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Boring poster, awesome movie |
The
Blues Brothers (1980)
Dir. by John
Landis
Starring John
Belushi, Dan Aykroyd, Cab Calloway and Carrie Fisher
[content warning:
Nazis, car crashes]
Plot:
R&B
singer and career criminal Jake Blues is released from prison after serving
three years for armed robbery. Upon
learning that the orphanage where he was raised will be foreclosed unless it
can raise $5000, he and his brother Elwood decide to put their old band back together for a fundraiser concert. Along the
way, they manage to attract the attentions of the police, Neo-Nazis, a vengeful
country band and a mysterious woman with a vendetta against Jake.
Nostalgia:
As with many
of these movies, I have no recollection of the exact time and place where I
first watched Blues Brothers. We never had it on VHS until I was old enough
to be able to buy VHS tapes myself, but it was one that I’d always scour the
weekly TV listings in the Sunday paper for.
If you’d asked me to list my favorite comedies or musicals at any point
in high school, Blues Brothers almost certainly would have
topped both lists.
Review:
This is the
best car chase musical ever made. I’d
say it was the only one ever made but for last year’s Baby
Driver. It’s also arguably the
greatest movie ever set in Chicago, with only the possible exception of
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.
According to my movie log, it’s been
seven years since I’ve seen The Blues Brothers, and I’m glad
to say that I still enjoyed it just as much this time around as I did back in
high school. Both Belushi and Aykroyd
were at the top of their games, and they are surrounded by possibly the best
lineup of musical guest stars ever assembled for a movie: Cab Calloway, James
Brown, Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, and John Lee Hooker all have songs, and the
Blues Brothers band itself is a who’s-who of classic soul and blues
musicians.
While the
soundtrack is absolutely tremendous, and would be reason enough to see the
movie just on its own, Landis and Aykroyd double down by making the movie one
of the most over-the-top chase movies of all time. The highlight is the twenty-minute,
hundred-mile-long race from the concert venue in Wisconsin to downtown Chicago,
with seemingly every single police officer in the state, as well as the
National Guard and the Neo-Nazis, in hot pursuit. The chase is a paean to ridiculousness, with
the Bluesmobile performing feats that no car would ever be able to accomplish –
it helps to be on a “mission from God.”
No wonder the car literally disintegrates once they reach their final
destination. However, for my money the
most entertaining chase actually occurs over an hour earlier, when Elwood
attempts to evade arrest at a traffic stop by driving
through a busy indoor mall.
It was filmed at an actual closed mall outside Chicago, and represents a
level of gleeful property destruction that modern-day superhero films would
envy.
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It set a record for most cars wrecked in a single movie |
There
is one plot element that gives me slightly more pause than it
did twenty years ago, however: the aforementioned Neo-Nazis. They are first introduced while marching
after a successful court case, with a horde of counter-protestors screaming at
them while being held back by the police.
Into this arrive the Blues Brothers, who decide to cut through the
traffic jam by ramming the Nazis with their car, forcing them to all jump off a
bridge or get hit. This is all played
for laughs, and while I can admire any movie that spends time kicking the ass
of American white supremacists, in a post-Charlottesville world this particular
scene is a little too real for comfort.
Especially its use of attempted vehicular manslaughter for a cheap
laugh.
Ultimately,
the Nazis really serve no narrative purpose in the film. They’re just another faction out to get the
Blues brothers, and could easily be excised from the movie without changing
much at all. That makes me wonder why
they were there in the first place. I
know that the original version of the script was infamously bloated out of
control. Dan Aykroyd had never written a
screenplay before, and turned in a 300+ page behemoth that he jokingly wrapped
in a phone book cover. Maybe they
originally had more of a point, which never made it onto the screen.
I’m glad I
finally got around to catching up with this one again, as it was just as good
as I remember it being. I’m docking it
just a little for the plot threads (i.e. Nazis) that don’t really go anywhere,
but otherwise it’s a real winning movie, and one I need to see if I can pick up
on Blu-Ray.
Nostalgia: A
Rewatch: A-
Stray
Thoughts:
-This was
the first movie to be based on an SNL sketch, and while there would be many
more to come, only perhaps Wayne’s World would ever manage
to equal this first one.
-When my
brother was in college, he and his roommate were the exact same height and
weight as Belushi and Aykroyd were. So
of course they went as Jake and Elwood for Halloween. They actually extended this act to Detroit’s
scifi convention circuit, performing the entire song-and-dance number from the
end of the movie in-character at ConFusion’s masquerade one year. They even snuck out the side of the room when
they were done, and then ran back in the main door and barricaded it before
heading back to the stage for the awards.
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My brother's the one playing Jake |
-In addition
to all of the musical performances, this movie also has a whole lot of famous
cameos that I gradually recognized over the years. Frank Oz is a prison clerk that gives Jake
his clothes back, Stephen Spielberg plays the Cook County clerk at the end,
Paul Reubens (Pee Wee Herman) is a maĆ®tre d’, and the band’s booking agent is
played by 50s pop vocalist Steve Lawrence in a non-singing role.
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