Miami Herald

‘DIAL OF DESTINY’

- BY KATIE WALSH Tribune News Service

It’s been 15 years since we last encountere­d Indiana Jones, the whipcracki­ng archaeolog­ist made iconic by star Harrison Ford, director Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, who conceived of the story while seeking to update the classic adventure serial. Audiences fell for the brainy, blunt and brave Indy in his globe-trotting adventures explored in the original trilogy, which started with “Indiana

Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark” in 1981. Even the fourth installmen­t, arriving in 2008, “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” was profitable, and warmly received despite its goofy story.

It’s no surprise that in a filmmaking landscape where legacy sequels, or “legasequel­s,” roam the box office, the powers that be would take ol’ Indy out for another spin. Ford had returned to both “Star Wars” and “Blade Runner” to positive notices, so it made sense to get the band back together for one more gig, to see if there’s any juice left to squeeze. Enter “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” in which James Mangold takes the reins from Spielberg.

Mangold also co-wrote the script with Jez and John-Henry Butterwort­h and David Koepp, and, true to the spirit of the legasequel, it’s about time travel — the story reflecting the nostalgic desire of both filmmakers and audiences to utilize movies as vehicles to revisit the emotions we felt when we were young. Lucas and Spielberg used “Indiana Jones” to recreate the feeling of their favorite childhood serials, and Mangold is tasked with delivering a film that brings us back to that feeling of falling in love with “Raiders of the Lost Ark” back in the ’80s. He approaches the task so literally that he seems to have overlooked the goal of simply making a great adventure movie.

“Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” hits the nostalgia button from minute one, with an almost creepy, fetishisti­c reanimatio­n of Indy’s appeal. These reminders of what was are

like constant jabs in the ribs, as if the filmmakers are saying, “Remember this? You like this.” It’s cameos from beloved characters, reminders of Indy’s well-known idiosyncra­sies, and do-overs of famous bits from the previous films. They try so hard to recapture the original charm, but the result is a sloggy, dull sequel.

It opens with a sequence that takes place toward the end of World War II, as Jones and fellow archaeolog­ist Basil Shaw (Toby Jones) sneak around piles of treasure looted by Nazis, trying to liberate a few historical­ly significan­t — and potentiall­y powerful — baubles. Fast-forward to the late ’60s, where Indy is a grumpy professor in

New York City. He has no groupies, no wife and no child when a strange woman, Helena (Phoebe Waller-Bridge), ambushes him at a dive bar. She’s Indy’s goddaughte­r, the daughter of dear departed Bas, and she wants a mysterious dial crafted by Greek mathematic­ian Archimedes that her pop pilfered from the Nazi loot train. Can Indy help her?

He doesn’t have much of a choice when they’re suddenly pursued through the city by two bloodthirs­ty blondes with buzz cuts (Boyd Holbrook and Olivier Richters). These menaces are in the employ of Dr. Jürgen Voller (Mads Mikkelsen), a shadowy figure from Indy’s past and a rocket scientist/former Nazi who needs the dial to “fix Hitler’s mistakes.” Yes, the plot itself is a rather hackneyed pop culture meme.

Mangold is a slick filmmaker, and in “Dial of Destiny,” he alternates the nostalgia bumps and surprise cameos with extremely fast set pieces; the entire film feels like one long car (horse, boat, tuktuk) chase. All of the action sequences are capably crafted, and a total snooze. As Indy and Helena — and a precocious poppet (Ethann Isidore) they pick up in Morocco — dart around the globe retrieving various items, the bad guys chase them and relieve them of said items. Helena quips annoyingly, Indy grumbles predictabl­y, and Mangold stuns us into a stupor with his perfectly competent filmmaking. It is a crushingly dull film until it becomes jaw-droppingly cartoonish.

Perhaps a swig of something familiar in an airconditi­oned theater will be the ticket this summer. However, this dose of “Indiana Jones” is a disappoint­ingly diluted version of this favorite hero that has the power to put a fan off the franchise forever.

 ?? PHOTOS BY Lucasfilm Ltd./Disney/TNS ?? Phoebe Waller-Bridge, left, and Harrison Ford in ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.’
PHOTOS BY Lucasfilm Ltd./Disney/TNS Phoebe Waller-Bridge, left, and Harrison Ford in ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.’
 ?? TNS ?? A de-aged Harrison Ford portrays a younger Indiana Jones in the first act of ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.’
TNS A de-aged Harrison Ford portrays a younger Indiana Jones in the first act of ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.’
 ?? TNS ?? Harrison Ford in ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.’ 1/2
TNS Harrison Ford in ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.’ 1/2

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