple.
I was disappointed in the Crystal Skull myself. Aside from the fact that he got together with the first female character and the mother of his son and that rounded out the family, the rest of the story was a little drab.
Whaaaaa Temple of Doom is great, there's not really much wrong with it unlike the Crystal Skull
Kali maaaa... KALI MAAA... KALI MAAAAAAAAAA
Crystal Skull was an abomination should never have been made. Temple of Doom was awesome
Um, is this a real question?
Temple of Doom is a classic bro and not cause its old. That entire movie had my son dressing up as Indy for years at Halloween and humming the theme.
EB: Prequels in general are pretty bad, and that is mostly due to the major sins they commit in relation to their source material. Prequels sometimes invalidate, sometimes contradict, and most of the time they unearth a lot of the surprises and stories from the original work that can even take away credence from the original itself! The central thesis boils down to: prequels, I hate them.
What is that one movie you feel compelled to watch if it happens to come on television? Starring Brad Jones, Mat Williams, Dan Olson, Patrick Brogan, Jack Shen and Leon Thomas.
Now, that would have been really something if it was kept in the final cut.