Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
Slightly biased review., 17 Nov 2005
This film has always been a favourite of mine. The excellent cast, modified helicopter and the flying sequences at the end of the film have always made this one to watch. Some people don't like the way Roy Scheider's character seems distant and disinterested with everything and everyone, but this is the whole point of the story. He is haunted with bad memories from Vietnam and it has made him into a burned out cop with very little patience for red-tape, bureaucracy, and devious people who wear cheap suits.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
Clunky chopper copper caper, empty of extras., 17 Jan 2001
Scheider is LAPD helicopter pilot Murphy, who is assigned to test Blue Thunder, an experimental attack helicopter designed for urban use. Murphy soon learns that dodgy guvmint spooks led by McDowell(played as an upper-class twit for no good reason)are stirring up ethnic trouble as an excuse to use their new toy, so he hijacks Blue Thunder and tries to expose the truth while avoiding destrucyion. What seemed cool back then is now revealed to have Scooby Doo-level plotting("Hey! This looks like a clue!")and lifeless pacing until the final dogfight is joined. The disc has strong audio and good reproduction of its murky photography, but lacks extras beyond a trailer. Because of this, the whole package never acheives takeoff.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
High-tech, fast-action paranoia and with first-rate performances, 31 Jul 2007
Among the stars of this first-rate high tech action thriller is Blue Thunder, a helicopter that, as one character says, can fire 4,000 rounds a minute and peer down blouses at 1,000 feet. At first glance, Blue Thunder is a marvel; it has night vision capability, whisper action engines, high sensitivity mikes, automatic firepower linked to the movements of the pilot's helmet and sophisticated targeting systems. It's heavily armored and heavily armed. When Officer Frank Murphy (Roy Scheider) a chopper pilot with the Los Angeles police who has bad memories of Viet Nam, is chosen to test out the helicopter, he and his partner, Richard Lymangood (Daniel Stern), find themselves up to their eyes in a secret government conspiracy where people are going to die.
Murphy has nightmares about Viet Nam, has trouble with authority, sticks his neck out, feels he has to test himself. His boss, Jack Braddock (Warren Oates), respects him but gets tired of dealing with Murphy's edginess. For one incident, Braddock takes him off flight status. "But there's a bright side to this, and a moral," Braddock tells Murphy. "I think morals are good things. I love morals. And the moral of this story is, if you're walking on eggs, don't hop." On night patrol in their regular police helicopter, Murphy and Lymangood come across an attack on a woman as she enters her condominium complex. They call it it, police quickly arrive, and in the shootout the woman is seriously wounded. The attack is labeled a suspected rape attempt, but Murphy isn't so sure. Why were there two assailants? Why was her briefcase the object of a theft? What happened to the abandoned car Lymangood had spotted nearby just moments before? The woman turns out to be Diane McNeely, a member of the Los Angeles Mayor's task force on urban violence. Murphy discovers she possessed written information that government agencies were stirring up violence in some of the poorest parts of Los Angeles.
Then the Feds show up with Blue Thunder. The experimental chopper with its high tech gear and armaments is designed to identify potential trouble makers and terrorists, to suppress them and to eliminate any unrest they may cause. Los Angeles, it seems, might be just the candidate for tests to prove more of these choppers will do the job. The helicopter is effective in tests, but not perfectly surgical in it's firepower. "One civilian dead for every ten terrorists. That's an acceptable ratio," says one official. "Not if you're the civilian," says Murphy. One of the people behind Blue Thunder is Col. F. E. Cochrane (Malcolm McDowell), an old acquaintance of Murphy's from Viet Nam. Cochrane was an ace pilot, too, who often tossed Viet Nam prisoners out of his chopper. One night in a check-out flight of Blue Thunder, Murphy and Lymangood come across a secret meeting of Cochrane and some Fed officials. Using Blue Thunder's surveillance capabilities, Murphy gets the meeting's discussion recorded on tape. The discussion proves a government conspiracy by a handful of officials to foment insurrection in order to justify Blue Star's use by the government, and to countenance murder, all for the greater good. Just as the meeting closes, Cochrane pulls open the drapes to look outside...and sees Blue Thunder hovering nearby. Murphy and Lymangood are discovered, and a brutal chase begins. The last third of the movie is a race...by the bad guys to get the tape, by Murphy and his girlfriend to get the tape to the news media, to get the Air Force to destroy Blue Thunder and Murphy, and finally to get Blue Thunder and Murphy destroyed in a head-to-head chopper duel between Murphy and Cochrane.
I like this movie a lot. It's a taut, high-paranoia action film where the paranoia is justified. All the actors do fine jobs. Scheider is authoritative and troubled. McDowell is thoroughly unlikable but always watchable. Stern makes Lymangood a goofy, good-natured guy who doesn't deserve what happens to him. Candy Clark as Murphy's girl friend is a sweet, slightly off-centered delight who is brave and determined when she needs to be. Warren Oates plays Murphy's boss in great style. And the city of Los Angeles comes off well, too. The action sequences take us in a fast tour the city from a bird's eye view, from over downtown, past and around sky scrapers, low and fast over freeways and down to the concrete-encased Los Angeles River.
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