Ravenwood's Hat
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- Flash Gordon
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Ravenwood's Hat
I just wanted to clear up a point for my own understanding.
Is the hat that Indy wears supposed to be the same one that Abner Ravenwood (Fedora) placed on his head as a boy in "Last Crusade"?
Is the hat that Indy wears supposed to be the same one that Abner Ravenwood (Fedora) placed on his head as a boy in "Last Crusade"?
- Michaelson
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- English Adventurer
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Fedora was originally 'Abner' in the script, but they changed it later. Some folks still like to think of Fedora as Abner Ravenwood, me being one of them, but the choice (as they say) is yours.
I always thought the passing of the hat was purely symbolic, rather than that hat being 'the' hat, but Spielberg maybe thought differently...
I always thought the passing of the hat was purely symbolic, rather than that hat being 'the' hat, but Spielberg maybe thought differently...
- jjkillin
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Well, I'm of the belief that if Spielberg wanted it to be "the hat", they would have actually used "a hat" (for what it's worth). But then again, Luke Skywalker's [Anakin's] lightsaber changes from ANH to ESB (but that's two different movies).ob1al wrote: I always thought the passing of the hat was purely symbolic, rather than that hat being 'the' hat, but Spielberg maybe thought differently...
-James
Well I suppose all they really did was change the name in the script, but it doesn't mean they decided it wasn't Abner...after all, he's never given a name in the movie so regardless of what the script called him, he can still be Abner.
The young Indy series would have been much better if they had set the episodes with young Indy was following Abner on his relic-hunting adventures and 'learning his trade' along the way IMO! But I digress...
The young Indy series would have been much better if they had set the episodes with young Indy was following Abner on his relic-hunting adventures and 'learning his trade' along the way IMO! But I digress...
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I think it's totally plausible that it's "the hat" despite how different it looks. Sure he would have grown, but when it's placed on his head they never show if it actually fit or not, which it probably didn't. And, just look at the miracles our own Fedora can work with old hats. several years and a few reblocks... sure, that cowboy-looking thing could be "the hat". Maybe that's part of the reason it was too tall and never quite looked like a fedora. Maybe Indy just had reblocked and the ribbon changed to suit the times/his own tastes. Maybe it was never a fedora at all! (can of worms, part II)
By the way, where are you guys getting the Indy font to write your john Handcocks on your posts? That's cool.
By the way, where are you guys getting the Indy font to write your john Handcocks on your posts? That's cool.
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- Kentucky Mason
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You know I recall reading in the novelization of Raiders a great deal about Indy's hat. In the novelization Indy lost his "lucky hat" after departing the Bantu Wind and riding to Goose Step Island (is that a bad name for a new Dizney attraction...) We never did see the hat returned to Indy (lest I spark the Brown hat Gray hat debate again). I always thought a great end to a teaser for Indy 4 would have Indy loosing his hat and going to HJ and seeing him purchase a new Poet and then hand shaping it himself.
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Ravenwood or not, This man is somone the Indy character decided to emulate in a multitude of ways.
I suppose Spielberg hat set out making those boyscout scenes with that as the idea.
this guy was idalized by Indy... maybe not at first. Though if this is the case, to back it up they should have had some stories with Ravenwood to show their connection.
Too bad there is not much info on the subject.
I suppose Spielberg hat set out making those boyscout scenes with that as the idea.
this guy was idalized by Indy... maybe not at first. Though if this is the case, to back it up they should have had some stories with Ravenwood to show their connection.
Too bad there is not much info on the subject.
I see where you are coming from Wayne, and agree to an extent, but remember Indy went after a few relics himself for the love of money - remember that job he did for Lao Che? That's not so different to Abner getting the cross for 'Panama'. And in TOD, Indy was mostly interested in 'Fortune & Glory' before deciding to rescue the kids from the mines.PropReplicator wrote:I, for one, am glad that "Fedora" isn't Abner. I have come to think of Abner as a kind man who has a love and respect for history, especially since he was a major mentor for Indy and passed that love and sense of respect down to him. "Fedora" showed that he was only after the money.
Wayne
Just because Abner did the occassional 'bread and butter' job for private clients doesn't mean he didn't have an equal respect for history and artifacts.
They could have used this as a running theme for young Indy's adventures with Abner - 'Remember the Cross of Coranado?' (or something like that...). Or maybe a subplot could have been to retrieve the cross and track down Panama, who always seemed to alude Indy and Abner, as the moved from place to place and encountered new advantures along the way...
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I have always tought of it, that it only was the gesture, like you wrote Mickaelson.
When "abner" passed over his fedora, indy know at an instance what he was going to dedicate his life to and how he was going to be dressed up.
It changed his life literally
I have hard to beleive that the fedora indy wears as a grown up, is the very same fedora he was given 1912
But then again who knows?
Regards
Fred
When "abner" passed over his fedora, indy know at an instance what he was going to dedicate his life to and how he was going to be dressed up.
It changed his life literally
I have hard to beleive that the fedora indy wears as a grown up, is the very same fedora he was given 1912
But then again who knows?
Regards
Fred
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Intersting opinions, gentlemen. I too think the giving the hat to Indy is a symbolic act, a preview of things to come, if you will. On the other hand, it's not like Indy figures "Hey! That cool tomb robber guy gave me a hat! From his day on, I will wear one too and make it my trademark!" Everybody wore a hat in those days - nothing special there...
If he got a quality fur felt fedora from Abner in 1912, who's to say he didn't cherish that particular lid an have it reblocked every once in a while?
I'm all for the Abner theory! It makes sense, in some weird way... I can see Wayne's point, but then again... the antiquarian outlook in those days differ pretty much from our view of things. "Archaeology" in practice meant "to remove historically interesting and/or valuable items from their respective sub-par cultures/homelands and put them on display where white folk can see them" Selling a couple of artifacts to get a ticket to Marrakech could very well have happened...
In this sense, both "Abner" and Indy are explorers/archaeologists in a very typical way for their era...
If he got a quality fur felt fedora from Abner in 1912, who's to say he didn't cherish that particular lid an have it reblocked every once in a while?
I'm all for the Abner theory! It makes sense, in some weird way... I can see Wayne's point, but then again... the antiquarian outlook in those days differ pretty much from our view of things. "Archaeology" in practice meant "to remove historically interesting and/or valuable items from their respective sub-par cultures/homelands and put them on display where white folk can see them" Selling a couple of artifacts to get a ticket to Marrakech could very well have happened...
In this sense, both "Abner" and Indy are explorers/archaeologists in a very typical way for their era...
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http://stud4.tuwien.ac.at/%7Ee9125985/I ... Fedora.zipShawnkara wrote:By the way, where are you guys getting the Indy font to write your john Handcocks on your posts? That's cool.
http://stud4.tuwien.ac.at/%7Ee9125985/I ... enture.zip
http://www.theindyexperience.com/Zips/Safari_Fonts.zip
I agree on the "Abner-theory".
As I see it we shall as far as LC (the battle on the boat for the Cross of Corenado) before we see any sign of Indy thinking of anything else than
selling of the artefacts he snach from varios places.
Even Harrison called him "a graverobber", and he should know as he blew life to the figure.
So Indy was never supposed to be a knight in shinning armour, but rather a gifted bum who was seeking fortune and glory.
And I see Fedora/Abner the same way (in his younger days at least).
Best regards
JAN
As I see it we shall as far as LC (the battle on the boat for the Cross of Corenado) before we see any sign of Indy thinking of anything else than
selling of the artefacts he snach from varios places.
Even Harrison called him "a graverobber", and he should know as he blew life to the figure.
So Indy was never supposed to be a knight in shinning armour, but rather a gifted bum who was seeking fortune and glory.
And I see Fedora/Abner the same way (in his younger days at least).
Best regards
JAN
- Michaelson
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In Abner's case, probably more so, as the laws for the protection of antiquities were practically non existant prior to 1920...Abner's heyday in the field. Heck, there was an archaeologist that would have been Abners peer who used dynamite to excavate. He came within an eyelash of blasting off the head of the Sphynx to see if there was a hidden chamber in the body. Fortunately, the charge misfired, and he changed his mind. So, compared to Abner, Indy was literally a babe in the woods in terms of field work as known by folks like Ravenwood and his group. Regards. Michaelson
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