InBanana Jones
Member
When I was ten and ROTLA burst upon the world, it not only opened up my imagination, but my friends and I thought of the 1930s as a great, adventurous time. We were fixated on Marvel Comics' ROTLA adaptation and the fact that it gave the date of the Peru adventure as 1936. We started reading up on Nazis and WWII more than before (we always had an interest) and we began asking our parents about old movies that may have been like Raiders.
As an adult, I find myself delving into that decade which has become a source of fascination for me: the music, the movies, the art, literature, world events, the politics, fashion, etc. I think that my childhood exposure to Indy's world stayed with me and eventually jump started an ongoing interest that has only gotten more intense as the years go by.
How 'bout you? Have the Indy movies gotten you interested in his era? How so?
As an adult, I find myself delving into that decade which has become a source of fascination for me: the music, the movies, the art, literature, world events, the politics, fashion, etc. I think that my childhood exposure to Indy's world stayed with me and eventually jump started an ongoing interest that has only gotten more intense as the years go by.
How 'bout you? Have the Indy movies gotten you interested in his era? How so?