Joe Brody
Well-known member
Finn said:. . . .there is a wide ravine between the college Indy and adventure Indy, nearly so wide that they could be taken as two different character. . . .
Shades of the old 'Is Indy a Superhero' thread?
Finn said:. . . .there is a wide ravine between the college Indy and adventure Indy, nearly so wide that they could be taken as two different character. . . .
My Whips Bigger said:I think the guy was in love with Indy secretly, but because Marcus was there, he felt a bit embarrased about it.
Pale Horse said:per se.
Indyologist said:My Whips, you are baaaaad!
Cut it out, dirty mind.</small>VP said:Finn, I know this is a wanha one, but I just had to.
My Whips Bigger said:I think the guy was in love with Indy secretly, but because Marcus was there, he felt a bit embarrased about it.
Attila the Professor said:has anyone ever heard about how The Wizard of Oz is supposedly really about the gold standard?
LostArkFan81 said:About the apple: The girls in Indy's class all have crushes on him and so does a gay male student, who gives Indy the apple to show his love for the teacher. It is wierd if nobody can find this information because it had already been understood by Indy fans, critics, and the general public two decades ago. Oh well, I guess newer generations of film goers have to learn this stuff too.
LostArkFan81 said:The Wizard of Oz which had been originally written during the 19th century is a populist piece. It is about farmers being hurt by droubts, and Dorthy represents the working class going to Washington(Emerald City) to ask the Wizard(the president of the United States) for help but unfortunately he can't. Each character represents someone or something like the wicked witch being the droubt who dies from water of course, the lion is William Jennings Bryan who is the populist presidential candidate, the Tin Man represented silver which Bryan advocated, and I think the scarecrow was the farm. However, there is plenty you can read about this or take a course in late nineteenth and early twentieth century U.S. history in college. I wish I could remember all the details though.
About the apple: The girls in Indy's class all have crushes on him and so does a gay male student, who gives Indy the apple to show his love for the teacher. It is wierd if nobody can find this information because it had already been understood by Indy fans, critics, and the general public two decades ago. Oh well, I guess newer generations of film goers have to learn this stuff too.