Let's just start over.
Something very wrong is happening. In a post-apocalyptic scenario sometime after World War II, Marcus Brody is alone in a de-nuclearized desert town three hundred miles from Odessa, Ukranian U.S.S.R. A lone figure appears on the horizon. She was wearing a rapier and a late 1940s Soviet military uniform. Marcus Brody hurriedly informs the O.S.S. and snaps a picture, but it is too late. Irina Spalkov kills him.
What would Indy do if he found his dead comrade in that situation, or what would Indy do if he just found the photographic film?
Or try this one.
Henry Jones Sr. is traversing the Scottish Highlands in a wool-knitted sidesaddle on top of a mighty Clydesdale. It is the bleak of winter, and although the torrents of snow have not begun, the landscape looks desolate and forbidding. An East German military officer crackles a command in a radio, and the Sr. Jones does not have time to react before considering him a Nazi or a Communist. He falls over dead.
What would Indy do if he found his father in that situation, or what would he do after he finds a burnt-out shotgun, a handbook on how to survive in the Scottish wilderness dated 1896, and a passport from Nazi Germany (1943) and the Soviet Union's East Germany (1952)?