Bluesmobile

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The Blues Brothers and their Dodge Monaco
The Blues Brothers and their Dodge Monaco

The Bluesmobile is a 1974 Dodge Monaco sedan that was prominently featured in the 1980 film, The Blues Brothers. In the film, it is described as a used Mount Prospect, Illinois police car that replaced a Cadillac, which Elwood Blues traded for a microphone. The Bluesmobile was equipped with the Magnum 440 squad car package that was offered by Dodge for the Monaco.

In describing the car to his brother, Jake, Elwood said, "It's got a cop motor, a 440-cubic-inch plant. It's got cop tires, cop suspensions, cop shocks. It's a model made before catalytic converters so it'll run good on regular gas." The Bluesmobile has the ability to perform seemingly impossible stunts, such as jumping over an open drawbridge, flipping backwards in midair and even "flying" for very brief periods of time.

The police do not like the car. Illinois State Trooper Mount, for instance, referred to it as "that shitbox Dodge".

After the extended chase from their concert gig, which was a 106-mile trip to Chicago and an unspecified total distance through the streets of city being pursued by the police and Neo-Nazis, the Bluesmobile collapsed seconds upon arrival at the Richard J. Daley Center.

In the extended version of the film, Elwood parks the Bluesmobile in an electric substation that was used to power Chicago's elevated trains. In the documentary "Stories Behind the Making of the Blues Brothers", Dan Aykroyd (Elwood) stated that the Bluesmobile would get charged from the substation, which would explain how it would be able to do impressive stunts. In the original theatrical release, director John Landis had cut that scene to shorten the length of the film and said there was no need to explain the car's powers. To him, it was simply "a magic car".

Landis also claimed that the chase scene beneath the elevated train tracks, which briefly showed the car's speedometer with a reading of 120 miles per hour (nearly 200 km/h) was actually filmed at that speed, a testament to the Monaco's police car heritage. Landis says he actually re-shot some of the scenes with pedestrians on the sidewalks, so viewers could see that the film had not been sped up to create the effect of speed.

The film used 13 different cars to depict the Bluesmobile, some formatted for speed, and others in jumps or high-performance maneuvers, depending on the scene. One was designed to simply fall apart upon its arrival at the Daley Center. A mechanic took several months to rig the car for that scene. The production kept a 24-hour body shop open for repairing the multiple cars used in the film.[1][1]

At the time of the film's release, it held the world record for the most cars destroyed in one film until it was surpassed by its own sequel.[1]

Many replicas of the Bluesmobile have been built by collectors around the world.

The name "Bluesmobile" was also given to another former police car, a 1990 Ford LTD Crown Victoria, used in the 1998 sequel, Blues Brothers 2000.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Chicago Sun-Times. Incredible stunt driving: "That was all real". Retrieved on December 16, 2006.

[edit] External links