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These sci-fi twists changed everything. Here are 10 shocking movie reveals that absolutely no one saw coming.

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00:00While it's absolutely expected that movie sequels don't just stick to the status quo of the original film,
00:05it can be hugely disappointing for audiences when beloved characters don't return for whatever reason.
00:12For though filmmakers can find sensible ways to temporarily write characters out of their franchise until the actor is able to return,
00:19sometimes they just kill them off between movies.
00:22And while they're not always bad, it's incredibly easy for filmmakers to piss off their fanbase
00:27by sending characters to their graves so unceremoniously.
00:31With that in mind, WhatCulture here with insulting ways characters were killed off between movies.
00:36Tank dies of his wounds from the first movie, The Matrix Reloaded.
00:40Tank was an immediate fan favourite in the first Matrix movie,
00:44enough that he was quite reasonably expected to return for The Matrix Reloaded.
00:49However, the sequel fleetingly reveals that Tank died between movies
00:53is implied to be a result of injuries sustained during his fight with Cypher in the original film,
00:58with new character Link serving as his replacement.
01:01As for why actor Marcus Chong got the boot?
01:04Well, he allegedly had a salary dispute with Warner Brothers and the Wachowskis
01:07while negotiating his role in the sequels,
01:10leading him to make threatening calls to the filmmaker siblings,
01:13who in turn rescinded their offer to him.
01:15While there's absolutely nothing wrong with the Wachowskis ditching a problematic cast member,
01:20did they have to kill his character too?
01:22Isn't it much nicer to think that Tank's just off elsewhere in Zion?
01:25Newton Hicks Crash Land Alien 3
01:28It wouldn't be a list about characters killed off-screen without Newton Hicks from Aliens.
01:33The infamy of these deaths doesn't make them any less frustrating though,
01:37and going into Alien 3 blind and realising that two out of the three survivors of Aliens
01:41had died between sequels, two of the best characters in that movie no less,
01:46is the first sign that the film is going to be disappointing.
01:49The worst thing is though, that their deaths could have meant something in the long run.
01:53Ripley's inability to once again make it home and crashing after defeating the xenomorphs
01:57acts as the tragic crux of the film,
02:00and losing her two closest allies so unceremoniously could have added to that.
02:05However, the abruptness of the revelation,
02:07as well as the ugliness of how they're dispatched,
02:10feels wholly unnecessary at best,
02:12and at worst, undermines the heroic final act of Aliens,
02:15as well as wasting the relationship forged between Ripley and Newt.
02:19It's been over 25 years, but fans still aren't over it.
02:23Emma Frost and the other mutants die during the time skip,
02:26X- Days of Future Past.
02:28Look, nobody is going to give January Jones five stars
02:31for her performance as diamond-sharp telepath Emma Frost in X- First Class,
02:36but the character was still intriguing enough that she deserved better than this.
02:40Frost ultimately didn't return for sequel Days of Future Past,
02:43where Magneto simply makes a passing mention
02:46that she and several other supporting mutants from First Class
02:49were tortured to death by villain Dr. Bolivar Trask
02:52in the time jump between movies.
02:55Though it's absolutely fair to say that Days of Future Past
02:57already had a colossal cast of characters to juggle
03:00given that it collided two X-Men timelines together,
03:04it's a damn shame that these mutants
03:05couldn't have at least been dispatched on screen in a brief action sequence.
03:10Brody dies of the fear, Jaws the Revenge.
03:13You don't need me to tell you that the original Jaws
03:16is one of the greatest thrillers of all time,
03:18a Steven Spielberg blended great human drama
03:21between a cast led by Roy Schneider's Martin Brody
03:24and pant-crapping terror cultivated by a massive, mostly unseen shark.
03:29Of course, being a major blockbuster more than it is a horror movie,
03:32the characters overcome their initial fear
03:34of being chomped to death by hundreds of sharp teeth,
03:37head out, blow up the shark, and live happily ever after.
03:41Well, only if you make the smart decision
03:43to not watch any of the dreadful sequels, that is.
03:46Getting more and more ridiculous with each movie,
03:48Jaws the Revenge actually picks up with Brody's family
03:51and reveals that after the events of Spielberg's classic,
03:54Martin actually died.
03:56Of fear.
03:58When the shark returns,
03:59Brody's son claims his dad died of a regular heart attack,
04:02to which his mother replies,
04:03no, he died from the fear.
04:05The fear of it killed him.
04:07Now, I understand the potency of the fear.
04:09I always think it'll end up killing me after a night of heavy drinking.
04:13But this is fear of a shark that Brody blew up.
04:17Couldn't he have, like, just not gone in the ocean ever again?
04:20What was he even worried about?
04:22Sam Witwicky died, somehow.
04:25Transformers The Last Knight.
04:26When Shia LaBeouf decided that three Transformers movies was enough,
04:30Mark Wahlberg was drafted in as the new lead for the fourth film,
04:34Transformers Age of Extinction,
04:36without even a mention made of Sam in that movie.
04:39But for Bay's fifth and final film,
04:41Transformers The Last Knight,
04:43the baffling decision was made to low-key reveal
04:45that Sam Witwicky was no more,
04:47for some reason.
04:49The sequel reveals a secret society called,
04:52wait for it,
04:53The Order of the Witwickans,
04:55who have safeguarded the existence of the Transformers on Earth
04:58for centuries,
04:59with Sam Witwicky being counted among their number.
05:03But astronomer Sir Edward Burton
05:04also declares to the new heroes
05:06that he's the last surviving member of the Witwickans,
05:09in turn implying that Sam has died since we last saw him.
05:13It's a bizarre choice,
05:14both because there's no explanation for Sam's death,
05:17nor any real stakes-raising reason
05:19to make Burton the last of the Witwickans.
05:22It comes off as weirdly mean-spirited,
05:24even if some fans have simply deferred to the belief
05:27that Sam has faked his death
05:28and is still out there somewhere.
05:30Alex gets hit by a brick.
05:32Final Destination 2.
05:34It might be foolish to get invested in characters
05:36from a horror franchise,
05:37as they're about as fragile as me
05:39when I visit the comments section.
05:40But few have received a death as throwaway
05:43as Final Destination's original hero, Alex.
05:46The original flick is all about Alex and girlfriend Clea
05:48finding a way to stop the Grim Reaper coming for them,
05:52landing on the solution of making it skip them
05:54to move on to the next victim.
05:56The sequel, however, reveals what happened to the pair
05:59after the original's ambiguous ending,
06:01with Alex dying and Clea surviving
06:03by confining herself to a padded psychiatric hospital.
06:07Alex's death is relayed in a news report,
06:09which explains he remained in his own home
06:11following the events of the first movie,
06:13eventually being killed by a rogue brick
06:16falling on his head in an alley.
06:18In the context of the franchise,
06:20being bludgeoned to death by a random brick
06:22isn't all that out of place,
06:24but it doesn't really gel with how smart and careful
06:26the character had been before that.
06:28It makes the struggle of the first film seem kind of pointless.
06:32Tom Hagen gets brushed under the carpet,
06:34The Godfather Part 3.
06:36Tom Hagen is undoubtedly one of the most memorable,
06:39even iconic, characters in The Godfather Saga.
06:42Yet, after making prominent appearances
06:44in the series' first two films,
06:46Hagen is nowhere to be seen in The Godfather Part 3,
06:49with only a passing mention
06:50that Hagen didn't live to see his son Andrew
06:53become an ordained Roman Catholic priest.
06:56Absolutely no indication is made
06:58as to when or how Tom passed away,
07:00which only compounded the disappointment
07:02many felt by the third Godfather movie as a whole.
07:06It stings all the more,
07:07given that the reason for Hagen's absence
07:09is simply that the film's producers refused to pay
07:12Robert Duvall's requested salary.
07:14He was offered just a fraction of Al Pacino's fee,
07:16and so he decided to walk.
07:18As a result,
07:19Hagen's role in the series
07:21was basically swept under the carpet,
07:23with a single line of dialogue,
07:24and BJ Harrison was appointed
07:26as the family's new lawyer advisor.
07:29Detective Tapp's fate is revealed
07:31in a video game,
07:32Saw 5.
07:33Danny Glover's Detective Tapp
07:34is seemingly mortally wounded
07:36at the end of the first Saw movie.
07:38But as often is the case with this franchise,
07:41nobody is ever really dead
07:42unless you actually see it.
07:44Consequently, fans waited for an answer
07:45to whether or not Tapp succumbed to his wounds,
07:48expecting some kind of grand twist.
07:50Then Saw 5 revealed that,
07:52yep, Tapp was dead,
07:53with his picture being included
07:55in a memorial for victims of Jigsaw's game.
07:58While that's not too insulting,
08:00as it's easy to put two and two together
08:02that the character simply succumbed to being shot,
08:04his true fate was actually revealed
08:06in the Saw video game tie-in.
08:09In this release,
08:09it's shown that Tapp was taken by Jigsaw
08:12after being shot,
08:13and forced into a series of sick games
08:15which he escapes and earns his freedom.
08:18But then, in that game's sequel,
08:20it's explained Tapp killed himself
08:22after escaping.
08:23As a result,
08:24Tapp is the only character on this list
08:26to not only die between movie sequels,
08:28but video game sequels as well.
08:30Sarah Connor succumbs to leukemia,
08:32Terminator 3, Rise of the Machines.
08:35Perhaps the biggest bummer
08:36about the third Terminator movie
08:38was the absence of Sarah Connor
08:39due to Linda Hamilton
08:41understandably feeling that Connor's arc
08:43was completed at the end of Terminator 2,
08:45not loving the sequel script,
08:47and being concerned about
08:48James Cameron's lack of involvement.
08:51And so, midway through Terminator 3,
08:53Rise of the Machines,
08:54Sarah's son John reveals
08:56that Sarah died of leukemia
08:57some time prior,
08:59albeit while living long enough
09:00to see 1997's Judgment Day
09:02pass without incident.
09:04Though explaining Sarah's absence
09:06without killing her off
09:07would admittedly have been
09:08extremely difficult,
09:09short of making her MIA,
09:11for one of the greatest heroines
09:12in the history of sci-fi
09:13and action cinema
09:14to be so unceremoniously offed
09:16was a huge disappointment.
09:18In the very least,
09:19this was eventually undone
09:20by 2019's sixth film,
09:22Terminator Dark Fate,
09:24which brought Connor back
09:25into the fold
09:25as a decades-hardened
09:27Terminator hunter.
09:28Hamilton absolutely crushed it
09:30as the aged,
09:31yet still incredibly badass Sarah,
09:33even if the rest of the movie's
09:35creative choices
09:35weren't quite so popular.
09:37You know the ones.
09:38Peter has a heart attack
09:40because his actor
09:41wanted to write dialogue,
09:43The Godfather Part 2.
09:44There have been plenty of characters
09:46killed off between movies
09:47because an actor pissed off
09:48a director, writer, or producer.
09:51Blofeld in Bond
09:52might be the biggest example,
09:53where a rift between
09:54the performer and the studio
09:55resulted in the villain,
09:57played by a buddy double,
09:59getting dropped down a chimney.
10:00It is admittedly
10:01totally glorious.
10:03Something similar happened
10:04on The Godfather Part 2,
10:06albeit in a slightly subtler way.
10:08Peter Clemenza is depicted
10:09as being one of Don Corleone's
10:11oldest friends
10:12in the original crime classic,
10:13but he's suspiciously absent
10:15in the sequel.
10:16His demise gets a throwaway line,
10:18with it being reported
10:19that he suffered a heart attack,
10:20but that it might have been
10:22down to foul play.
10:23He's barely mentioned again,
10:25and that's because his swift exit
10:27was actually down to a rift
10:28between the actor,
10:29Richard Castellano,
10:31and Paramount Pictures.
10:32Castellano apparently wanted
10:34to write his own dialogue,
10:35and refused to lose weight
10:37for the sequel,
10:38which resulted in him
10:39butting heads with
10:40Francis Ford Coppola
10:41and being shunted
10:42from the project completely.
10:44The script was rewritten,
10:45and Clemenza was killed off.
10:47Shaw gets tortured to death,
10:49Alien Covenant.
10:50Now, Prometheus certainly
10:52had its fair share of issues,
10:54but in the very least,
10:55Elizabeth Shaw was a compelling
10:56and appealing protagonist
10:58to lead a new trilogy
10:59of alien movies,
11:00with the first of Scott's
11:01alien prequels
11:02teeing up a sequel
11:03where Shaw and android David
11:05would venture
11:06to the engineer homeworld.
11:07But perhaps in light
11:09of Prometheus's divisive reception,
11:11Scott pivoted
11:12and made the follow-up
11:13Alien Covenant
11:14far more of an alien movie,
11:16with David being effectively
11:17thrust into the protagonist's role instead.
11:21Though Shaw did appear
11:22in an online prologue video
11:23released before Covenant hit cinemas,
11:26she has only a brief voice role
11:27in the movie proper,
11:29before it's revealed later on
11:30that she was killed
11:31and experimented upon by David
11:33prior to the events of the film.
11:35Shaw was a badass character,
11:37who deserved better
11:38than being mutilated off-screen,
11:40and her splayed innards
11:41shown to us after the fact.
11:42At the very least,
11:43she could have shown up
11:44for a supporting role
11:45in Covenant
11:46and died sacrificing herself
11:47to help the new band of heroes.
11:50Every video game hero just...
11:52disappears.
11:53Resident Evil,
11:53the final chapter.
11:55Paul W.S. Anderson's
11:56Resident Evil franchise
11:57absolutely resents
11:59the people who enjoy it.
12:01From movie to movie,
12:02the writers constantly disregard
12:03their own continuity,
12:05picking and choosing
12:05the parts they need,
12:06and taking a big old wee
12:08on everything else.
12:09What they hate more
12:10than coherent storytelling though,
12:12is the source material
12:13the movies are actually based on,
12:15as iconic video game characters
12:16are relegated
12:17to two-bit imitations.
12:19All that seems set to change
12:20by the end of the fifth film, however.
12:22The finale of that
12:23saw hero Alice
12:24teaming up with former villain Wesker,
12:26as well as Jill Valentine,
12:28Leon S. Kennedy,
12:29and the legendary Ada Wong
12:30from the video games,
12:32for a last stand
12:33in the White House,
12:34against the hordes
12:35of the incoming undead.
12:36It provided an image
12:38and a set up
12:38so damn cool
12:40that there was no way,
12:41no way,
12:42even Paul W.S. Anderson
12:44could dick it up.
12:45Of course,
12:46that's exactly what he did,
12:47and the next movie,
12:48the final chapter,
12:50picks up in the immediate aftermath
12:51of this battle,
12:52where Alice
12:53is the only survivor.
12:54It's never explained
12:55what actually happened,
12:57and you never get to see
12:58the action yourself,
12:59and the video game characters
13:00who were finally set up
13:01to do something,
13:02anything,
13:03were just gone.
13:05Aura Singh was killed
13:06by Beckett,
13:07apparently.
13:08Solo, A Star Wars Story.
13:10Solo, A Star Wars Story
13:11contains a moment
13:12that's at once
13:13a fan-serving Easter egg
13:15and a crushing revelation
13:16in and of itself.
13:18You might not know
13:19the name Aura Singh,
13:20but you'll certainly recognize
13:22the distinctively attired
13:23bounty hunter
13:24with deathly pallid skin
13:25and striking red hair
13:26briefly glimpsed
13:28during the Phantom Menace's
13:29Tatooine pod racing sequence.
13:31Despite her brief appearance,
13:33her unique design
13:34struck a chord with fans
13:35who desperately wanted
13:36to know more about her.
13:38Many years later,
13:39Singh was featured
13:40in a handful of episodes
13:41of animated series
13:42Star Wars The Clone Wars
13:44as voiced by Jamie King,
13:46but that was the last
13:47we saw of her.
13:48However,
13:49Singh's speculated
13:50about fate
13:50was finally sewn in
13:52to Solo
13:52when Lando Calrissian
13:54mentioned that
13:55Tobias Beckett
13:56killed her,
13:57to which Beckett replied,
13:58pushed her,
13:59pretty sure the fool
14:00killed her.
14:01While on one hand
14:01it was neat to hear
14:02Singh's name mentioned
14:03in a major Star Wars movie,
14:05that it was only
14:06to announce her death
14:07was a crying shame.
14:09Dawn kills herself,
14:10palindromes.
14:11Welcome to the Dollhouse
14:12is as extreme
14:13as indie black comedy gets.
14:15The cult classic
14:16focuses on Dawn,
14:17a shy, bully preteen
14:19whose terrible family life
14:20is made much worse
14:21by her school life.
14:23Her existence is,
14:24as it's repeatedly stated,
14:25all around terrible.
14:26But buried within
14:27the film's cynical view
14:28of the world
14:29is the promise
14:30that things will get better
14:31for Dawn
14:31as she moves into high school
14:33and then later college.
14:34That's the optimistic dream
14:36the film ends on,
14:37well as optimistic
14:38as Welcome to the Dollhouse
14:39can get anyway,
14:40leaving fans to ponder
14:41how Dawn's adulthood
14:42would turn out.
14:44Flash forward nine years
14:45and fans had to wonder
14:46no more,
14:47as the spiritual sequel,
14:48Palindromes,
14:49opens on her funeral.
14:51It turns out,
14:52after school,
14:53Dawn went to college,
14:54put on weight,
14:54got pregnant
14:55and then killed herself.
14:57It's the kind of resolution
14:58that was perhaps inevitable
14:59for someone
15:00in this particularly bleak world,
15:02but it felt like
15:03a needlessly nasty end,
15:04extinguishing any of the hope
15:06found in the original movie.
15:08The writer and director
15:09of both movies
15:09apparently realised this as well
15:11and again ten years later
15:13brought Dawn back
15:14in Wiener Dog,
15:15with her apparent demise
15:16never being explained.
15:17Donna dies randomly
15:19because Meryl Streep wanted out.
15:21Mamma Mia,
15:22here we go again.
15:23The Mamma Mia sequel
15:24is perhaps the only film
15:25in history
15:26to actively shove
15:27Meryl Streep to the periphery
15:29and decide it needed
15:30less of her.
15:31Well, sort of.
15:33When a sequel
15:33to the hit ABBA-themed
15:34musical rom-com
15:35was announced,
15:36many were naturally excited
15:37to see the Oscar-winning legend
15:39back among the main cast.
15:41Yet, as Streep proved
15:42to be strangely absent
15:43from the film's
15:44marketing materials,
15:45they became understandably
15:47suspicious.
15:47And as it turned out,
15:49that's because
15:49Streep's character Donna
15:50died of an unspecified cause
15:52prior to the events
15:54of Mamma Mia,
15:54here we go again.
15:56Basically,
15:56the film pulls
15:57a Godfather part two
15:58and spends much of its run time
15:59on decades prior flashbacks
16:01with the part of a younger Donna
16:03played by Lily James.
16:04Donna's death
16:05was a bit of an unnecessary bummer,
16:07all things considered,
16:08and the fact that we don't learn
16:09precisely what happened to her
16:11didn't help at all.
16:12The reason for killing her off
16:14between films
16:14was apparently due to Streep's
16:16unwillingness to return
16:17for a major role in the sequel,
16:19and in the words of producer
16:20Judy Kramer,
16:21her desire to
16:22leave this to the younger ones.
16:24As if to prove to audiences
16:26she didn't completely
16:27know part of the project,
16:28though,
16:28Streep does appear briefly
16:30at the end of the film,
16:31showing up as a ghost
16:32during the christening
16:33of her daughter Sophie's son.
16:35Yet, given that Streep's name
16:36and face were still featured
16:37prominently on the movie's posters,
16:40it felt like a bit
16:40of a crass bait and switch.
16:42Everyone explodes,
16:43G.I. Joe Retaliation.
16:45Sometimes a sequel gets made
16:47and you just have no idea why.
16:49G.I. Joe Rise of the Cobra
16:51at best was a complete misfire
16:53and at worst,
16:54completely embarrassing
16:55for everyone involved,
16:56especially actor Channing Tatum,
16:58who quickly became
16:59a bona fide movie star
17:00following the picture's release.
17:02Paramount pushed ahead
17:03with a sequel anyway though,
17:05subtitled Retaliation,
17:06bringing Tatum back,
17:07but dropping pretty much
17:08the rest of the cast
17:09from the original,
17:10including Marlon Waynes' ripcord.
17:13Tatum reportedly wanted
17:14nothing less than to return
17:15for the sequel,
17:16but was contractually obligated to.
17:19Fortunately for him,
17:19he's killed off quickly
17:21in the opening,
17:22as an airstrike takes out
17:23all the original G.I. Joe members,
17:25making it clear
17:26that he was only brought back
17:27for 10 minutes
17:28so Paramount could use
17:29his stupid sexy face
17:31to con people into paying
17:32for a sequel
17:33they didn't really want to see.
17:35It's the rest of the cast
17:36that pulled the shot
17:37as straw though.
17:38The studio obviously
17:39didn't want to pay
17:40for the actors to return
17:41just to give them
17:42a dignified demise,
17:43presumably as they couldn't
17:45capitalize on their image
17:46like they could Tatum's,
17:47and instead just implied
17:49that they also
17:49died in the explosion.
17:51Becky dies in a car accident
17:53while pregnant,
17:54Clerks 3.
17:55Clerks 2 seemingly arrived
17:57at a pretty sunny ending
17:58for Dante,
17:59who ends up proposing
18:00to his pregnant girlfriend Becky.
18:02Clerks 3 picks up 15 years later
18:04with the utterly brutal gut punch
18:06of a revelation
18:07that, shortly after the events
18:09of the previous movie,
18:10Becky and her unborn child
18:12were killed by a drunk driver.
18:14It kicks the threequel off
18:15on an absolutely
18:16heart-wrenching note
18:17and left many frustrated
18:19at how aggressively
18:20it undid Clerks 2's ending.
18:22Though Kevin Smith
18:23clearly used Clerks 3
18:24to reckon with his own feelings
18:25about death
18:26following his near-fatal
18:272018 heart attack,
18:29killing Becky rubbed
18:30a lot of fans the wrong way.
18:32While it's highly likely
18:33that money or scheduling issues
18:34prevented Rosario Dawson
18:36from having a starring role,
18:38there had to be a better way
18:39to nudge her out of the frame
18:41than killing her off
18:42so cruelly.
18:43Off on a road trip, perhaps?
18:45Stephen Hiller gets blown up
18:47because Will Smith bailed.
18:49Independence Day Resurgence.
18:50One of the many, many, many, many, many
18:53modern-day soft reboots
18:54that completely forgets
18:56why people loved the original
18:57in the first place,
18:58Independence Day Resurgence
19:00completely pushes the cast
19:01of the first movie
19:02to the sidelines
19:03in favour of a far blander
19:05younger generation of heroes
19:06designed to attract
19:08a whole new audience.
19:09One of these wet blankets
19:10is the son of Will Smith's
19:12Steve Hiller,
19:13who sadly didn't return
19:14for the sequel.
19:15Though the producers
19:15and director Roland Emmerich
19:17apparently wanted Will Smith back,
19:19he had to choose between
19:20the Independence Day sequel
19:21and Suicide Squad.
19:23In fairness,
19:23that's kind of a no-win scenario,
19:25but ultimately,
19:26he went to work on the DC film
19:28and as a result,
19:29the writers just killed him off.
19:31In fact, no,
19:31not only did they just kill him off,
19:33but they did it in the lamest way ever,
19:35having Hiller die in a random explosion
19:37after some alien tech he's working on malfunctions,
19:40which is then reported on the news.
19:43The fact that he did receive the script
19:45for the sequel
19:45suggests he originally had a pretty major part,
19:48which wasn't only cut out when he said no,
19:50but was changed
19:51so that his character was outright dead.
19:54Mutt dies in the Vietnam War,
19:56Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.
19:58It would seem that Transformers
19:59wasn't the only franchise
20:00to kick Shia LaBeouf to the curb,
20:02as the fifth and purportedly final
20:04Indiana Jones movie
20:05also dispensed with one of his characters.
20:08Now, to be completely fair,
20:10Indiana Jones' son,
20:11Mutt Williams,
20:12wasn't exactly a fan-favorite character
20:14in the fourth film,
20:15Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,
20:18but it's not like LaBeouf
20:19was working with A-plus material either.
20:22All the same,
20:23between the overwhelmingly negative response to Mutt,
20:26especially the implication
20:27that he could take up Indy's mantle one day,
20:29and LaBeouf's space of personal issues,
20:32the decision was made
20:33to keep the character
20:33entirely out of the recent
20:35Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.
20:37But rather than simply forget about Mutt
20:39or devote a single line
20:40to explaining his absence,
20:42the sequel reveals that Mutt died
20:43in the Vietnam War,
20:45leaving Indy a depressed alcoholic shell
20:47of his former self,
20:49who even his wife Marion
20:50can't stand to be around anymore.
20:52While you can argue
20:53that the film uses Mutt's death
20:55to deepen Indy's characterisation,
20:58were any Indiana Jones fans
20:59really pining to see
21:01the whip-cracking hero
21:02depicted as a boozy, guilt-rat mope?
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