@@MrZantkilleryup lol and when they’re escaping from Germany in the blimp he says “You’re old enough to be her grandfather..” and his dad replies “I’m just as human as the next guy” and Indie goes “I was the next guy!” 😅
yes I always thought it was funny even since the first time I saw the movie as a kid, the librarian stamps the book at the same time it booms against the floor, and he looks at it, like huh, poor old italian guy.
This entire scene is gorgeously shot. Look at how much Spielberg moves the camera, telling stories with it even when just shooting dialogue. The camera's constant anticipation of what the viewer will be or should be looking at is a big part of what makes Spielberg movies disarmingly easy to watch, and easy to follow for children and adults. And this scene is as good an example of that as any he's made.
@@geocross237 Didn't Stan Lee made a cameo as a librarian on the Spiderman Homecoming movie where Spiderman was after someone in a library and they were causing chaos behind Stan Lee's librarian but he heard nothing because he was wearing headphones.
SpSot You’re thinking of the amazing spider man with Andrew Garfield. Spider-Man was fighting the green lizard in the library. In Spider-Man Homecoming, he was in an apartment when he overheard Spider-Man stopping what he thought was an attempted car theft, only to find out that the man was merely entering his own car.
@@supermariogriffin4527 Exactly how I asked: when they discover the X, it's green/black on white tile, but when he smashed it, it's all green tile. The entire square.
@@nolansaylor7710 There are tons of books, not even of the movies or anything either. I personally like the ones written by Wolfgang Hohlbein best. Check them out in your local library if you want.
The set design team did a great job making the "X" subtle enough that you wouldn't notice it from up close, because the stone doesn't change color, just the reflectivity. But when shooting started, Spielberg barely ended up using the work, keeping the floor entirely hidden until the big reveal. Ironically, the set design team didn't do nearly as a good a job with the upstairs bookcase... I suspect that it wasn't originally part of the set, but Spielberg or the DP made a late decision that the "X marks the spot" shot needed to show a different background behind Indy, and they just grabbed a fake bookcase from downstairs that hadn't been intended for closeups. No plan survives first contact with the enemy, as they say.
"X never marks the spot." Later: "X marks the spot." Indy stood corrected at the sighting of the latter. The former is sometimes true. Any of you heard of false exits/entrances? Pharaohs put those in their pyramids to deter and confuse grave robbers.
pirates were dummies, so to remember were the treasures were buried they always had their treasures written on a ink on a cloth and the mark meaning is the x reveals the treasures of incalculable value.
*Christopher Dean:* They cut it before my favorite bit: "What's that?" "It's the Ark of the Covenant." "How do you know?" "Trust me." *Matt Bartley:* It's "Are you sure?" "Pretty sure…" *Christopher Dean:* How do you know? *Matt Bartley:* Trust me.
It would have been nice if they hadn't so obviously hid the floor in the preceding shots. Also the "X" was waaaay too prominent in the high angle shot. When he comes back down the x is barely visible.
It may seem minor, but - listen to their footfalls on the stone library floor. It’s SUCH a great, rich sound. You don’t really recognize it until you focus on it, but the foley work in the IJOT is so textured. It fully brings you into the world the movies inhabit.
I would just like to point out the level of craftsmanship needed to make an "X" THAT BIG not show up on marble at floor level but clearly when elevated. Amazing!!
Like all Indiana Jones Movie, this was perfection. With Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark, being the best, this can be easily said as the second best, and close to its first. With Legendary Casts, Soundtracks, and storyline made the movie what its worth. Harrison Ford & Sean Connery, was such an iconic duo on this film. Compared to the last, and it's critics, this one was a clear redemption, and one where we got so much more than we deserved. We got to see the many perspectives of Indiana Jones, some old classic characters returning, and a movie that was extra long for us, with an action pact timeline. Honestly sad that they don't make movies like these anymore, and that many of the cast are gone now, and may the legend Sean Connery rest in peace. In all Honesty here, if your looking for an action pact, comedic, and with adventure movie, this is it. What a blast it was to re-watch it during Christmas.
@foodbug I agree, it was very funny. Then when he put the stamp down, he was looking at it like he was saying "I'm never going to stamp books ever again, especially since the library has to be quiet even though the library is closed now."
I love how in history class, Professor Jones says “and X NEVER EVER marks the spot”… (talking crap about wives tales and folklore) yet in this scene he had to admit that X marks the spot 😂 There’s so much humor in this movie, I watched it probably 100 times as a kid. I absolutely love what a dim whit Markus Brody can be too 😂
Never really thought about it, but its a cool detail that the arrangement of the 3 and the 7 on the pillars and the 10 on the floor actually somehow resembles a simple math equation.
@mario.antonio He probably wanted to get a better look at it up high and/or maybe the bright light wasn't making the "X" too visible for him to see up close which is why he went up higher to see it.
Had to look this up because I just had an Indy moment. Was writing about a stained glass window in St John's Chester, which features a map and noted the fellow holding it appeared to be pointing at one spot. Looked at the spot on Google thinking "X never marks the spot" and found a very nice photo artifact - the shadow of a person who isn't there.
I love how in the movie Indiana asks his dad how he knew elsa was a nazi. He replies "She talks in her sleep". Then realised his dad tapped elsa before he did. Thus indy had his dad's sloppy seconds. Lol 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Alison Doody confessed in an interview which included Karen Allen and Kate Capshaw that she was jealous of Sean Connery in this movie. His character got the relationship with Indy rather than her. It was a father and son relationship, but she still got jealous.
The most beautiful girl in the trilogy (the last 2 didn't counts) and at least she doesn't scream every 2 minutes like Willie in the 2nd movie, i feel little sad when Elsa would reedem herself but her ambition kills her
Elsa is my favorite of the 3 women in the movies. She’s a strong, independent intellectual beauty. Not to mention she’s a doctor herself. I know she’s an antagonist and she later betrays Indy, but I think she made up her mind in the end when she, Donovan and Indy were in the room of the Holy Grail. It looks to me like she killed Donovan on purpose, and then she wanted her and Indy to have the Grail all to themselves. I’m actually really upset that she dies, but I guess she deserved it after not listening to the Knight.
I know this is late but he kind of did because the x was marked on with gloss so the light shone on it at a certain angle to see it properly that's why it's unclear when u see the floor again from a lower angle when they're breaking the tile.
Jesus Christ. Why are there so many people asking where the X went?! IT'S STILL THERE! I can understand if they're color blind (nothing wrong with that, just unfortunate. luckily there's color correction glasses) but my lord!
Two things to comment: 1. Now you said it, Indi. X does mark the spot. 2. Perfect timing, Indi. Smash the floor at the same time the librarian stamping the book
I am positive that a prestigious historical library would not let even Indiana Jones RUIN the tile floor with out checking into thing first. They quite possibly have removed that tile with out ruining it.
Had to watch it in hd to read... Damn, it took forever to load. Definitely it speaks of 1942-43. Was that done on purpose by Spielberg? I can't see him doing that kind of goofs on purpose. I know there are many anachronistic weapons and clothes in the movie though.
Hey this is great and all, for the record it's the same x just the light shone on the gloss differently when viewed from a lower angle, but nobody seems to be asking questions like how there's an archaeological site with Roman numerals and skulls at all in the United States. I don't get it.
One important question: How come no one discovered the entrance? Sure thing at some point they had to do some construction work or to lay some pipes and if not in the building, than in the streets...
The plot takes place in the year 1938, but when Indy looks in the grail diary, you can clearly read a note about marriage rates during the war in 1942 to 1943 and later (0:33). Indy, the time traveller ;)
0:33 Something seems a bit off about that particular clipping. Perhaps it's that this movie is set BEFORE all the years whose marriage rates are discussed in it.
I laugh at the Librarian Stamper he just doing his Stamp but then he Smacks it in the Book and gives off a Loud Bang! after the 3rd Time he put it down and now is Questioning the Stamp itself!
That X is literally only on the floor when Indy looks at it from the staircase. When he's hitting it with the post and climbing down, it's just a green square. Edit: You can very faintly make out a slightly darker X in the square.
Guys I'm.. well.. no one realized that when Jones climbs up the stairs there is a big X on the floor, but at minute 3:00 you can clearly see that in the same spot there is nothing, just green floor? It is not another place i think, the columns are the same we see on the X scene.. wtf?
If someone writes a M.C.U. fanfic which reuse the joke at 02:31 they could put in Stan Lee Cameo like: The heroes looked around in case someone saw them and smacked it against the floor with a loud crack just as the elderly, mustachoid librarian with backslicked silver har and big glasses stamped a book leaving him staring at the stamp and carefully place it on the table.
I wonder the actors name that plays the librarian? He was also in, very briefly, Batman in 1989. He was one of the gangsters surrounding the table where the Joker shakes the guys hand with the buzzer and crisps him into a skeleton.
31 years later and this movie is still absolutely gorgeous
The interactions between Ford and Connery are priceless.
... and its legacy will be destroyed this year with the newest one.
@@Muck006 Nah 👎👎👎
@@Muck006 it's already with crystal skull tbh
The glory of film cameras
3:04 "You don't disappoint Dr Jones, you're a great deal like your father"
Given what we find out later that has some extra meaning...
Oh, yeah, rsrs!
And what exactly do you mean, I've watch this movie dozens of times lol
@@paulgentili1425 Elsa sleeps with both of them. Hence the whole "She talks in her sleep" line from his dad later on.
@@MrZantkilleryup lol and when they’re escaping from Germany in the blimp he says “You’re old enough to be her grandfather..” and his dad replies “I’m just as human as the next guy” and Indie goes “I was the next guy!” 😅
This scene made me laugh so hard when the librarian thought he stamped the books hard.
Did the same thing to me too
Ethan Peterson lol same as well too funny as well 😂
WinVistaUser2 Same here man. I was laughing so hard.
Did anyone notice the x disappear after he broke the floor?
yes I always thought it was funny even since the first time I saw the movie as a kid, the librarian stamps the book at the same time it booms against the floor, and he looks at it, like huh, poor old italian guy.
The librarians face is priceless, always makes me laugh.
It is a silly joke though, because he would hear that the noise isnt coming from your stamp but rather elsewhere.
@@Muck006Timing is a big part of humor.
@@Muck006 In the novelization, the librarian concludes that his hearing is getting worse and decides to retire.
This entire scene is gorgeously shot. Look at how much Spielberg moves the camera, telling stories with it even when just shooting dialogue. The camera's constant anticipation of what the viewer will be or should be looking at is a big part of what makes Spielberg movies disarmingly easy to watch, and easy to follow for children and adults. And this scene is as good an example of that as any he's made.
Spielberg has always been a genius with the shots
Except for 2:03, the bookcase behind Indy is a comically terrible prop
Zzzzzzz
@@AlhazredsGamingGoowow, didnt notice that before. Thx
Agreed, here, lovely sweeping motion. 0:16
Is it weird that i totally imagine Stan Lee in place of the stamp guy?
ReduxEditor335 Nope, not at all, actually.
@@Saturnia2014 Seriously, that scene easily have worked as a Stan Lee cameo.
Rest his soul.
It’s funny because there were Indiana Jones comics made by Marvel in the 80s.
@@geocross237 Didn't Stan Lee made a cameo as a librarian on the Spiderman Homecoming movie where Spiderman was after someone in a library and they were causing chaos behind Stan Lee's librarian but he heard nothing because he was wearing headphones.
SpSot You’re thinking of the amazing spider man with Andrew Garfield. Spider-Man was fighting the green lizard in the library. In Spider-Man Homecoming, he was in an apartment when he overheard Spider-Man stopping what he thought was an attempted car theft, only to find out that the man was merely entering his own car.
I couldn't stop laughing at the librarian guy thinking his stamping was making loud noises. hahahaha
That made laugh a bit. There been same thing in Ice Age Dawn Of The Dinosaurs, where beaver thought that biting a stick made a loud noise.
I always find it funny how Indy says in the class that X never marks the spot and yet here it does.
Foreshadowing at its finest.
If it did, where did it go when Indy tries to smash the tile?
@@JacobdeFries what
@@supermariogriffin4527 Exactly how I asked: when they discover the X, it's green/black on white tile, but when he smashed it, it's all green tile. The entire square.
@@JacobdeFries because he blew away the white dust
It's even more hilarious if you read the book lol, the librarian in the book is so confused he's even contemplating retirement XD
Who the hell isn't contemplating retirement these days?
there are books?!
@@nolansaylor7710 - Novelizations.
@@nolansaylor7710 There are tons of books, not even of the movies or anything either. I personally like the ones written by Wolfgang Hohlbein best. Check them out in your local library if you want.
@@sonrouge Dave
I always thought it was amazing how the floor changes colors depending if you're standing on it or up high.
The set design team did a great job making the "X" subtle enough that you wouldn't notice it from up close, because the stone doesn't change color, just the reflectivity. But when shooting started, Spielberg barely ended up using the work, keeping the floor entirely hidden until the big reveal. Ironically, the set design team didn't do nearly as a good a job with the upstairs bookcase... I suspect that it wasn't originally part of the set, but Spielberg or the DP made a late decision that the "X marks the spot" shot needed to show a different background behind Indy, and they just grabbed a fake bookcase from downstairs that hadn't been intended for closeups. No plan survives first contact with the enemy, as they say.
Never got that I always thought it was a continuity error
"X never marks the spot"
NO UR WRONG
I know it is old. That is what I'm gonna comment that but you beat me. 😂
Never say never.
"X never marks the spot." Later:
"X marks the spot."
Indy stood corrected at the sighting of the latter. The former is sometimes true. Any of you heard of false exits/entrances? Pharaohs put those in their pyramids to deter and confuse grave robbers.
pirates were dummies, so to remember were the treasures were buried they always had their treasures written on a ink on a cloth and the mark meaning is the x reveals the treasures of incalculable value.
They cut it before my favourite bit.
Elsa; "what's that?"
Indy; "It's the Ark of the covenant"
Elsa; "How do you know?"
Indy; "Trust me."
I thought it was
"Are you sure?"
"Pretty sure..."
@@mattbartley2843 It might have been, haven't watched it for a while.
*Christopher Dean:* They cut it before my favorite bit:
"What's that?"
"It's the Ark of the Covenant."
"How do you know?"
"Trust me."
*Matt Bartley:* It's "Are you sure?" "Pretty sure…"
*Christopher Dean:* How do you know?
*Matt Bartley:* Trust me.
I caught it right away too.
The simple miracle of knowing how to block your shot. The grand track up the stairs and then the magnificent pan down to the ten. Magnifique.
I was just thinking how well executed that shot was.
It would have been nice if they hadn't so obviously hid the floor in the preceding shots. Also the "X" was waaaay too prominent in the high angle shot. When he comes back down the x is barely visible.
@@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 The whole idea is that it's not really visible except from a certain angle.
@@MaximusNYC I guess those ancients mastered optical tile.. Lol.
Now they use handheld camera and wildly shake it side to side.
This scene inspired the Da Vinci Code franchise
I've never noticed the very lovely fake bookshelf behind Indy at 2:03
i thought its real library 😟
It may seem minor, but - listen to their footfalls on the stone library floor. It’s SUCH a great, rich sound. You don’t really recognize it until you focus on it, but the foley work in the IJOT is so textured. It fully brings you into the world the movies inhabit.
I would just like to point out the level of craftsmanship needed to make an "X" THAT BIG not show up on marble at floor level but clearly when elevated. Amazing!!
Like all Indiana Jones Movie, this was perfection. With Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark, being the best, this can be easily said as the second best, and close to its first. With Legendary Casts, Soundtracks, and storyline made the movie what its worth. Harrison Ford & Sean Connery, was such an iconic duo on this film. Compared to the last, and it's critics, this one was a clear redemption, and one where we got so much more than we deserved. We got to see the many perspectives of Indiana Jones, some old classic characters returning, and a movie that was extra long for us, with an action pact timeline. Honestly sad that they don't make movies like these anymore, and that many of the cast are gone now, and may the legend Sean Connery rest in peace. In all Honesty here, if your looking for an action pact, comedic, and with adventure movie, this is it. What a blast it was to re-watch it during Christmas.
The Last Crusade is my fave of all the Indiana Jones movies! R.I.P. Sean Connery. :(
RIP Albert Evansky
, the actor who played the libararian
He was also one of the crime lords from Batman (1989) which was his final film role.
Pretty soon everyone who worked in that film will be dead.
The librarian stamp scene always had me laughing on the floor when I saw this lol Still does.
@foodbug I agree, it was very funny. Then when he put the stamp down, he was looking at it like he was saying "I'm never going to stamp books ever again, especially since the library has to be quiet even though the library is closed now."
I love how in history class, Professor Jones says “and X NEVER EVER marks the spot”… (talking crap about wives tales and folklore) yet in this scene he had to admit that X marks the spot 😂
There’s so much humor in this movie, I watched it probably 100 times as a kid. I absolutely love what a dim whit Markus Brody can be too 😂
lol yeah the books behind indy at 2:03 are totally fake.
Oh nice! But why? O.O
Buzzolan Leo because they’re not in a real Library and it saves time and money of renting a whole bunch of books
For an indiana jones film just think of it as another false wall with a secret behind it :P
And there is no more X on the floor at 2:55.
@@MatrixDiscovery The X is still there. Its just the perspective that makes it harder to see. It blends in with the green of the stone.
Glad Im not the only one who realizes the librarian looks like Einstein
2:48 my dad and I still chuckle at that part.
Never really thought about it, but its a cool detail that the arrangement of the 3 and the 7 on the pillars and the 10 on the floor actually somehow resembles a simple math equation.
Really? Which kind?
@@SaImanKayani You know. 3 plus 7 equals 10. And with the 10 being on the floor inbetween the pillars, its like the two numbers are combined there.
@@Mrstealth93 Interesting take, however I believe it would become further comprehensible if you employed the word "operation".
@@SaImanKayani Probably, but either way, interesting they designed the set piece that way, either intentionally or by accident.
Or it could be that the four points of the X equals 7 - 3.
I love how he needed to stand on something so high when anyone standing at a fair distance on the ground could see that it was an X.
@mario.antonio He probably wanted to get a better look at it up high and/or maybe the bright light wasn't making the "X" too visible for him to see up close which is why he went up higher to see it.
Love how he didn't really need to climb up those stairs to point at the giant X on the floor but did it for a dramatic camera shot.
It represents illumination.
Had to look this up because I just had an Indy moment. Was writing about a stained glass window in St John's Chester, which features a map and noted the fellow holding it appeared to be pointing at one spot. Looked at the spot on Google thinking "X never marks the spot" and found a very nice photo artifact - the shadow of a person who isn't there.
I love how in the movie Indiana asks his dad how he knew elsa was a nazi. He replies "She talks in her sleep". Then realised his dad tapped elsa before he did. Thus indy had his dad's sloppy seconds. Lol 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I’d still give her one! 👍🏻
I mean, the dad was probably also not the first guy she ever banged, don't know why he'd think he was 😂
@@NoriMori1992 thatsnot the point. Would you hit the sheets with a girl your dad pounded?
One of those movies I wish I forgot so I can experience it for the first time again
Such a great final movie to a classic trilogy!
2:32 my favourite part.
"Ships that pass in the night....." haha love this film and the dialog.
I love the moment just a bit later when they see a painting of the Ark on the wall, with just a hint of the theme.
I like how this is all done the three-piece suit and the dress
3:02 Indy hit the floor so hard he made the 'X' disappear!
I know Elsa is an antagonist but she's still my favorite
Alison Doody confessed in an interview which included Karen Allen and Kate Capshaw that she was jealous of Sean Connery in this movie. His character got the relationship with Indy rather than her. It was a father and son relationship, but she still got jealous.
Easily the hottest of the 3
The blonde dame, swell dish.
The most beautiful girl in the trilogy (the last 2 didn't counts) and at least she doesn't scream every 2 minutes like Willie in the 2nd movie, i feel little sad when Elsa would reedem herself but her ambition kills her
Elsa is my favorite of the 3 women in the movies. She’s a strong, independent intellectual beauty. Not to mention she’s a doctor herself. I know she’s an antagonist and she later betrays Indy, but I think she made up her mind in the end when she, Donovan and Indy were in the room of the Holy Grail. It looks to me like she killed Donovan on purpose, and then she wanted her and Indy to have the Grail all to themselves. I’m actually really upset that she dies, but I guess she deserved it after not listening to the Knight.
Her fault is her ambition
This Movie is a masterpiece.
2 things I learned from this movie are X never ever marks the spot, and X marks the spot
I really like Elsa’s look here
Nice hourglass figure. They don't make clothes like that anymore.
Beautiful face, body and hairstyle 😍😍😍
just now noticed the X disappears when he lifts up the panel XD
1:49 I love this staircase, it's so pretty!
2:03 the books in this library, kinda flat aren’t they?
Yeah looks like a prop lol
In a lot of older libraries the upper levels have those for decoration so the place seems fuller
lmao he didn't even need to go up the stairs to see that
I know this is late but he kind of did because the x was marked on with gloss so the light shone on it at a certain angle to see it properly that's why it's unclear when u see the floor again from a lower angle when they're breaking the tile.
@KrisGabby I think he just wanted to get a better look at the "X" which is why he went up the stairs.
Yes he did.
2:00 he sees it clear as day from upstairs.
2:56 we see it from a lower angle and the x is not as visible, it's barely there.
Robert Langdon is chuckling somewhere.
Jesus Christ. Why are there so many people asking where the X went?! IT'S STILL THERE! I can understand if they're color blind (nothing wrong with that, just unfortunate. luckily there's color correction glasses) but my lord!
Two things to comment:
1. Now you said it, Indi. X does mark the spot.
2. Perfect timing, Indi. Smash the floor at the same time the librarian stamping the book
I N D I
Catacombs under a library. Comparable to the Uncharted movie with tombs between a nightclub and pizza dining place. 😂
2:06 prop books behind harrison ford (they're an inch thick)! HA
Indy was wrong once he said x doesn't mark the spot but then x did mark the spot
2:25 - 2:52
Wish I could have witnessed the audiences reaction when this was in the theater.
I wish we had a library like that one in Venice 🥲🥺
2:03 the bookshelf behind Indy is fake
Don’t you just love those little things that they don’t think you’ll notice?
I am positive that a prestigious historical library would not let even Indiana Jones RUIN the tile floor with out checking into thing first. They quite possibly have removed that tile with out ruining it.
I mean he knows that. He didn’t ask permission because he knows they wouldn’t let him do it!
Because their going to even entertain an idea like that. Even someone as knowledgeable and respected as Indy wouldn't have been able to convince them
0:33 that paper clearly is anachronistic...
Why?
Martin Daniel it talks about ww2, when ww2 wouldn't occur until the following year...
Had to watch it in hd to read... Damn, it took forever to load.
Definitely it speaks of 1942-43. Was that done on purpose by Spielberg? I can't see him doing that kind of goofs on purpose.
I know there are many anachronistic weapons and clothes in the movie though.
As a kid, I always wondered why Albert Einstein was working in a library...
Oh, fun fact: he didn't work at a library, but he worked at a patent office.
@@jinclay4354 It's a joke. Einstein did his best stuff working as a patent clerk!
@@MrAllen-fv9cj
I knew it was a joke. I was just stating a fact I think is interesting, which I didn't know whether you knew.
@@jinclay4354 No worries :)
bloober for this scene, when pointing out the X on the floor vs when opened the floor, they don't match.
3:00 where did the X go?
+wolfumz its still there
It's very faint.
the light shines on the glossy coat
Looks a lot different than the X at 2:00
Hey this is great and all, for the record it's the same x just the light shone on the gloss differently when viewed from a lower angle, but nobody seems to be asking questions like how there's an archaeological site with Roman numerals and skulls at all in the United States. I don't get it.
Giant 20ft X right in the middle of the room:
Indy: wHeReS tHe X!?
Did anyone notice that you can’t see the X after he breaks through and goes in?
This scared me as a kid, especially when they went down where the rats were.
But did you laugh at the stamp scene? xD
@@FluffySylveonBoi No. I thought it was odd as a kid.
Awesome camerawork👌🏽
I'm onto you, Daron Nefcy.
Indy: X never marks the spot
Indy here: So that was a f-king lie.
I'd like a mystery crawl space like that in my house
Stamp making noises 🤣
2:31 ここからのシーン好きw
One important question: How come no one discovered the entrance? Sure thing at some point they had to do some construction work or to lay some pipes and if not in the building, than in the streets...
Best one out of them all in my opinion
2:02 X! X marks the spot!
The plot takes place in the year 1938, but when Indy looks in the grail diary, you can clearly read a note about marriage rates during the war in 1942 to 1943 and later (0:33). Indy, the time traveller ;)
He might literally be a time traveler now with the new movie
0:33 Something seems a bit off about that particular clipping. Perhaps it's that this movie is set BEFORE all the years whose marriage rates are discussed in it.
Seriously????? You bothered to read the clipping? You managed it at all? Even at full screen I can barely make it out.
Jeff Nathanson really knows how to write humour
I laugh at the Librarian Stamper he just doing his Stamp but then he Smacks it in the Book and gives off a Loud Bang! after the 3rd Time he put it down and now is Questioning the Stamp itself!
the face of this girl is telling she is villain from the beginning :))
All that art direction just on the floor for one joke! 😄
That X is literally only on the floor when Indy looks at it from the staircase. When he's hitting it with the post and climbing down, it's just a green square.
Edit: You can very faintly make out a slightly darker X in the square.
It appears the 'X' ran off to mark another spot sometime after Indy identified it but before he started smashing it.
Guys I'm.. well.. no one realized that when Jones climbs up the stairs there is a big X on the floor, but at minute 3:00 you can clearly see that in the same spot there is nothing, just green floor? It is not another place i think, the columns are the same we see on the X scene.. wtf?
We see it from the top of the stairs from Indy's perspective, which was clearer because of the light.
Look at it this way. At the libraries, some monitors has that thing you can see but sitting next to you cannot. Perspective.
i did not notice until now.. it is a different flow he is smashing.
Marcus Brody: Ah, yes. III, VII and X. That window seems to be the source of the Roman numeral.
favorite movie indian jones
I guess Einstein was a librarian before working in the patent office?
Guess so
The librarian looks like Einstein.
Some variation of him for sure!!!
That's exactly what I think
Ever noticed of clearly fake the bookcase behind Indy looks at 2:02 ? The one tiny thing I can't unsee in this great movie
I decided to search where "X marks the spot" came from. It was a mark for treasure on a map in Robert Louis Stevenson's _Treasure Island (1881-3)._
2:56 and the X is gone. Fucking hilarious!
No it’s not. It’s barely visible
Man, Coleman really gets around for a Butler.
😊mua!💋🥰 Harrison Ford que no deleitó con su papel de Indiana Jones inolvidable ,que cierto 👍
If someone writes a M.C.U. fanfic which reuse the joke at 02:31 they could put in Stan Lee Cameo like:
The heroes looked around in case someone saw them and smacked it against the floor with a loud crack just as the elderly, mustachoid librarian with backslicked silver har and big glasses stamped a book leaving him staring at the stamp and carefully place it on the table.
Later on Sean would ask Indy. "u call this archeology?" 😊
I wonder the actors name that plays the librarian? He was also in, very briefly, Batman in 1989. He was one of the gangsters surrounding the table where the Joker shakes the guys hand with the buzzer and crisps him into a skeleton.
The librarian looks an awful lot like christopher lee.
Weird how the books behind Indy when he climbs up to see the X are fake.
If you notice, the X is not the same when they start breaking it. The colours would be more pronounced even if they were standing over it
...I'VE SEEN THIS WINDOW BEFORE...YOU SEE, THE ROMAN NUMERALS...
Why were they better at making adventure movies back then?? I simply don't get it!?
X marks the spot is a movie, Film noir by George Shermann !
There is a lot of Asmr in this scene