10 Things You Didn’t Know About Blue Thunder

Chris The Brain

Life long movie fanatic. Former pro wrestling announcer. Co-founder of Bulletproof Action. Follow The Brain on Twitter @ChrisTheBrain74

4 Responses

  1. Another interesting thing about Blue Thunder was that Roy Scheider and Malcolm McDowell became very good and life long friends during the filming of Blue Thunder. They enjoyed working together on the film so much that they could not leave each other alone.

    That’s pretty awesome, since they played enemies in the film.

  2. Robert says:

    Watching “Blue Thunder” right now. It’s amazing to me that this film has withstood the rest of time so well. I would think that any film that featured “high tech” tools, weaponry, surveillance equipment, etc. from so long ago would have ended up falling flat by now. At the very least, it ought to seem dated, and / or strangely anachronistic by way of detailing a potentially dastardly use of law enforcement surveillance equipment that while possible never actually happened in the technological past. Some of the other ideas from this movie *have* come to pass, though. The idea that the government might engage in fueling discontent and stirring up crime “in the barrios” in order to justify larger budgets and purchases of “Urban Tactical Warfare” equipment is occurring right now, and unsuspecting citizens who normally do not belong to already-oppressed minority groups or neighborhoods are finding it hard to believe that the level of crime which created the inflated ‘need’ for the additional budgets containing the urban tactical (and very scary) equipment _was_ in fact stirred up by, and otherwise faked by those police departments who most benefitted from it. Because we were raised to believe police are our friends and protect us from the bad guys. But when we really get to look back on this from far enough in the future, our descendants will feel about us much the way everyone is feeling about the Confederate Statues and the honoring of Americans who fought for the Confederacy. I’m a direct descendant of a well-loved Confederate Commander, too. But I sure don’t want to be on the wrong side of history.

  3. Sundaynista says:

    Just watched this for the first time. The climactic helicopter chase holds up very well and is all the more impressive considering the lack of CG. But the unsettling aspect was how Murphy seemed to have no regard for the lives of civilians as lured missiles to be shot into occupied buildings. He then downs an f16 over a populated area, and at one point he even fires his guns directly into a building. He was supposed to be a renegade, but presumably somewhat still sane. (Although the raining chickens was pretty funny.)

    Speaking of sane, I read that the original script was more specifically focused on themes of the surveillance state and the use of militarized weaponry in law enforcement and that Murphy goes insane and starts attacking the city. That would be an awesome remake. Sort of like “Falling Down” in the sky.

  4. Seems like a lot of people have been discovering Blue Thunder recently.

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