Movies sometimes take a circuitous route to the screen. The internet is littered with stories of big time movies that almost were, only to end up as something else completely. Some of the most fascinating of these un-made movies are the ones for the Indiana Jones series. Here's a breakdown of scripts from the Indiana Jones movies that almost were.
For the sake of brevity, I'll be ignoring any versions that had largely similar plots to the final film, so nothing from Raiders of the Lost Ark or Temple of Doom and nothing from the several drafts of Last Crusade that hew closely to the final film.
Note: All information is taken from The Complete Making of Indiana Jones and the various script leaks, unless noted otherwise.
-------------------------------------------------
For a timeline of Indy III scripts and downloads of available ones, see the excellent screenplay page on fan site The Raider.
-------------------------------------------------
Chris Columbus's Indiana Jones and the Monkey King
Background
George Lucas completed an 8 page treatment for Indiana Jones and the Monkey King in September, 1984. Lucas wanted to make the Holy Grail the MacGuffin, an idea he'd proposed for the second Indy movie, but Spielberg didn't like it. So Lucas put the eternal life and healing powers that he'd imbued the grail with into magical peaches in the Monkey King treatments. After writing a second, 11 page treatment, Lucas hired Chris Columbus to write the script. His first draft (which has found its way online) was finished in May 1985 before delivering a second draft in August of that year. That second draft was titled Indiana Jones and the Lost City of Sun Wu Kung (Sun Wu Kung was another name for the Monkey King). Both scripts opened with a prelude in a haunted castle in Scotland, an idea that had first been proposed for Temple of Doom. Lucas and Spielberg both liked Columbus' script, but felt it was too supernatural for an Indiana Jones movie.
Synopsis
For a (much) more detailed synopsis, see this page on IndyFan.com
(Synopsis taken from here)
While on a fishing vacation in Scotland, Indy gets roped into a murder investigation that leads to an allegedly haunted mansion. Inside, Indy faces off against empty animated suits of armor and matches wits with a long-dead nobleman who's responsible for the murders on the moor.
The story really kicks off when Indy gets back to Marshall University and is contacted by his old friend Marcus Brody. Brody tells him about zoologist Dr. Clare Clarke, who has come in contact with Tyki, an African pygmy, who claims to know the location of the lost city of Sun Wu-Kung, the Monkey King. As proof, Tyki says he is 200 years old thanks to an enchanted peach pit that he wears around his neck, apparently from the Monkey King's orchard, where the fruit can grant eternal life with a single bite.
Indy boards a ship to Mozambique along with a stowaway he's unaware of until he reaches port his young teaching assistant, Betsy Tuffet, who has a schoolgirl crush on her professor. Indy and Betsy join Dr. Clarke, a no-BS kinda gal, Scraggy Brier, a superstitious native, and Tyki, the good-natured pygmy.
Unfortunately, before the expedition can begin, Tyki is kidnapped by Sgt. Helmut Gutterburg, a Nazi stooge with a machine gun arm, who is under the command of Lt. Werner Von Mephisto, a hulking Aryan monstrosity. The Nazis escape with Tyki inside their three-story tall, 100-foot long tank. Of course Indy rescues Tyki and the good guys make their way to the lost city with the Nazis on their tail.
They are stopped at the gates by a troop of guardian gorillas that have been trained to defend the city from intruders. Just as a gorilla is about to throw Indy off the mountain, Tyki shouts a command and the gorilla snaps to attention. We soon discover that Tyki isn't just any resident of the city he is the future king.
Soon Indy, the natives, and the gorillas are battling it out with Mephisto and his men. In a surprising twist, Indy is shot and killed by Mephisto, but his body is carried into the enchanted peach orchard. There, Sun Wu-Kung, the half-man, half-monkey god, is reconstituted from ancient skeletal remains. The monkey-man heals Indy and then gives him a shape-shifting staff as a gift for his valiant defense of the Monkey King's chosen people.
-------------------------------------------------
(For a great rundown of the crazy rumors and speculation that went around prior to Indy IV being greenlit, check this excellent blog post.)
For a timeline of Indy IV scripts and downloads of available ones, see the excellent screenplay page on fan site The Raider.
-------------------------------------------------
Jeb Stuart's Indiana Jones and the Saucer Men from Mars
Background
Following the completion of Last Crusade, while Spielberg and Ford were interested in doing another, Lucas felt he was done with them. His attitude changed while filming a small cameo of Harrison Ford for The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles. He hit upon the idea of doing an Indy movie based around an older Indy in the 1950s, which would open up a 50s sci-fi B-movie angle for the film. Ford and Spielberg didn't care much for the angle, but let Lucas get a script together with a screenwriter. Lucas approached Jeb Stuart (Die Hard, The Fugitive) in late 1993 about writing Indy IV with several ideas already in mind: the Doom Town atomic bomb sequence (actually taken from the first draft of Back to the Future), a fight on a rocket sled, aliens, psychic power, Soviets as the villains, Indy married at the end, a double agent, and the CIA helping and hindering Indy. Stuart wove those into a draft that he finished on May 24th, 1994. After some discussions with Lucas in August and September of that year, he finished a revised draft (which has found it's way online) on February 20th 1995.
Synopsis
For a (much) more detailed synopsis, see IGN's review of the script.
(Synopsis taken from here)
In this one, Indy very nearly gets married at the start to a linguist by the name of Dr Elaine McGregor. Amongst the guests at the wedding would have been Marion, Willie, Sallah and his father, but McGregor, instead of walking down the aisle, hops into a car on the big day and disappears. The search is thus on to find her.
Turns out she's working on the discovery of alien bodies and a strange stone cylinder. Indy and McGregor crack the code on said cylinder, which turns out to be coordinates leading them to a mountain. Russian spies want in though, and as Indy tries to rescue Elaine from one of their planes, a flying saucer appears. A further alien encounter sees a truck being lifted off the ground. Meanwhile, a mysterious countdown ticks down, with the assumption being it's a bomb.
And so the story progresses, until the eventual departure of the flying saucers and aliens - after teaching some nasty people lessons by, er, killing them - leaving Indy and Elaine free to go off and get married. Short Round was set to give them a lift in a car at the end of the film too.
-------------------------------------------------
Jeffrey Boam's Indiana Jones and the Saucer Men from Mars
Background
Lucas wasn't happy with Stuart's revised draft, so he handed the project off to Last Crusade writer Jeff Boam. Boam wrote three different drafts in 1995 with the same title as Stuart's version, with the third dated December 18th. In early 1996 Boam said, "George is very happy with the script and Steven is happy with it too, but the next step is to get Harrison on board." The script was dropped after Independence Day was released to huge box office success. Spielberg didn't want to do an alien movie so close to ID4 and Lucas refused to do a version of Indy 4 without aliens. This essentially killed the project until 2000.
Information about the contents of the script are scarce. Due to the identical title, it's probably similar to Stuart's take. The atomic explosion was in the middle in Boam's script (from The Complete Making of Indiana Jones pg. 251):
George Lucas said:We ended up putting the atom bomb scene that Jeff Boam and I had in the middle at the head of the movie.
A little more about Boam's work from an interview with him in 1995:
DP: WHAT HAVE YOU BEEN DOING IN THE MEANTIME? THE DATE ON THE SCRIPT IS JANUARY.
JB: Ive been working on a fourth installment of Indiana Jones. Im just about done with the first draft. Somebody else had also tried their hand at it, and it didnt work out too well.
DP: THEY ALWAYS KEEP COMING BACK TO YOU, JEFFREY.
JB: Its nice, you know. Actually, George Lucas came to me to do this first, and I was busy writing a movie called The Phantom. So I couldnt do Indy, because I had to do that, and when I finished that, George came back to me and said, It didnt really work out with the other writer, are you available?
DP: WHEN WILL THEY START SHOOTING THE INDY MOVIE?
JB: Well, its conceivable that it could be the movie that Steven (Spielberg) does next. It could go very quickly. George has seen most of the first draft; we put off the first 15 pages because we werent really sure what we wanted to do there. So I gave him everything but the first 15 pages, and hes very happy with that. So I know were well on the road to having the script that he likes. And generally when he likes it, Stevens not far behind. And once Stevens on board, Harrison (Ford) is much easier to snag, as well.
DP: ANY HINTS AS TO WHAT THE INDY THINGS ABOUT?
JB: Its set in the 50s, Ill tell you that. And Harrison will play his own age. A considerable amount of action. We have him (Sean Connery character) back, for kind of a cameo. Id love to tell you more, but George is secretive about these things.
Whatever the 50s conjur up, thats probably what this is about. Thats all Ill say. I think youll kind of automatically grasp what the story is if you just think about what the 50s is about and how it might relate to Indy.
Its not about Elvis, though.
The movie apparently would have been primarily shot in the US, with only one week overseas.
Variety said:As for Indie, he says Steve Spielberg wants the pic to shoot here. Only one week will be on location, probably in Honduras. Russia had first been planned. And, added Boam, Harrison Ford will play his own age, so he can limp and/or wear glasses!
(For comparison, Kingdom of the Crystal Skull filmed entirely in the US)
-------------------------------------------------
Frank Darabont's Indiana Jones and the City of the Gods
Background
And now we come to the most infamous unused script. At the AFI tribute to Harrison Ford in 2000, most of the principals involved in the Indy movies (Lucas, Spielberg, Ford, producers Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall) reunited. Their desire to do another one was rekindled when they met backstage and started reminiscing about the previous films. The "big three," Spielberg, Ford, and Lucas, would meet for a story conference on April 12th, 2000. Lucas and Spielberg would meet again for a story conference in December of 2001 and twice more in June of 2002.
Screenwriter/director Frank Darabont (The Green Mile, Shawshank Redemption) was then hired to write the movie. He talked with Lucas by phone about the script several times in July and George wrote up an outline on July 31st. Darabont delivered his first draft on May 27, 2003, a second draft sometime later, and a third on November 4th. This third draft apparently got the approval of both Spielberg and Harrison Ford, but Lucas vetoed it, thus sending the project back into limbo. Shortly after Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was released, Frank's third draft hit the internet via Wikileaks, with rumors claiming he or some one close to him had leaked it.
The first draft supposedly gave Indy and Marion a 13 year old daughter. Spielberg didn't like this, saying he had already done that in The Lost World: Jurassic Park and didn't want to re-tread that ground. Another sticking point was the villains. They were apparently Nazis who had escaped to South America and wanted to exact revenge on Indy for killing Rene Bellocq and Toht in Raiders. Both Spielberg and Lucas felt that the 50s setting meant a Soviet villain. And after making Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan, Spielberg felt he couldn't satirize the Nazis and Harrison Ford thought they "plum wore the Nazis out." Darabont cut the daughter and introduced Soviet baddies in subsequent drafts.
Synopsis
For a (much) more detailed synopsis, check the City of the Gods page on the Indiana Jones wiki.
At a secret military hangar in Nevada Indy witnesses his partner Yuri, along with several Soviet soldiers, attempting to obtain plutonium. After a chase through the hangar and a fight on a rocket sled, Indy gets captured and taken to a nuclear test site to be killed. He escapes his captors and survives an atomic blast in a fridge. The US government thinks Indy might be a spy like Yuri, so the university puts him on a leave of absence. Devastated, he drunkenly heads to the school that night where a bad guy named the Thin Man shoots the FBI agent tailing him. Indy and the Thin Man get into a fight in the workings of the university's clock tower, eventually resulting in the death of the Thin Man.
A clue on the body of the Thin Man leads Indy to a crystal skull and a hotel in Peru. There, Indy is shocked to run into Marion. They discuss how the crystal skull will supposedly lead to the Lost City of the Gods, which can grant the wish of anyone who enters. Indy's friend Professor Vernon Oxley had vanished searching for it years before. Marion is part of a new expedition to find it. Flying on their way to the expedition, Marion and Indy get ambushed by a plane flown by Yuri.
They crash, but are found by men connected to the expedition, which is headed by famous archaeologist Peter Belasko, who turns out to be Marion's husband. Yuri convinces the Peruvian president to join him on an expedition to find the city, with help from Nazi Doctor Von Graun. Indy discovers that Belasko has been getting much of his information from a completely mad Oxley. Yuri and President Escalante find them, triggering a stand off that is broken by a giant army ant attack. Indy and Marion are eventually captured by Escalante's men, then freed by Belasko who reveals that he's working for the Soviets.
Marion and Indy get tied up at the entrance to the city by Belasko and Yuri, only for Belasko's men to betray him and tie him and Yuri up with the others. Oxley helps them escape, after which the party enters the main temple in the city where they find the mummified bodies of 13 aliens. When the skull is placed on a crystal skeleton, one alien seemingly comes back to life, hypnotizing the other five men and asking them what their wish is. Von Graun and Belasko get killed by their wishes, Escalante gets turned into an Amazonian tree frog and Indy is freed from the hypnosis after asking for Marion. He shoots the skull, freeing Yuri. Yuri, Marion, Indy, and Oxley flee the city as a massive saucer fails to escape the earth and crashes, causing a giant mushroom cloud
Back in the US, Indy is cleared of all government charges and marries Marion. The script ends with Henry Jones Sr. drunkenly singing Fly Me to the Moon at the reception.
-------------------------------------------------
Jeff Nathanson's Indiana Jones and the Atomic Ants
Background
After Lucas vetoed Darabont's third draft, he wrote a revised version he called Phantom City of the Gods, presumably as a starting point for the next writer. That next writer turned out to be Jeff Nathanson (Catch Me If You Can and The Terminal). He was brought in to write a new script in 2004 and met with Lucas and Spielberg for story conferences in August of that year and May of 2005. He quickly pumped out three drafts in November and December, with the third draft being delivered in December with the title "Indiana Jones and the Atomic Ants." Spielberg and Lucas weren't entirely happy with it and brought in Steven's trusted "closer" David Koepp to give it a shot.
Again, like Boam's work, there's very little information about what Nathanson's script contained. It was apparently set in the late 40s. Drew McWeeny (aka Moriarty), currently of HitFix and previously of Ain't It Cool News, has mentioned having a copy of one of Nathanson's drafts. Since Nathanson got a "Story by" credit on the final movie, his script probably bears a resemblance to the film, which he mentioned in an interview:
Were you and Lucas satisfied with the results of your collaboration?
I think for what George and I did and where we left off, I think we had figured out the movie for structure and character and storytelling. I think George was ultimately really happy with the story at that point. I think it then was the responsibility of the director to come in and get the script in the shape that he wanted it to be in to shoot.
He may have created Mutt, but I can't find a solid source for that.
-------------------------------------------------
Notes
- I left out a bonkers supposed pitch for Indy II. According to Mythmaker: The Life and Work of George Lucas, the movie would have opened with a motorcycle chase on the Great Wall of China leading to Indy stumbling upon a hidden valley filled with prehistoric creatures including dinosaurs, but the project was abandoned after China refused the production permission to film in the country. Since The Complete Making of Indiana Jones makes absolutely no mention of this, I'm ignoring it.
- Similarly, Spielberg: A Biography by Joseph McBride says Diane Thomas (Romancing the Stone) wrote a script for Indy III set entirely within a haunted mansion. Since the timeline is sketchy (Lucas wrote a treatment for Monkey King only 4 months after Temple of Doom opened which leaves very little time for Thomas to have written the script) and The Complete Making of Indiana Jones doesn't mention it at all, I'm ignoring it.
- Many fan scripts did the rounds during the dead period from 1996 - 2000 with media outlets sometimes biting and claiming them as real. Two different ones (Indiana Jones and the Sons of Darkness and Indiana Jones and the Sword of Arthur) were passed off as official work by Jeff Boam. Several sites claimed to have gotten their hands on leaked scripts (Law of One, Raiders of the Fallen Empire, and Red Scare being the most notable), though they were almost assuredly fakes.
- M. Night Shyamalan talked to Lucas and Spielberg about writing the movie in 2000, but was never hired and never wrote a draft.