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Of course, like all schoolyard tales it was too good to be true. 'Blue Thunder' wasn't a top clandestine Commie-busting nuke firing super secret weapon; it was a cool looking helicopter that the cops used to control rioters. When I actually saw the movie a few years later, I was bummed to say the least.
But there was a good reason for that. Blue Thunder is an intelligent, well-conceived film that is as satirical as it is macho tech. Scripters Dan O'Bannon (Alien) and Don Jakoby (Invaders from Mars) are more concerned with the sinister implications of the Blue Thunder copter than they are in showing off its supreme firepower.
The film concerns Frank Murphy (Roy Scheider), an L.A.P.D. pilot who is haunted by nasty Nam flashbacks and paired up with a clumsy rookie named Lymangood (Daniel Stern). These two are roped into trying out an experimental helicopter called Blue Thunder that the police want to use to counter the insurgency, er, I mean urban violence. But Murphy's no slacker and he quickly catches on that Blue Thunder has been developed for more nefarious reasons and it links in with a secret military program called Thor.
The film really plays up the distrust of the government vibe that was so popular in the late 70s and the early 80s. (Now where on Earth has that vibe gone?) Murphy's concerns, at first painted to be the result of psychiatric illness, are validated in the end. The film's just as cynical as he is. And it's surprisingly topical today. Along the way we are treated to some nice aerial shots, some pyrotechnics and a scene of a very limber woman doing nude calisthenics that will forever haunt prepubescent boys. Oh yeah, and Malcolm McDowell plays the villain. This is an 80s film, after all.
After 20 odd years, Blue Thunder is still an invigorating and sardonic film. Badham's pacing is spot on, the acting straight and narrow, the screenplay witty and almost overly intelligent. Oh, and the helicopter kicks some serious ass, even if isn't a super Commie destroyer.
The new DVD includes a commentary track, a pair of making-of featurettes, and an original 1983 promo for the film.
Now available in orange.