The story
is a tale of redemption for paroled convict Jake and his brother Elwood, who take
on "a mission from God" to save the Roman Catholic orphanage in which
they grew up from foreclosure. To do so they must re-form their rhythm and blues
band, the Blues Brothers, and organize a performance to earn $5,000 to pay the
tax assessor. Along the way they are targeted by a destructive "mystery woman,"
Neo-Nazis, and a country and western band all while being relentlessly
pursued by the police, and eventually the military and a SWAT team.
The film is set in and around Chicago, Illinois, and also features non-musical supporting performances by John Candy, Carrie Fisher and Henry Gibson.
Plot
"Joliet Jake" Blues is released from Joliet Prison into his brother Elwood's custody after serving a sentence for armed robbery. Jake is irritated at being picked up in a battered former police car instead of the Cadillac the brothers used to own, but is mollified when Elwood demonstrates the "new" Bluesmobile's powers by vaulting it over an open drawbridge.
Over Jake's protests, they visit their childhood home, a Roman Catholic orphanage. They learn the institution will be shut down unless $5,000 in property taxes can be paid. Jake indicates they can quickly obtain the funds, but the orphanage director, a nun known as "The Penguin", emphatically refuses to accept any stolen money from the brothers. She drives them out, and tells them not to return until they have redeemed themselves. At the prompting of Curtis, the elderly orphanage worker who introduced the duo to the blues, the brothers visit a lively evangelical church service where Jake has an epiphany: they can legitimately raise the funds by re-forming their legendary rhythm and blues band.
As they drive home, Elwood's driving attracts the attention of two Illinois State Police troopers named Daniels and Mount. Elwood proceeds to both escape and earn the officers' undying enmity by driving through a shopping mall. Arriving at the flophouse which Elwood calls home, the brothers also suffer a bazooka attack launched by a "Mystery Woman;" she reappears at regular intervals throughout the rest of the film to launch more similarly-unsuccessful assaults.
The brothers begin tracking down members of the band. The core rhythm section of the group is found playing in an empty Holiday Inn lounge, and is fairly easily convinced to rejoin. Trumpet player "Mr. Fabulous", now maître d' at a high-class French restaurant, is harder to sway, but Jake and Elwood gleefully proceed to make a ghastly spectacle of themselves, swilling the restaurant's food and drink and harassing the other patrons. When they threaten to repeat this performance at every meal, Mr. Fabulous gives in.
En route to meet guitar player Matt Murphy and sax player Lou Marini, the brothers disrupt the neo-Nazi rally of the American Socialist White People's Party ("The Illinois Nazis"), adding another bitter enemy to the brothers' rapidly-growing list. Murphy and Marini are at the soul food restaurant which Matt owns with his wife. Against her emphatic advice, Matt and Lou walk out and rejoin the band. The reunited group obtains instruments and equipment from a pawn shop, Ray's Music Exchange.
Jake leads the skeptical band out into the countryside and stumbles into a gig at Bob's Country Bunker, a bar which features both country and western music. After a rocky start, the band wins over the bottle-tossing crowd with the theme from Rawhide and "Stand By Your Man". At the end of the evening, however, not only is their bar tab greater than the pay for the gig, the band that was actually meant to play turns up: a Nashville group called the Good Ole' Boys. Jake and Elwood escape the Good Ol' Boys and Bob thanks to the fortuitous reappearence of Daniels and Mount.
The Blues Brothers blackmail their booking agent friend Maury Sline to land their big gig a performance at the Palace Hotel Ballroom, located 100 miles north of Chicago. After being driven all over the area promoting the concert, the Bluesmobile runs out of gas, making Jake and Elwood very late. The ballroom is packed, the concert-goers are joined by the Good Ol' Boys, troopers Daniel and Mount, and scores of other police officers. To settle the crowd, Curtis appears and performs a magical version of "Minnie the Moocher" with the band. Jake and Elwood finally sneak into the venue and perform two songs. With the help of a record executive, they receive the money they need and slip through the police cordon.
As the brothers escape via some grimy service tunnels, they are confronted one last time by the Mystery Woman, whereupon it is revealed she is Jake's brutally-jilted ex-fiancée. She threatens them with an M16 rifle, but Jake charms her, kisses her, then unceremoniously drops her in the mud, allowing the two brothers to escape to the Bluesmobile. They hit the road back to Chicago with the entire "Illinois law enforcement community" and the Good Ol' Boys in close pursuit. The brothers eventually elude them all, leaving massive pileups of cars in their wake.
After a gravity-defying escape from the Illinois Nazis, Jake and Elwood arrive at the Richard J. Daley Center, where the Bluesmobile literally falls to pieces. Finding the office of the Cook County Assessor, they discover a sign saying "Back in 5 minutes". As they wait, the building is stormed by hundreds of police, firefighters, and Illinois National Guardsmen. An assessor clerk finally appears, and the brothers pay the tax bill. Just as their receipt is stamped, handcuffs go on their wrists and they turn to face a sea of armed law officers. As the film ends, Jake, Elwood and the rest of the band are back in prison, where they play "Jailhouse Rock" for their fellow inmates.
Cast
Cab Calloway as Curtis
Carrie Fisher
as Mystery Woman
Aretha Franklin as Mrs. Murphy
Ray Charles as Ray
James
Brown as Reverend Cleophus James
John Candy as Burton Mercer
Kathleen
Freeman as Sister Mary Stigmata, "The Penguin"
Henry Gibson as Head
Nazi
Steve Lawrence as Maury Sline
Twiggy as Chic Lady
Frank Oz as
Corrections Officer
Jeff Morris as Bob
Sheilah Wells as Claire
Charles
Napier as Tucker McElroy
Steven Williams as Trooper Mount
Armand Cerami
as Trooper Daniel
Chaka Khan as Choir soloist
John Lee Hooker as musician
on Maxwell Street
John Landis as State trooper
Stephen Bishop as State
trooper
Joe Walsh as Prisoner
Paul Reubens as Chez Paul waiter
Steven
Spielberg as Cook County Assessor's Office Clerk
The band
The
band playing "Jailhouse Rock" in prisonMain article: The Blues Brothers
John
Belushi as "Joliet" Jake Blues, vocals
Dan Aykroyd as Elwood Blues,
harmonica and vocals
Steve Cropper as Steve "the Colonel" Cropper,
rhythm guitar and vocals
Donald "Duck" Dunn as Donald "Duck"
Dunn, bass guitar
Murphy Dunne as Murphy "Murph" Dunne, keyboards
Willie Hall as Willie "Too Big" Hall, drums and percussion
Tom
Malone as Tom "Bones" Malone, trombone, tenor saxophone and vocals
Lou
Marini as "Blue Lou" Marini, alto saxophone and tenor saxophone and
vocals
Matt Murphy as Matt "Guitar" Murphy, lead guitar
Alan
Rubin as Alan "Mr. Fabulous" Rubin, trumpet, percussion and vocals
Production
Origins
The Blues Brothers
The characters, Jake and Elwood
Blues, were developed by John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd in performances on Saturday
Night Live. The fictional back story of blood brothers Jake and Elwood is related
in the liner notes of the band's debut album, Briefcase Full of Blues, having
them growing up in an orphanage, learning the blues from a janitor named Curtis
and sealing their brotherhood by cutting their middle fingers with a steel string
said to come from the guitar of Elmore James.
When it was decided the act could be made into a movie by Universal Pictures, Aykroyd set about writing the script. He had never written a screenplay before, he said in the 1998 documentary, Stories Behind the Making of The Blues Brothers, and he put together a very descriptive volume that explained the characters' origins and how the band members were recruited. It was 324 pages, which was three times longer than a standard screenplay. To soften the impact, Aykroyd made a joke of the thick script and had it bound with the cover of the Los Angeles Yellow Pages directory for when he turned it in to producer Robert K. Weiss. John Landis was given the task of editing the script into a usable screenplay.
The premise of the underlying plot, that a church-owned orphanage would have to pay a property tax bill, has been questioned in Illinois, and generally elsewhere in the world, church-owned property is exempt from taxes. However, at the time of writing of the film, a legislative proposal to tax such property was under consideration. The proposal was never enacted into law.
Location
Much of the film was shot on location in and around Chicago,
Illinois between July and October of 1979. Made with the cooperation of Mayor
Jane M. Byrne, it is credited for putting Chicago on the radar as a venue for
filmmaking. Mayor Richard J. Daley had all but prevented movies from being produced
there up until his death in 1976. This is alluded to in a line by Mr. Fabulous,
when he said, "No, sir, Mayor Daley no longer dines here. He's dead, sir."
Since then, nearly 200 movies have been filmed in Chicago.
Chicago is one of the stars of the movie. We wrote it as a tribute," Dan Aykroyd told the Chicago Sun-Times in an article written to mark the film's 25th anniversary DVD release.
The first traffic stop was in Park Ridge, Illinois. The mall car chase was filmed in the real, albeit abandoned, Dixie Square Mall in Harvey. The bridge jump was filmed on an actual drawbridge, the 95th Street bridge over the Calumet River, on the southeast side of Chicago. The main entrance to Wrigley Field (and its sign reading "Save lives. Drive safely, prevent fires.") makes a brief appearance when the "Illinois Nazis" visit it after Elwood falsely registers the ballfield's location, 1060 West Addison, as his home address on his driver's license. (Elwood's Illinois driver's license number is an almost-valid encoded number, with Dan Aykroyd's own birthdate embedded). The other chase scenes included Lower Wacker Drive and Richard J. Daley Center. Filming was done on selected Sundays in 1979, with the downtown area cordoned off.
In the final car chase scene, the production actually dropped a Ford Pinto, representing the one driven by the "Illinois Nazis," from a helicopter at an altitude of more than a mile and had to gain a special "air-unworthiness" certificate from the Federal Aviation Administration to do it. The FAA was concerned that the car could prove too aerodynamic in a high-altitude drop, and pose a threat to nearby buildings. The shot leading up to the car drop, where the "Illinois Nazis" drive off a freeway ramp, was shot in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on Interstate 794. The Lake Freeway (North) was a planned but not completed 6-lane freeway and I-794 contained an unfinished ramp that the Nazi's drove off that was to head north on the unfinished freeway. Several Milwaukee skyscrapers are visible in the background as the Bluesmobile flips over, notably the U.S. Bank Center.
The "Palace Hotel Ballroom," where the band performs its climactic concert, was at the time of filming a country club, but later became the South Shore Cultural Center, named after the Chicago neighborhood in which it is located. The interior concert scenes were filmed in the Hollywood Palladium.
The filming in downtown Chicago was conducted on Sundays during the summer of 1979, and much of the downtown was cordoned off from the public. Although the Bluesmobile was allowed to be driven through the Daley Center lobby, special breakaway panes were temporarily substituted for the normal glass in the building.
The tunnels under the hotel ballroom were in an abandoned freight subway system underneath downtown Chicago.
Bluesmobile
The
film used 13 different cars bought at auction from the California Highway Patrol
to depict the Bluesmobile, ostensibly a retired 1974 Mount Prospect, Illinois
Dodge Monaco patrol car. The vehicles were outfitted by the studio to do particular
driving chores; some formatted for speed and others for jumps, depending on the
scene. For the large car chases, filmmakers purchased 60 police cars at $400 each,
and most were destroyed at the completion of the filming. More than 40 stunt drivers
were hired and the crew kept a 24-hour body shop to repair cars.
For the scene when the Blues Brothers finally arrive at the Richard J. Daley Center, a mechanic took several months to rig the car to literally fall apart. The statues, seeming to be looking on with concern when the car disassembles, actually exist at the Cook County Building. 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.
Casting
In addition to recognized soul and rhythm and blues
stars James Brown, Cab Calloway, Ray Charles, and Aretha Franklin, the members
of the Blues Brothers band are notable for their musical accomplishments as well.
Steve Cropper and Donald Dunn are architects of the Stax Records sound and were
half of Booker T. & the M.G.'s. Horn players Lou Marini, Tom Malone, and Alan
Rubin had all played in Blood, Sweat & Tears and the Saturday Night Live band.
Drummer Willie Hall had played in the Bar-Kays and backed Isaac Hayes. Matt Murphy
is a veteran blues guitarist. Blues performers were featured in the cast as well,
with John Lee Hooker backed by harmonica player Big Walter Horton and pianist
Pinetop Perkins, playing "Boom Boom" on Maxwell Street.
As the band developed at Saturday Night Live, pianist Paul Shaffer was part of the act and was cast in the film. However, due to contractual obligations with "SNL", he was unable to participate. So actor-musician Murphy Dunne (whose father, George Dunne, was the Cook County Board President) was hired to take his role.
Carrie Fisher, Kathleen Freeman, Henry Gibson, and John Candy were cast in non-musical supporting roles. The movie is also notable for the number of cameo appearances by established celebrities and entertainment industry figures, including Steve Lawrence as a booking agent, Frank Oz as a corrections officer, Twiggy as a "chic lady" in a Jaguar convertible whom Elwood propositions at a gas station, and Steven Spielberg as the Cook County Assessor's clerk. John Landis plays a state trooper in the mall chase. Paul Reubens (pre-Pee-wee Herman) has a small role as a waiter in the Chez Paul.
The character portrayed by Cab Calloway is named Curtis as an homage to Curtis Salgado, a Portland, Oregon, blues musician who inspired Belushi while he was in Oregon filming Animal House.
Over 200 National Guardsmen, 100 state and city police officers, and 15 horses were used in filming of the blockade on the building. Additionally, three Sherman tanks, three helicopters, and three fire engines were used.
Reception
The
Blues Brothers is the second-highest grossing "Saturday Night Live"
adaptation.
Box office
The Blues Brothers opened on June 20, 1980 with a
release in 594 theaters. It took in $4,858,152, ranking sixth for that week and
10th for the entire year. But over the years it has gained a following through
television and home video. The film in total grossed $57,229,890 domestically
and $58,000,000 in foreign box offices for a total of $115,229,890. By genre,
it is the sixth-highest grossing musical and the eighth-highest earner among comedy
road movies. It ranks second, between Wayne's World and Wayne's World 2 (which,
coincidentally, also take place in the greater Chicago metropolitan area), among
films adapted from Saturday Night Live sketches. The Blues Brothers was also the
first American film to gross more money overseas than it did in the United States.
Critical reception
The movie has a 90% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It
won the Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing and Sound Effects, is No. 14
on Total Film magazine's "List of the 50 Greatest Comedy Films of All Time"
and is No. 69 on Bravo's "100 Funniest Movies".
Leonard Maltin gave the film 3 stars out of a possible 4, and described it as "Off the wall from start to finish, with some fine music woven in."
The Blues Brothers has been criticized for its simplistic plot and being overly reliant on car chases. Among the reviewers at the time of the movie's release who held that opinion was Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times. But, he also praised it for its energetic musical numbers and said the car chases were "incredible".
Janet Maslin of the New York Times criticized the film for shortchanging viewers on more details about Jake and Elwood's affinity for African-American culture. She also took director Landis to task for "distracting editing", mentioning the Soul Food diner scene in which saxophonist Lou Marini's head is cut off as he dances on the counter. In the documentary, Stories Behind the Making of The Blues Brothers, Landis acknowledges the criticism, and Marini recalls the dismay he felt at seeing the completed film.
As with the Blues Brothers act in general, music critics derided the film, saying it was demeaning to the rhythm and blues performers. In his book, Sweet Soul Music, critic Peter Guralnick calls the film "an almost unmitigated disaster" for the "great black artists involved", though he does praise Aretha Franklin's performance on her musical number, "Think", as "an on-screen explosion."
Cult-film status
The Blues Brothers in popular culture
The Blues
Brothers has become a staple of late-night cinema, even slowly morphing into an
audience participation show in its regular screenings at the Valhalla Cinema,
in Melbourne, Australia. John Landis acknowledged the support of the cinema and
the fans by a phone call he made to the cinema at the 10th anniversary screening,
and later invited regular attendees to make cameo appearances in Blues Brothers
2000. The fans act as the members of the crowd during the performance of "Ghost
Riders in the Sky".
In August 2005, there was a 25th anniversary celebration for The Blues Brothers at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles. Attendees included Landis, former Universal Studios executive Thom Mount, movie editor George Folsey Jr., and cast members James Brown, Henry Gibson, Charles Napier, Steve Cropper, and Stephen Bishop. It featured a press conference, a panel discussion where Dan Aykroyd joined via satellite, and a screening of the original theatrical version of the film. The panel discussion was broadcast directly to many other cinemas around the country.
Extended scenes
When the film was first
developed for a preview audience, a producer demanded that director John Landis
cut twenty-five minutes of scenes. After trimming fifteen minutes, it was released
in theaters at 133 minutes. The film's original length was restored to 148 minutes
for the "Collector's Edition" DVD release in 1998. The 25th anniversary
DVD release in 2005 includes both the theatrical cut and the extended version.
The full-length version includes:
A longer opening scene, showing the prison
guards having to use their nightsticks to wake Jake up.
A scene with Sister
Mary Stigmata ("The Penguin") where as she lists what missions she might
be sent to if the orphanage is closed.
A scene in which Jake and Elwood discuss
whether or not to enter the Triple Rock Church.
Elwood is shown parking the
Bluesmobile inside an electrical substation that powers the Chicago Transit Authority's
"L" trains. In the documentary, "Stories Behind the Making of The
Blues Brothers", Dan Aykroyd explained that the Bluesmobile would get charged
from the substation, enabling it to do impressive stunts. But, in the same documentary,
director Landis said he originally cut the scene because he considered it unnecessary:
the Bluesmobile is simply a "magic car."
A scene showing Elwood
(without his trademark sunglasses) on his last day at his job in an aerosol-spray
can manufacturing company. He is shown removing a can from the assembly line and
putting it in his briefcase. He then goes to his boss and explains that he has
to quit because he's joining the priesthood. This scene explains where Elwood
obtained the spray epoxy ("This is glue ... strong stuff.") that he
used to sabotage the Good Ol' Boys' Winnebago and to improvise a blowtorch in
the elevator of the Cook County building. This scene also explains what Elwood
means when he says, "It's almost 9 o'clock. We've gotta go to work."
after having his apartment blown up by the "Mystery Woman" (played by
Carrie Fisher).
An extension to the scene in which Elwood discusses why Jake
committed the gas station robbery.
Longer versions of some of the musical
numbers, most notably the Maxwell Street blues band scene with John Lee Hooker,
showing Hooker and Pinetop Perkins getting into an argument over who wrote "Boom
Boom."
Bob gives the list of songs to the band prior to their performance
at Bob's Country Bunker.
Curtis tells the band that Jake and Elwood will use
the gate receipts from the Palace Hotel gig to pay the taxes on the orphanage.
Jake accidentally blows up the gas station by tossing a cigarette into a puddle
of spilled gasoline.
Another aerosol can is used to spray a substance into
the tires of police cars outside the Palace Hotel Ballroom, which makes the tires
explode and causes a jam-up of the police, thus enabling the Blues Brothers to
get a head start on their pursuers.
Additional footage of Jake and Elwood
waiting for the Cook County Assessor's Office clerk to return from his break.
An extended ending just before the closing credit scroll: as the Blues Brothers
continue to perform "Jailhouse Rock," it appears that the prison guards
are about to use force to control the audience.
Television
US television
airings of the film usually cut out most of the profanity from the dialogue. This
is awkward in some scenes because John Belushi did not participate in the redubbing
(due to his death two years after the film's release). His younger brother, actor
James Belushi, recorded the overdubbed dialogue, and his voice is of a lower pitch.
Some broadcasters avoid this by simply muting the offending words.
The American Movie Classics network noticeably edits a scene in which Elwood disables an elevator by using an aerosol can and a Zippo lighter as an improvised blowtorch, which would be a very dangerous stunt to try in reality.
The film has been broadcast in high-definition on HDNet. Universal is pending an HD DVD release.
Soundtrack
The
Blues Brothers: Music from the Soundtrack was released in June 1980 as the second
album by the Blues Brothers Band, which also toured that year to promote the movie.
"Gimme Some Lovin'" was a Top 40 hit. The album was a followup to their
debut, the live album, Briefcase Full of Blues. Later that year they released
a second live album, Made in America, which featured the Top 40 track, "Who's
Making Love".
The songs on the movie soundtrack album are a noticeably different audio mix than in the film, with a prominent baritone saxophone in the horn line (also heard in the film during "Shake a Tailfeather," though no bari sax is present), and female backing vocals on "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love", though the band had no backup singers in the film. A number of regular Blues Brothers' members, including saxophonist Tom Scott and drummer Steve Jordan, perform on the soundtrack album but are not in the film.
Music from
the Soundtrack
Soundtrack by The Blues Brothers
Released June 20,
1980
Genre R&B, soul
Length 40:27
Label Atlantic
Producer
Bob Tischler
Professional reviews
All Music Guide link
The Blues
Brothers chronology
Briefcase Full of Blues
(1978) The Blues Brothers:
Music from the Soundtrack
(1980) Made in America
(1980)
"She
Caught The Katy" (Taj Mahal, Rachell) 4:10
The Blues Brothers
with lead vocals by Jake Blues
"Peter Gunn Theme" (Mancini)
3:46
The Blues Brothers Band
"Gimme Some Lovin'" (S. Winwood,
M. Winwood, Davis) 3:06
The Blues Brothers with Jake Blues, lead vocals
"Shake a Tail Feather" (Hayes, Williams, Rice) 2:48
Ray
Charles with the Blues Brothers (Jake and Elwood, backing vocals)
"Everybody
Needs Somebody to Love" (Wexler, Berns, Burke) 3:21
The Blues
Brothers (Jake Blues, lead vocals; Elwood Blues, harmonica and vocals)
"The
Old Landmark" (Brunner) 2:56
James Brown and the Rev. James Cleveland
Choir (additional choir vocals by Chaka Khan credited in the film)
"Think"
(White, Franklin) 3:13
Aretha Franklin and the Blues Brothers with
backing vocals by Brenda Corbett, Margaret Branch and Carolyn Franklin (real-life
sister of Aretha) and Jake and Elwood
"Theme From Rawhide" (Tiomkin)
2:37
Elwood and Jake and the Blues Brothers Band
"Minnie the
Moocher" (Calloway, Mills) 3:23
Cab Calloway with the Blues Brothers
Band
"Sweet Home Chicago" (Johnson) 7:48
Dedicated to
the musician Magic Sam
"Jailhouse Rock" (Leiber, Stoller)
3:19
Jake Blues and the Blues Brothers (Over the closing credits in the film,
verses are sung by James Brown, Cab Calloway, Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin and
"crew".)
Other songs in the film
The film's score includes
"God Music" (instrumental with choir vocalese) composed by Elmer Bernstein,
who previously had worked with John Landis on National Lampoon's Animal House.
Other songs in the film include:
"Shake Your Moneymaker"
composed and performed by Elmore James
"Soothe Me"/"Hold On!
I'm Comin'" composed by Sam Cooke/Isaac Hayes and David Porter; performed
by Sam and Dave
"I Can't Turn You Loose" composed by Otis
Redding; instrumental performed by the Blues Brothers band (their theme song)
"Let the Good Times Roll" composed and performed by Louis
Jordan
"Anema e Core" performed by Ezio Pinza
"Quando,
Quando, Quando" performed by Murph and the MagicTones
"Just
the Way You Are" composed by Billy Joel; performed by uncredited group
"Boom Boom" composed by John Lee Hooker; performed by John
Lee Hooker (as "Street Slim"), vocals and guitar' Big Walter Horton
(as "Tampa Pete"), harmonica. Pinetop Perkins (as "Luther Jackson")
electric piano; Willie "Big Eyes" Smith, drums; Luther "Guitar
Jr." Johnson, guitar; Calvin "Fuzz" Jones, bass
"Mama
Lawdy"/"Boogie Chillen" composed and performed by John Lee
Hooker
"Your Cheatin' Heart" composed by Hank Williams; performed
by Kitty Wells
"Stand By Your Man" composed by Tammy Wynette
and Billy Sherrill; performed by the Blues Brothers
"I'm Walkin'"
performed by Fats Domino
"Ride of the Valkyries" composed
by Richard Wagner; performed by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
"The
Girl from Ipanema" composed by Antonio Carlos Jobim; performed by
uncredited group (background music while the brothers are in the elevator to the
assessor's office.)
Sequel
Blues Brothers 2000
The 1998 sequel, Blues
Brothers 2000, had similar traits to the original, including large car chase scenes
and musical numbers. John Landis returned to direct the film and Dan Aykroyd reprised
his role, joining John Goodman, Joe Morton, and 10-year-old J. Evan Bonifant as
the new Blues Brothers. Aretha Franklin and James Brown were among the celebrities
returning from the first film. There were also musical performances by Sam Moore,
Wilson Pickett, Paul Shaffer, B. B. King and Eric Clapton, among others. Dozens
of artists were packed into an all-star band called The Louisiana Gator Boys.
The film was considered a box office failure, only generating a little over $14
million in box office sales on an approximate $28 million budget.
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