I started thinking about all those times I've heard there were 13 bluesmobiles. And I think those claims are all based on that memo. That memo is great info, but it doesn't say there were 13 blumos. It only says that as of August 24, 1979 there were 12 blumos in the catalog.
We don't know if the Country Bunker blumo was ever in the catalog (exterior 216 bracket and 75 bumper).
And we don't know if any other cars were in the catalog afterward. Maybe there were 20 blumos in the catalog two months later.
We have the fall-a-part blumo that isn't listed.
And the blumo bullet car isn't listed.
And a unique reference number in the catalog doesn't necessarily map to a unique car. From my research on door stars, there were far more distinct door stars than could fit on 13 blumos. Its possible they kept replacing doors on the same car, but it's also possible that the maintenance crew only promised that someone could always reserve one of the 12 blumos in the catalog.
Anyway, I went to wikipedia where I saw that "13 blumo" claim, and the reference was to the Sun Times article.
The article is a from 5 part series in the Sun Times in June 2005.
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This week marks the 25th anniversary of the release of "The Blues Brothers,'' a watershed film for Chicago and one that spread the city's soul around the world. In five parts, the Sun-Times takes you back to the streets of Jake and Elwood Blues and checks out what's happened since the Bluesmobile rolled.
web.archive.org/web/20050911010647/http://www.suntimes.com/special_sections/bluebros/cst-nws-bbchurchside21.htmlThat page says:
See an official list of Bluesmobiles used during filming and the original contract to film at Dixie Square Mall at
www.suntimes.com.
But I haven't found those online.
Here's the stunt article:
web.archive.org/web/20050728125722/http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-bbcarchase23.htmlWhich has this text:
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Incredible stunt driving: 'That was all real'
June 23, 2005
BY DAVE NEWBART Staff Reporter
Call it the mother of all modern car chase movies.
For much of "The Blues Brothers,'' Jake and Elwood race from place to place: along Lower Wacker Drive, under the L tracks, over a gaping 95th Street bridge as it opens, and through a south suburban mall.
The chases usually end with one or several of Illinois' finest in some sort of pile-up. When the film was released in 1980 it set a record for the number of cars crashed in a movie, according to the Internet Movie Database.
In his review, Sun-Times critic Roger Ebert called the chases "incredible'' and "sensational.''
Whereas in movies today computer graphics are often used to enhance a stunt, filmmakers had no such aid when they were shooting in 1979. "That was all real,'' director John Landis said.
SPECIAL SECTION
The Blues Brothers: 25 years later
A quarter-century ago, "The Blues Brothers" embraced Chicago as no other film has, before or since. The movie tapped directly into the heart of the city, harnessing its energy and will to get things done on a scale bigger than anywhere else.
Filmmakers flew in 40 stunt drivers every weekend. They used 13 different Bluesmobiles, including five for filming John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd as they portrayed Jake and Elwood Blues driving about town.
Two other cars were built specifically for speed while another three had one-gallon gas tanks and were used for jumps, said Jerram Swartz, an assistant director who oversaw the fleet.
Yet another was rigged to fall apart with the pull of a lever, used for just one scene: when the Blues Brothers finally arrive at the Cook County Building after a long chase. First assistant director David Sosna remembers it took a mechanic several months to rig the car up. "That is a very expensive gag,'' he said.
To pursue the Blues Brothers, filmmakers bought more than 60 old police cars at $400 apiece, according to news reports at the time, and also hired real police to participate in some chases. They reinforced them with steel cages and ran a 24-hour body shop on the Near West Side to fix them for later use. Most of those cars were destroyed by the end of filming.
Chicago and State Police shut down countless city and suburban streets -- even the interstate and Lake Shore Drive -- for filming. The only thing that slowed production? Pope John Paul II's October visit -- and the Chicago Bears. "They told us when the Bears lose and the fans are pissed off, even the Chicago Police can't stop them,'' Sosna said.
Lower Wacker
Two hundred police and production assistants manned nearly every conceivable entrance to Lower Wacker for a famous chase in the bowels of the city.
At Monroe, the Bluesmobile races up an exit ramp and vaults a squad car in what Landis called his "favorite stunt.'' Landis wanted the driver to take out the Mars lights on top of the police car, but the driver could only guarantee he could clear the cop car. But after Belushi and Aykroyd each offered him $1,000, his car ended up clipping the Mars lights.
Lake Street
Filmmakers actually got permission to drive down Lake -- between trestles supporting the L, no less -- at more than 100 mph. After Landis shot the sequence he realized it looked as if he simply speeded up the film. So he reshot it with stunt pedestrians on the sidewalks so viewers could tell the drivers were, indeed, going that fast.
At La Salle, near what is now the James R. Thompson Center, they staged a pile-up of grand proportions, with more than 10 cars careening into one another. They drilled holes in the street to install a pipe ramp, technology developed in Australia that had never been used in a major motion picture before, Landis said. The pipe flips a car if it's struck correctly.
The crash is over the top: police cars enter the frame already upside down, turning sideways, you name it. "We were just seeing how wacky you can be,'' Landis said.
The pileup so impressed Ebert that he wrote it "has to be seen to be believed. I've never seen stunt coordination like this before.''
Rand Road and Route 176
Another memorable pileup took place off the side of these roads in Wauconda. More than 50 police cars were involved in the chase. More than 10 cars go flying off the road and into a median. Filmmakers dug a ditch immediately off the side of the road so the cars would flip as they hit it, Sosna recalls.
For one shot, a squad car sails into a moving truck. To do that, a stunt driver drove the car off a 150-foot-long ramp that crossed the highway. The truck, driving at 15 mph, was equipped with special break-away sides.
Even with all the stunts, there were only a few minor injuries throughout filming. That "we got away that lightly, I would say is miraculous,'' Aykroyd said. "God was on our side.''
See an official list of Bluesmobiles used during filming and the original contract to film at Dixie Square Mall at www. suntimes.com.
Copyright © Chicago Sun-Times Inc.
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It has this block:
Notes from a briefcase full of blues
Script: The film's opening scene
Script: The film's closing scene
Memo: Cook County Sheriff Richard Elrod to Universal Studios
Script: Shooting schedule from filming at Daley Plaza
which has these two pics:
and these sections of the screenplay:
web.archive.org/web/20060523142507/http://www.suntimes.com/special_sections/bluebros/blues-script24a.htmlweb.archive.org/web/20060523142515/http://www.suntimes.com/special_sections/bluebros/blues-script24b.html