Yesterday evening, me and wifey watched
The Blues Brothers for our film club.
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And ... I don't know how to put this, but people who have made this a classic surely do have a strange view on what amounts to comedy. Or even an interesting film.
It was incredibly tedious and thoroughly
unfunny; James Belushi was a very talented comedian (elsewhere I
have seen moments of his where he was downright brilliant), but this is an utter waste of potential. And mind you, I should (in theory) like the overall aesthetic, music makes up a significant part of my life and in certain metrics, I analyse art and text for a living
and for my pastime, yet I was completely baffled at this. I don't understand this movie and I don't understand its cult. It usually doesn't even
attempt to be funny, mostly it's just stuff blowing up, deadpan people in sunglasses, things crashing into other things and some shouting. Yeah, and music cameos, but I don't get any kind of satisfaction from realising that
this stereotypically gobby black woman is played by Aretha in particular and that it's hey, John Lee Hooker playing Boom Boom in the street.
It gives me
Who's That Girl flashbacks, only unlike that particular headache on wheels you can't even say this film could use a strong dose of Ritalin, because so many scenes are just going on and on, droning without a point, just ...
being there.
The trolling in the restaurant was almost the only scene that really approached some attempt at comedy, or maybe I just don't understand this type of humour (Carrie Fisher shooting at them with rocket launcher certainly doesn't fit my idea thereof).
I suppose it's the general SNL vibe or maybe just 80s US as well - I mean, I also don't really understand the mass appeal of John Hughes' comedies - maybe it was something in the water at that time or whatever...