Indiana Jones may not be the first franchise you associate with science fiction (flying saucers in Kingdom of the Crystal Skull aside), but the upcoming fifth installment, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, is here to prove you wrong – the titular dial can be used for time travel.
"The Dial of Destiny is perfect for us because it’s about time," producer Frank Marshall tells SFX magazine in the new issue, which features The Witcher on the cover. "It’s math and time. We always try and have some sort of archaeological connection and there was certainly that – there’s a mythology to the Dial of Destiny that exists. It turned out to be the perfect thing for this movie."
Playing with time feels even more of a departure for Indy than the interdimensional beings of Kingdom of the Crystal Skull – and they were controversial enough. Is this film pushing the parameters of what an Indiana Jones story can be, genre-wise? Are we going full sci-fi here?
"Well, yes and no," Marshall smiles. "It works in the plot because it is scientific." He catches himself. "Well, I guess it’s scientific! It really works for what we are doing and it sets up a whole lot of great plot points. The question is, if you can control time, like in Back to the Future, would you change things? And what would that mean? That’s a big question for everybody, and certainly is in the movie."
Out to twist history is Mads Mikkelsen as Voller, a deeply sinister mathematician with a Nazi past. Inspired by real-life scientist Wernher von Braun, the German rocket specialist recruited by America as part of the secret Operation Paperclip intelligence program after the war, Voller aims to reverse the past in the name of the Third Reich.
"It’s a plot point that drives the
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