Indiana also encounters Belloq in two novels by Max McCoy, set before the films, where the two meet for the first time (contradicting the novelization of Raiders of the Lost Ark) and Belloq gives Indiana information for locating a crystal skull. Another encounter in 1934 is detailed, when Indiana spends months preparing a dig in Rub' al Khali, only to arrive and discover Belloq has excavated the region.
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The novelization of the movie reveals Belloq became Indiana's foe at graduate school, when he plagiarized his essay on stratigraphy, thus winning an award that rightfully belonged to Indiana. At one point in the film, Belloq says to Indy that they are very much alike and that he is Indy's "shadowy reflection".
When the Ark is opened, its contained spirits engulf Belloq in flames and cause his head to explode Indiana and Marion are spared and turn the Ark over to the United States government. Belloq aids the Nazis in finding the Ark of the Covenant, as he wants to use the relic to speak with God. In the film's opening, Belloq and the Hovitos tribesmen force Indiana to hand over a fertility idol he has braved numerous booby traps to obtain. René Emile Belloq ( Paul Freeman) is a French archaeologist who takes credit for Indiana's findings by following his exploits and then securing the artifacts after Indiana completes efforts to initially retrieve them and the main antagonist of Raiders of the Lost Ark. Like Satipo, his name is based on a Peruvian town and county, Barranca, Barranca Ward, Barranca County, Lima state. In the early script of the film, written by Lawrence Kasdan, when Barranca pulls his gun out on Jones, the archaeologist uses his whip to make Barranca shoot himself, but the script was scrapped. Barranca then runs away but is later killed with poisonous darts by the Hovitos tribe. The gun is yanked from Barranca's hand and lands in a stream. When Barranca draws a revolver, Indy uses his famous bullwhip and wraps the whip around the gun. Barranca īarranca ( Vic Tablian) is the other Peruvian guide who turns against Indiana. The "Jock Lindsey's Hangar Bar" cocktail lounge at Disney Springs says he settled down in central Florida in 1938. According to the novelization of Raiders of the Lost Ark written by Campbell Black aka Campbell Armstrong (1981), Jock is Scottish. Easygoing and affable, Jock butted heads with Indiana on only one subject: his pet snake Reggie. He frequently was hired by Jones to fly the archaeologist to remote parts of the world. Jock cut his teeth as a stunt pilot performing in Midwest airshows and relocated to Venezuela after a rumored flight-related tragedy. Jock Lindsey ( Fred Sorenson) is an American freelance pilot. His name is based on that of a Peruvian town, Satipo in Satipo Province in Junín Region. He appears in the video game Indiana Jones and the Infernal Machine (1999) in the secret level "Return to Peru", where Indiana returns to the same temple and finds the second idol. In an early script of the film, written by Lawrence Kasdan, Satipo flees the boulder with Indy, only to be met with Barranca's ultimate fate in the finished film and killed by the Hovito tribe, but the script was scrapped. In his haste, he forgot to mind the wall trap he had witnessed Indy test and is killed Indiana makes it out. Indy throws over the fertility idol to Satipo, who offered to throw him his whip for it but he betrays Indy, dropping the whip and fleeing. When Indy and Satipo reach a pit on the way out, Satipo makes it over with Indy's whip and Indy is stuck on the other side. He follows behind him through the temple's traps on the way in. Satipo ( Alfred Molina) is a guide accompanying Indy in the temple in the film's opening. ( Harrison Ford), the titular character of the franchise, is an archaeologist and college professor. Introduced in Raiders of the Lost Ark Indiana Jones ĭr.