Blue Thunder
- TV Series
- 1984
- 1h
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
An advanced prototype police helicopter and their ground support crew battle crime.An advanced prototype police helicopter and their ground support crew battle crime.An advanced prototype police helicopter and their ground support crew battle crime.
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This spin off from the Blue Thunder movie has nothing in common with the film other than the LA setting and the helicopter. Aside from the chopper, gone are the serious themes and grit and overall sense of paranoia. Instead, into the TV production have come multiple TV tropes: The tough lead cop who breaks the rules to get things done; his comedy relief partner; two ex football jocks that are as the brawn ; and the Chief who yells at his subordinates a lot. Plots are generic (stop terrorists, stop an assassination, stop another assassination, get an old girlfriend out of trouble, foil a kidnaping, stop a drug runner, transport a MacGuffin), and the writers had to work harder and harder to find something in the air Blue Thunder can confront (choppers, WWII planes, space shuttles). BUT the star of the show is clearly Blue Thunder itself, a mock up of a French Chopper that steals the scene whenever it appears. Although stock footage is often used, there is new footage each episode of some dam fine stunt flying happening as well. The last episode, which took the Blue Thunder flies away from LA to stop a coup on an island nation was ironically much improved. Although to be honest it was a lot more like an Airwolf plotline with its foreign mission and cold war elements..
Was in Grade 9 when this show was on. It's ok but typical tv, did not watch to much, rather watch Air wolf. The part I hate it, and I watched it at my buddies place Tony & Wilfred, and we would all laughf at this, they would shoot the gun out of the hand of bad guy every time, with this super powerfull attack chopper. Dam where thoes guys good. The only other thing I can remember one of the cast made sure they would get cassarole after Bubba and Dick ate it for a week in sum prision. It would have been a better show if they made the guy eat it than the typical ending I mention earlier. One point to be taking this show with a chopper had a bigger set budget, and include the stunt than any of todays on the cheap shows. Friend's , Sienfield what kind of budget is that, 2 room, and now with reality TV shows with no director script, or even professional actor. Boy, TV budgets sure have gone down the toilet no wonder I only watch movies.
Blue Thunder is a special federal air unit based in Los Angeles. Frank Chaney (James Farentino) is the pilot. Joining him in the cockpit is computer tech observer Clinton 'JAFO' Wonderlove (Dana Carvey). Captain Braddock (Sandy McPeak) is their commander. Former NFL players Richard 'Ski' Butowski (Dick Butkus) and Lyman 'Bubba' Kelsey (Bubba Smith) are their ground support.
It's funny that this came out at the same time as Airwolf. While the pilot of Airwolf is far superior, I like the rest of episodes of this show better. It's an 80's action comedy episodic series. I would have expected better for its fortune but this mid-season replacement never got renewed. Carvey is doing his voices for comedy and the football buddies are a bit campy. Where else do we get two football greats on network TV? This show kinda works. The comedic elements combine with the action elements which inevitably involves air to air combat. Never has there ever been so many bad guys with air support. It's overkill especially on city streets. It would have been more prudent to move the location to the border where the crew can battle the drug cartels in an ongoing serial. It would have made this a more serious show which would be fine. The comedy makes this more campy which does fit 80's TV. It would have been interesting to treat the material more seriously.
It's funny that this came out at the same time as Airwolf. While the pilot of Airwolf is far superior, I like the rest of episodes of this show better. It's an 80's action comedy episodic series. I would have expected better for its fortune but this mid-season replacement never got renewed. Carvey is doing his voices for comedy and the football buddies are a bit campy. Where else do we get two football greats on network TV? This show kinda works. The comedic elements combine with the action elements which inevitably involves air to air combat. Never has there ever been so many bad guys with air support. It's overkill especially on city streets. It would have been more prudent to move the location to the border where the crew can battle the drug cartels in an ongoing serial. It would have made this a more serious show which would be fine. The comedy makes this more campy which does fit 80's TV. It would have been interesting to treat the material more seriously.
I remember watching a few episodes of this TV series when it first came out, and liking what I saw. So when I found out that the entire eleven episodes of the series had been released on DVD, I rented the entire set to see if the show would still hold up. And the answer is, for the most part, no. With the exception of a pre-fame Dana Carvey, who manages to show off his comic skills and charm, the cast gives pretty forgettable performances, most likely because the scripts don't give their parts multi-dimension. The other parts of the scripts also fail to interest, with bland, simplistic stories. The Blue Thunder Helicopter does look cool, and there is some impressive aerial photography as well as choreography. But it seems that the expense to do so resulted in some shabby cost-cutting elsewhere, with obvious stock footage and footage repeated - sometimes in the same show! And while the helicopter looks cool, its movements and abilities come across as sluggish - unlike Airwolf, from a different helicopter show broadcast around the same time. In fact, you'd be better off watching "Airwolf" than watching the "Blue Thunder" TV series.
After seeing only the Pilot episode (''Second Thunder'') and the next proper episode to follow (''A Clear and Present Day''), I have to say this spinoff series inspired by the original 1983 box-office smash hit of the same name, is a worthy and stylish piece of television, fiananced by Rastar Productions and the original film's distributer, Columbia Pictures. Dana Carvey get's on my nerves sometimes with his over-the-top humour (noticably taken from Dwight Schultz's Murdock in 'The A-Team'), but the aerial action sequences are superb. Seeing as only 11 episodes were produced, I would have to say it is miles ahead of the 1985 13-episode 'Streethawk' series, seeing as both were aired on ABC in the Eighties. The new theme music is now one of my favourites, but I still recognise the constant drum beat used also constantly in 'The A-Team'. All in all, I would rate these show 8/10. Although the original aerial police station base wasn't available to the show's production team, the stock footage taken from the original film is well put together and the soundstages are alright, but a bit of a goof, with the slow rotating blades above the actors, plus no backing motion video playing to simulate the actors actually flying in the air, which was seen in 'Airwolf'.
Did you know
- TriviaThe camouflaged vehicle used in the series is a modified GMC S15 Jimmy 4 x 4 with the rear section and doors removed.
- ConnectionsFeatured in MacGyver: Pilot (1985)
- How many seasons does Blue Thunder have?Powered by Alexa
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- Das fliegende Auge
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