Wouldn't that the British? There was no Israel, just the Mandatory PalestineIt should have been returned to Israeli authorities, such that they were at the time.
Is the Ark actually an analogy for nuclear weaponry? The Nazis are trying to beat the Allies to it, it's deployed in a limited manner, scores a victory and the US then tries to keep it under wraps from everyone else.
Yep.Wasn't there some deleted scene in Raiders where the translator Indy took the Medallion too with Sallah outright tells Jones that he must not look into the Ark?
Yes, I'm aware but as a cultural icon it would warrant at least making them aware of it's existence.Wouldn't that the British? There was no Israel, just the Mandatory Palestine
I'd think the religious leaders then. Which at the time would have been the Chief Rabbis.Yes, I'm aware but as a cultural icon it would warrant at least making them aware of it's existence.
Thank you. Why did delete them? They seem quite important bits of info!Reminds me a bit of the discussion of how to mark hazardous nuclear waste, with the idea that no language or symbol could be guaranteed to be correctly interpreted by a future civilization that could be completely disconnected from our own, either due to some catastrophe or simply from thousands of years of cumulative cultural drift.
There's also the issue that even if the warning was understandable, would it be believed, or would it just be regarded as superstition and coincidence (for a society that was rational, but also hadn't rediscovered the concept of radiation)? "Ooh, you believe in the curse of the desert mountain, that it causes sickness and death to all who violate it? It's just a creepy coincidence that all those archeologists died young. Don't be silly."
Yep.
A plot element involving the Ark of the Covenant was cut from the film and is only hinted at during the finale when the Ark is opened. Basically, there were 2 rules about the Ark not mentioned in the final cut of the film:
This is first explained in additional dialogue for the scene when Indy and Sallah visit Imam. Before translating the writings on the headpiece that give the height of the Staff of Ra, Imam warns Indy not to touch the Ark or look at it when it is opened.
- If you touch the Ark, you die.
- If you look at the Ark when it is opened, you die.
The next scene involving this Ark subplot is when Sallah and Indy remove the Ark from the Well of the Souls. When Sallah first sees it he reaches out to touch it. Indy stops him before he does and reminds him of Imam's warning. Then they insert long poles through each side of the Ark to lift it out of its crypt.
Notice that nobody ever touches the Ark throughout the rest of the film until the finale.
Thank you. Why did delete them? They seem quite important bits of info!
No. Only direct contact with the Ark is problematic. Hence the reason for the poles.Ah, but if you touch the poles that touched the Ark, haven't you touched the Ark by the transitive property of touching?
I'm just not sure how Ark cooties work.
It does react to its surroundings.No. Only direct contact with the Ark is problematic. Hence the reason for the poles.
At the government for apparently misplacing and/or hiding away the Ark?
Did he think it should try to be used as energy or weapon against the Nazis or did he just want it to be displayed in a museum, if so why did he feel so strongly that way? The film itself I think seemed to argue more against his position, argue that the Ark ending up still lost, unused, unrecognized was ironic but appropriate.
No. Only direct contact with the Ark is problematic. Hence the reason for the poles.
Correct. The Israelites are forbidden to touch it. In one story, when the Ark is sent from one city to another, it is sent on a cart pulled by oxen, and they stumble, a man reaches out to keep it from falling and is struck dead.That bit is actually in the Bible, right?
Indiana Jones is pissed because he is not the hero of the story. His name didn't originally feature in the title of the movie. The Lost Ark is the actual subject of the film.
My post and the paragraph above were throwaway jests and should not be taken seriously.
It was pretty obvious. Not the first time we've been down this road.You should've said so in the first place instead of wasting my time.
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