Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny is an awestruck adventure for all times

Indiana Jones is back for a sweeping, meditative finale.

It’s really hard to make everyone happy when it comes to making movies. No matter how hard you try, you’re bound to run into resistance from any avenue you take. It doesn’t make it right, but it certainly makes it so.

MORE: Every Indiana Jones movie, ranked, and The Last Crusade isn’t first

For Lucasfilm, it’s been more than 20 years of trying to appease all sides of all expectations. Whether it’s with Star Wars or Indiana Jones, you either want what’s comfortable or you want something daring. You either want to recapture the nostalgia of what you had when you were a kid, or you want a subversive exercise in challenging what’s come before with new ideas.

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny straddles a very careful line between one of the most iconic templates in film history and a very peculiar moment in history. Like Indy walking on a rickety bridge over a river full of crocodiles, the film has to do a lot while still trying to stay true to itself.

Disney/Lucasfilm

It’s somewhat of a miracle that this latest Indiana Jones adventure finds what it does, especially with longtime director Steven Spielberg not in the director’s chair for the first time in the five-film run. Spielberg’s first four Indiana Jones adventures are all singular works, as they call came at various points in the legendary auteur’s career. Filmmaker James Mangold is the first person ever to excavate the caves of this franchise with fresh eyes.

If anything, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny somehow finds a way to give everyone what they want out of this series in some fashion or another. Do you want a globetrotting spectacle with creepy-crawlies, Nazi-punching, breakneck chases and treasures beyond belief? You’ve got it. Do you want a film that feels starkly different than what’s come before it, even down to the way the adventure is paced? Mangold can do that.

Much of the criticism for the previous Indiana Jones film Kingdom of the Crystal Skull feels disingenuine as time has passed, haphazard internet memes born into slapdash talking points without much weight. That film was Spielberg at his wiliest, a spiritual successor to Temple of Doom combined with the filmmaker’s endearing homage for the sock-hop society.

This latest Indiana Jones film feels right in place with The Last Crusade, as Mangold and company nail the contemplative nature of all of these films. While it’s easy to get fixated on the boulder chases and the historical artifacts, the Indiana Jones films have always been about discovering a world bigger than you. Harrison Ford has always brought the smirk and irreverence we love him for, but he’s also well aware of Indy’s inner awe for his journeys.

Disney/Lucasfilm

Despite the grandiosity of the adventures, Indiana Jones is just an average guy with a whip and fedora, trying to make sense of the supernatural, the terrifying and the downright divine converging on his moment in history. The movies are always made by Ford’s disarming sense of wonder and fear when things really hit the fan and all you can do is look in disbelief.

Mangold’s film doesn’t quite have the same momentum as the other Indy films, but it doesn’t need to. It finds perhaps Ford’s best performance in the series to hang its narrative, one that finds our hero dealing with the weight of his personal history and that of the world he’s in. He’s a man lost in time, and it’s fitting that he’s still battling with those nefarious Nazis over a device that could alter the course of history.

There’s more than enough here to satisfy the lifelong fan, just as there’s more than enough here for folks yearning for a fresh take on Indy’s galavanting. Ford’s more than up to the task, as are newcomers Phoebe Waller-Bridge (Jones’ goddaughter, a chip off the old block) and Mads Mikkelsen (a dastardly Nazi scientist from Jones’ past who wants to turn back the clock on the failures of the Third Reich).

The balancing act can get understandably tricky in spots for Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, but it makes it across the bridge in plenty of style. Like the films that come before it, this latest Indiana Jones film stays true to the title character. Through all the hand-wringing about what these movies are supposed to be, they always seem to get right what matters most.

New Marvel actor Harrison Ford claims he has absolutely no idea who the Red Hulk is

Will we see Ross transform into Red Hulk in Captain America: Brave New World?

If the Red Hulk is to appear in Captain America: Brave New World, Harrison Ford doesn’t know anything about it.

That what he says, at least, in a recent interview with Comicbook.com.

Ford is making the rounds with the media to promote his newest film, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny. But Ford is also set to join the Marvel Cinematic Universe soon, taking the reins of the character General Thaddeus E. “Thunderbolt” Ross in the new Captain America movie set for release next year. Ross was previously played by the late William Hurt, who died in 2022.

Ross made his on-screen debut in the MCU in The Incredible Hulk (2008) as a general who is hunting down Bruce Banner. By the time Captain America: Civil War (2016) rolls around, Ross has become Secretary of State.

In the comics, Ross eventually obtains the powers to transform into a Hulk-like figure, but one that is red, thus simply and appropriately named: Red Hulk. But Hurt’s Ross never transformed into Red Hulk on the big screen.

A few weeks ago, a photo from the Captain America set surfaced online, and it seemed to show Ford wearing ripped pants, leading a lot of folks to wonder if Ross’ transformation is coming in this film.

And so, at the end of this interview, Comicbook.com’s Jamie Jirak asks Ford, “Might we be seeing Mr. Ford as the Red Hulk?”

Ford keeps a straight face, takes a beat, and then deadpans: “What’s a Red Hulk?”

The 80-year-old actor then says Red Hulk “may or may not” appear in the new Captain America film.

Judge for yourself: Is Ford legitimately clueless about the MCU, or is he playing dumb here?

And stick around for a nod to Han Solo at the end.

Harrison Ford tearily delivered a touching Cannes award speech during Indiana Jones premiere

Harrison Ford is still the best.

As his latest globetrotting adventure Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny premiered at the Cannes Film Festival this week, franchise star Harrison Ford got a hero’s welcome in France.

Juxtaposed with the first public screening of the blockbuster sequel, Cannes played a highlight reel to honor Ford’s career and gave him an honorary Palme d’Or for his five decades of film achievement.

While he’s known for his gruff, sarcastic characters, Ford became overwhelmed with emotion at the honor and the praise from the audience who likely grew up watching Ford fight bad guys on the big screen.

“They say, when you’re about to die, you see your life flash before your eyes,” Ford said with a laugh after the montage of his best film moments. “And I just saw my life flash before my eyes, a great part of my life.”

Ford is one of the truly legendary actors in the profession, and he was richly deserving of such an honor on such a major stage in the movie world.

His latest Indiana Jones film hit theaters on June 30.

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny’s new trailer promises a treasure hunt for the ages

Check out the latest look at Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.

Indiana Jones is getting close to making his grand return to the silver screen.

At Friday’s Star Wars Celebration Europe festivities, Lucasfilm shared the latest look at the fifth film in the adventure series, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, coming from Logan and Ford v. Ferrari director James Mangold.

As you could imagine, the latest Indy film features a grizzled, determined Harrison Ford going on a treasure quest for the ages all while fighting off nefarious Nazis.

With this likely serving as Ford’s farewell to one of his iconic characters, you can bet that this will be as grand a finale for one of cinema’s most iconic characters.

The film will have its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival on May 18.

Ford is joined in this latest Indiana Jones adventure by franchise newcomers Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Mads Mikkelsen, Antonio Banderas, Boyd Holbrook, Shaunette Renée Wilson, Toby Jones and Thomas Kretschmann. 

Veteran actor John Rhys-Davies will return to the franchise after more than 30 years as Dr. Jones’ old friend Sallah.

The film is set for release in the United States on June 30.

Photo via Walt Disney Pictures/Lucasfilm. 

Harrison Ford and Ke Huy Quan share wholesome Indiana Jones reunion on stage at the Oscars

We’re not crying, you’re crying.

When Harrison Ford took the stage to present the final award of the evening — Best Picture — at the Oscars, it set up the possibility for a wonderfully heartwarming reunion. Ford, who played hunky archaeologist Indiana Jones in the popular movie series, acted alongside Everything Everywhere All At Once Best Supporting Actor Ke Huy Quan in 1984’s Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.

Quan was just 13 years old at the time, playing Jones’ spunky sidekick Short Round in the film.

Fast forward nearly 40 years and the two were able to reconnect in the most wholesome way. Quan detailed a story of running into Ford at Disney’s D23 event in October of 2022, and it was the cutest thing. Now they’ve added a new chapter as the duo embraced on stage after Ford announced Everything Everywhere All At Once as the year’s Best Picture.

What an incredible journey for these two actors.

MORE OSCARS: