The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles/Trivia

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Trivia about The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles includes:

  • Ascended Fanon: The be-eyepatched Very Old Indy of the Chronicles was originally proposed as a narrator for the opening and closing "bookend" scenes of an Indiana Jones series proper Expanded Universe novel. Lucas rejected the conceit for the novel, reasoning that "no one wants to see an old Indy," only to turn around and "borrow" the idea (right down to the eyepatch!) in his new TV series. As noted above, many fans still agree with his initial assessment.
  • Hey, It's That Guy!:
    • Anthony Daniels in "Attack of the Hawkmen".
    • Big Mac in "The Phantom Train of Doom" two-parter/telemovie was played by actor Mac McDonald, probably better known as Commander Simpson from the extended version of Aliens and/or Captain Frank Hollister from Red Dwarf.
  • Retroactive Recognition: Episodes featured then unknown actors Elizabeth Hurley as Young Indy's British suffragette girlfriend, Catherine Zeta-Jones, future James Bond and Felix Leiter Daniel Craig and Jeffrey Wright (in different episodes), Jane Krakowski, Anne Heche, Douglas Henshall.
  • What Could Have Been:
    • Among the episodes being prepped when the series was cancelled were an adventure starring Even Younger Indy (aged 5), and Indy's first meetings with Abner Ravenwood and Rene Belloq (the latter in a story also involving a certain crystal skull).
    • River Phoenix was first offered the role of Young Indy, to continue from Last Crusade. He declined, as he didn't feel television had anything to offer his career.
  • You Look Familiar:
    • Paul Freeman (Belloq!) as real-life explorer Frederick Selous in two episodes.
    • Actors would often play multiple roles in the series; sometimes this could get a little confusing. The most iconic example is Vic Tablian, who already had two different roles in Raiders (Barranca and the Monkey Man). Here he plays villain Demetrios in the two-parter "The Curse of the Jackal" and an Armenian saboteur in "Istanbul, September 1918".