July 1, 2020

The Blues Brothers.

Review #1462: The Blues Brothers.

Cast: 
John Belushi ("Joliet" Jake Blues), Dan Aykroyd (Elwood Blues), featuring James Brown (Reverend Cleophus James), Cab Calloway (Curtis), Ray Charles (Ray), Aretha Franklin (Mrs. Murphy), Steve "the Colonel" Cropper (Lead guitar), Donald "Duck" Dunn (bass guitar), Murphy Dunne (keyboards), Willie "Too Big" Hall (drums), Tom "Bones" Malone (trombone), Lou "Blue Lou" Marini (saxophone), Matt "Guitar" Murphy (lead guitar), "Mr. Fabulous" Alan Rubin (trumpet), with Carrie Fisher (Mystery Woman), Henry Gibson (The Head Nazi), John Candy (Burton Mercer), John Lee Hooker (Street Slim), and Kathleen Freeman (Sister Mary Stigmata) Directed by John Landis (#328 - Trading Places, #410 - Coming to America, and #513 - Spies Like Us, and #1114 - Animal House)

Review: 
"...A good man, but a bad boy." 

Every decade had plenty of entertainment to spare, and the 1980s was certainly a decade among itself in trying to reach audiences every which way it could, for better or worse. A newly forged era of studio films with the stars came about in this decade that emphasized high-concept ideas for films to go along with the freshly-devised blockbuster (an old term in the 1940s that came back into prominence with the release of films like Jaws and Star Wars). One film to represent a high point in comedy to start the decade off is this film, directed by a newly-honed showman director in John Landis and talents in John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd. They had met while each were performing in The Second City comedy troupe in 1973 (Aykroyd initially joined the Toronto troupe before being part of the Chicago group). Both were original members of the television series Saturday Night Live when it began in 1975, and they both had developed interest in music from a young age, with Aykroyd being interested in the blues while growing up near a blues/jazz club in Ottawa and Belushi having formed his own band while growing up in Chicago lasted for exactly one single (where he played drums and sang). In 1978, they formed The Blues Brothers, which turned from a musical sketch on SNL to an actual band that had Belushi as vocalist and Aykroyd as harmonica/vocalist while being accompanied by musicians of the time such as Paul Shaffer for their debut album in Briefcase Full of Blues (with Cropper, Dunn, Murphy, Malone, Marini, Rubin participating in both the album and the film), which did covers of blues and soul songs that ranged from "Soul Man" to "Groove Me".

This was the second of three collaborations in film that they would do after leaving SNL and having their own band (the other films being 1941 and Neighbors). The script for this film was originally done by Aykroyd, who wrote over 300 pages. Obviously this couldn't work for just one film, so it fell to Landis to help cut the script down over the course of a couple of week (it did not stop the film from possibly being too long, since the first cut of the film was actually two-and-a-half fours long). We are talking about a film that involves folks on the run from the police, Illinois Nazis, and country singers, after all. The film had its share of production issues, such as the budget, which Universal had actually settled to initially make for $17.5 million that went to over $30 million at the end along with trying to keep Belushi away from going over on his addiction to cocaine, but it all eventually worked out for a tremendous success in the end. There aren't that many comedies that can also be thought of as a musical (or at least that what Landis said to the crew), especially one that presents musical greats and gives them each a chance to sing a number, whether it is Calloway singing his classic "Minnie the Moocher" with a big band behind him once again or an energetic Brown (as if one expects anything different from the "Godfather of Soul"), and so on and so on - with the Blues Brothers following right behind in doing entertaining covers of songs to go with it ("Theme from Rawhide" was a song I head long before I saw this film, but it doesn't make it any less charming). Simply put, Belushi and Aykroyd are a dream team of energy and deadpan that makes for a mostly successful ballad of humor and songs in a manic state that holds up well after four decades. This is the kind of film where a stroll through the mall with cars is only just the first layer of the spectacle cake that makes for silly fun to go with a fair supporting group to go alongside our main duo (such as a jilted would-be assassin played by Fisher) and a sneaky Gibson. On the whole, this 133-minute package of music and comedy might go over the top in chaos, but it has a cast and director that make the best of it with success more often than not to make a worthy film to represent a decade with.


Overall, I give it 9 out of 10 stars.
Now then, let me announce the films slated for review in July. It was a list worked over to try and fit the best possible representations of the decade without going completely overboard - despite that, there are 32 slated reviews, with several films that didn't make the shortlist that could be done at a later time. Although I do wish there was a special review for Canada Day or Independence Day, I do hope that this month will prove satisfactory for some fun reviews of interesting movies, both with new and old faces.

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