I appreciate that kind of re-imagining, because it opens new and imaginative ways to talk about stale characters. I love OG Indiana Jones and watched "Raiders" last week with my wife, who also loves those movies. But there's so much more that could be done in that universe. What would Indy look like from the POV of someone who keeps having their hard-earned treasure "stolen" by him? And he sure wasn't the hero in a younger Marion's memory.

For me, it's the same as when comic books changed dramatically in the 80s. I bought as many Superman, Batman, and Spider-Man comics as my parents would let me as I was growing up. They got a little stale though:

1. $hero is enjoying his day.

2. $villain comes along and ruins it.

3. $hero prevails and goes back to what he was doing.

Then authors like Alan Moore came along and asked what it would look like if the superhero was actually a giant asshole, or emotionally damaged. I can still enjoy Peter Park triumphing over Green Goblin, but I'm glad there are new ways to explore that universe.