Because now that you can sit down at a computer and make thousands of spaceships out of pixels and Red Bull, the idea of building an entire franchise around one vehicle seems silly. It was only in the '80s—which came after the rise of the summer blockbuster but before CG-everything—that the vehicle show could flourish.
Anyway, thanks to the renewed interest in cool-vehicle franchises spurred by Mr. Cruise's latest money-printing endeavor, we at Ars decided to settle one of the greatest debates of the subgenre.
I have taken it upon myself to decide, once and for all, which is the superior '80s murder-copter: Blue Thunder or Airwolf? Blue Thunder was a movie starring an experimental, machine-gun-toting police helicopter that eventually tears up Los Angeles.
My parents took me to see it when I was five. I cried at the end. Murphy uncovers a conspiracy involving the chopper that leads him into the aforementioned aerial dogfight over the streets of LA. Airwolf , by contrast, was a totally different thing. Airwolf is a Bell Guilfoil John Guilfoil started Air Cache in as his first website. He re-launched it in Loading Comments Email Required Name Required Website. Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
All three major networks produced shows featuring helicopters, but it was Airwolf that had the most advanced aircraft. The highly advanced vehicle put all government and spy agencies to shame. Airwolf could outrace conventional jets, travel halfway around the world, and attack with devastating results. The Firm then recruited Hawke to get Airwolf back. Hawke complied, but then made a deal — he refused to hand it over to The Firm until they located his brother who was missing in action in Vietnam.
They are more like family. Together they run missions for The Firm using Airwolf as a secret weapon to stop all manner of criminal masterminds.
These good friends act as stewards to this weapon, which is too dangerous to fall into unenlightened hands. After Airwolf went off the air, the helicopter was sold to a German charter company and used as an air ambulance. It was in this capacity that it crashed in and killed the three passengers onboard. While Borgnine was known to say that acting was the easiest thing in the world, he also admitted to spending hours preparing for each episode of Airwolf.
His ritual included carefully studying each line of dialogue to put it in the context of his character and the story.
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