Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones

Certain fans of the franchise have been wary of the torch passing between Spielberg and Mangold, but Mangold himself has tried to assuage fears, taking to his Twitter account to shut down unearned criticism of the picture during production. After one “journalist” told fans to temper their expectations about the project, Mangold responded directly and said, “Maybe, just maybe, I won’t let you down. I cherish old Hollywood pictures. Give me a little air to make the film. Then make your judgments, okay?”

Obviously, when taking over directing duties on an iconic film franchise such as Indiana Jones there is going to be some skepticism, but when speaking with Comic Book, Mangold was sure to relay that his head and heart are in the right place, and that his experience working on Logan was particularly valuable. 

“Like in all my work, I’m always trying to find an emotional center to operate from,” Mangold said. “I think the most important thing is, in an age when franchises have become a commodity, that serving the same thing again. At least for me, in the dances I’ve had with any franchises, serving the same thing again, the same way, usually just produces a longing for the first time you ate it. Meaning, it makes an audience wish that they just had the first one over again. So you have to push something to someplace new, while also remembering the core reasons why everyone was gathered.”

He went on to compare his approach to Indy with his take on the Wolverine.

Said Mangold, “When you’re dealing in a world of a very pressured franchise—for all of the things, and there were many that I freed myself from in the canon, in the baggage, to try and make the best story—the core values of Logan, of Wolverine, and of Charles Xavier and the X-Men, were something that I felt we never abandoned… Those core issues were at the heart of the movie. And in any franchise I take in, I’d always be trying to capture and make sure that we preserve those core ideas that are at the center, because that’s why these stories are more than franchises. They’re the fairy tales of our contemporary culture.”

So while Mangold was onstage with Ford, giving a small audience their first taste of Indiana Jones 5, it doesn’t mean that Spielberg is sitting at home resting on his laurels. The director was at the Toronto International Film Festival this week, premiering his new film The Fabelmans, a semi-autobiographical look at the director’s childhood and his relationship with his parents. It appears that Spielberg is in a more reflective, personal stage of his career, looking back on his past and his own mythology instead of revisiting his works of fiction.

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