Leland Y Chee
Aug 01, 2007 01:42 PM
Ask about the Indycron database here.
E.T.F., Golden Boy
Aug 02, 2007 08:03 AM
Okay. What is it? Where is it?
Leland Y Chee
Aug 03, 2007 01:45 PM
The Indycron is our Indiana Jones continuity database, along the lines of the Holocron which we use for Star Wars. It includes story summaries, timelines, and entries for characters, objects, places, and events. It covers not only the movies, but the Indiana Jones TV shows, games, books, comics, and merchandise. We try to make things as consistent as possible so Indy doesn't get his hat twice or be introduced to Wu Han or Marcus Brody twice. We track things like when Indy was born, where and when he went to high school, when and where he got his college degrees, where he teaches and when, what kind of pistols does Indy use, what languages does Indy speak, and other things like that.
E.T.F., Golden Boy
Aug 06, 2007 02:42 PM
Cool! So how does one access the data in the Indycron? Or will you (Tasty) be the Keeper that we should just ask questions to in this thread?
Leland Y Chee
Aug 10, 2007 01:25 AM
The Indycron is the internal continuity database used primarily by Lucas Licensing. Neither the Indycron nor the Holocron are accessible to the public. I'll drop in on this thread on occasion to answer what questions I can.
E.T.F., Golden Boy
Aug 10, 2007 11:53 AM
More's the pity. Thank you for your willingness to do so.
So here's a couple of questions, I suppose: Old man Indy (from the Young Indy Chronicles) had an eyepatch. How did he lose the eye -- adventuring, diabetes, fork mishap, or what? If adventuring, is it from events we would seen in Indy IV or an as-yet-unchronicled adventure?
Leland Y Chee
Aug 10, 2007 01:54 PM
Hasn't been determined, though back in 1992 George Lucas responded to the question by saying "That's possible!" Of course, with the "Old man Indy" (played by George Hall) segments cut out of the VHS releases, the official continuity of older Indy has been in limbo.
PEZman4
Oct 16, 2007 03:23 AM
So, does the Indycron use a letter designation system like Holocron does? And if so, where, generally, does everything fall?
E.T.F., Golden Boy
Oct 26, 2007 08:22 AM
Have they been restored for the DVDs?
Leland Y Chee
Nov 05, 2007 01:55 PM
The Indycron assigns each entry to one of the following categories:
- Movie
- TV
- Licensing
- Non-Continuity
- Non-Fiction
The DVDs are based on the VHS release, so the George Hall scenes have not been restored.
E.T.F., Golden Boy
Nov 07, 2007 10:12 AM
Thanks. That makes them less attractive to me, though. I'm surprised that they wouldn't be included as bonus features, though.
Adam_wan_kenobi
Nov 12, 2007 12:12 AM
Tasty Taste, have you ever been told why exactly Mr. Lucas chose to remove the "Old Indy" bookends?
lukevanhorn
Jan 18, 2008 02:03 PM
Are "Movie" and "TV" the equivalent of G canon and "Licensing" the equivalent of C canon? If so, does this mean that there is nothing like the distinction between C and S canon for the Indycron?
Also, do you read German and French (for the German and French language books), or have someone on staff go through those for you who reads those languages? Or do you have some kind of official translation available?
Leland Y Chee
Feb 04, 2008 01:17 PM
Movie = G
TV = T
Licensing = C & S
I don't have translated versions of the foreign-language titles; just brief story synopsises.
TheShroudHasFallen
Mar 04, 2008 01:45 PM
1. So how does that language barrier affect the treatment of those stories regarding continuity?
2. Do cut scenes, like Old Indy, get the same treatment as disowned Star Wars scenes?
3. Where do educational books (Indiana Jones Explores) stand?
Leland Y Chee
Mar 07, 2008 02:24 PM
1. The books appear in our internal timelines, but because they aren't very accessible, the likelihood of them being referenced in other titles is much less likely.
2. I've never been told to treat the Old Indy material as non-continuity. Like Star Wars, we'd treat everything case-by-case.
3. They fall under a separate Non-Fiction category.
Lady Shada
Mar 21, 2008 08:58 AM
I honestly never knew about this before. Sounds rather interesting, and it's a shame that the public doesn't have a "catch-all" of information like this. It would be helpful and useful at times....though, now that I say that...what the heck would I use this info for? lol
1. Anyway, just curious where the fictional books come into play with the Indycron. I know there are some Indy stories out there, and I believe they had some young Indiana Jones tales as well. Are those considered canon and incorporated into the over-all storyline or Indiana Jones, or are they just skipped over and ignored?
UltimateManGod
Mar 22, 2008 02:27 PM
2. My question involves a discrepancy between the Young Indy series and the adult novel series. In Young Indy, he begins college in 1920, but in Indiana Jones and the Peril of Delphi, he's graduating in 1920. So what I'm trying to ask is how those two differing sources mesh, and whether one outweighs the other. I know the book came before the later Young Indy episodes.
TheShroudHasFallen
Mar 26, 2008 08:49 AM
3. Has it been harder to compile the Indycron compared to the Holocron? Has it been more difficult to reconcile contradictions when the material is mostly centred on one character taking part in real events as opposed to the Star Wars EU which has more room to move but more material?
And thank you for answering my previous questions.
Leland Y Chee
Mar 26, 2008 02:49 PM
1. The letter system described earlier in this thread refers to a continuity system which we use to resolve continuity discrepencies. Lucas Licensing considers everything part of a single continuity, but gives greater weight to the films and then the television shows when resolving discrepencies.
2. Now we're finally getting into the real continuity stuff here. Indy starts attending the University of Chicago in 1920, and graduates in 1922. Later that year he begins studying at the Sorbonne. Peril of Delphi actually covers two different periods of time.
3. We had an internal glossary to work from as the Indycron's foundation, so it wasn't difficult to get it up and running. There's also much less source material to deal with which naturally means less chance for discrepencies. And we've got real world history and locations to help with dates and maps. On the downside, I don't have as many coworkers here who know all of Indy as well as they know Star Wars (myself included, though I've learned fairly quickly).
TheShroudHasFallen
Mar 26, 2008 05:04 PM
1. Have it your way.
How many crystal skulls?
2. Anna Jones: influenza or scarlet fever?
3. And the Emperor's tomb... was Emperor Qin's Heart of the Dragon carrying head found in 1934 by architects who put it back on the body, placed it inside a magic vortex, redesigned the layout and then took that jewel encrusted map of the world as payment for Indy to re-open it in 1935?
And thank you again.
Adam_wan_kenobi
Mar 28, 2008 11:39 AM
The 1912 prologue to Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade shows Indy and his father living in Utah, with Anna not being present. The film seems to suggest that she is dead by this point. However, in "London, May 1916", Indy tells Vicky that his mother died "three years ago" (which would set her death at sometime in 1913), and this "three years" comment was made again in the bridging footage filmed in 1996-1997? for "Spring Break Adventure". So which is correct?
Leland Y Chee
Mar 28, 2008 04:28 PM
1. How many are there in the real world? In the Indy world, there's at least three maybe four. Crystal Skulls
2. Scarlet fever in 1912. Helen Seymour died of influenza.
3. Yet to be resolved.