Wednesday 18 July 2012

Iconic Movie Performances – Karen Allen in Raiders of the Lost Ark


The year was 1981 and Raiders of the Lost Ark was Karen Allen’s second big break after she appeared in National Lampoons Animal Park in 1978, a performance which had attracted the attention of Hollywood produces. She was on the radar and brought with her a strong on screen presence which was very much the flavour of the moment with the likes of Margot Kidder in Super Man and Kathleen Turner (whom Allen featured in a band with) in Body Heat portraying a tailored feminine aggression.

Karen Allen became Marion Ravenwood in Raiders and fully embodied an action packed female lead in what was obviously a Steven Spielberg classic in the making. Spielberg’s demands upon actors featuring in his iconic family films required a diverse range of emotions. Allen is not allowed to pull any punches as she switches from hard, drinking bar owner to submissive hostage in a night dress.  The drama she exudes is the direct result of her classical training and theatre experience. She expertly shows the full range of emotions, as if projecting to a crowd and handles this without hamming up the role. Her meaning is in her wide eyes and her charm in the broad smile she wealds like a rapier.  These two physical assets have additional potency for Allen as she was temporarily blinded by Kerato Conjunctivitis in 1978 and is an accomplished singer.
Raiders of the Lost Ark shot Allen for the second time into the realms of stardom.  In many ways her lovable rogue character stole the film and although Harrison Ford was his usual charismatic self he features largely as an action figure rather than an emotion barometer and we are drawn into Marion Ravenwood’s roller-coaster world, Allen’s on screen persona completely captivating.  

Allen is the only female presence in the film. Raiders deals with a number of stereotypical, yet enriching and sometimes comical characters; the academic, the action hero, the Nazi villain, the archaeologist, the trusted companion, the patron and they are all played by men. It is evident that Allen was obviously directed, and masterfully cast, to be a strong female but this is easier said than done when faced with such a masculine cast. She has to be tom boy and heroin, lover and fighter and understandably receives critical success for how she manages it with apparent ease.

The late seventies and early eighties were incredibly successful for Karen Allen.  In 1977 she was considered for the role of Princess Leia in Star wars and could have chosen from a number of blockbusters following the success of Raiders. But she decided to focus on Theatre and for two years scooped a number of awards and huge acclaim for her stage work. If Allen had decided to stay in Cinema there is little doubt that she would have forged a career of legendary status and she does feature in some successful films later in her career such as Ghost in the Machine (1993) and The Perfect Storm (2000) but the momentum was stalled and other personal projects distracted.

Karen Allen is primarily associated with her iconic role in Raiders. In hindsight it almost stereotyped her and perhaps this was part of the reason why she returned to stage. When revisiting Raiders of the Lost Ark much of it is dated, although it’s still a family classic. The action has become comic, Harrison Ford is far more recognisable as Harrison Ford rather than a dashing Indiana, and the format has been worn thin by numerous failed attempts at replicating. Yet one main aspect stands out as quality: Karen Allen.

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