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virtualobserver

(8,760 posts)
2. I had forgotten about that scene....maybe James Fields got the idea from the movie....revenge...
Sun Aug 13, 2017, 05:28 PM
Aug 2017

for a movie attack on Nazis

customerserviceguy

(25,183 posts)
3. He probably didn't see the movie
Sun Aug 13, 2017, 05:54 PM
Aug 2017

I'm sure his impulses were more focused on what Islamic terrorists did in Europe.

Now, "The Blues Brothers" is my favorite movie of all time, and I am a bit ashamed to admit it, I laughed at that scene when I first saw the film. It doesn't seem so funny now.

 

virtualobserver

(8,760 posts)
4. Impossible to know, I guess, but I just wondered how a committed Nazi would react to that scene
Sun Aug 13, 2017, 06:14 PM
Aug 2017

They wouldn't be doing any of this openly if Trump hadn't forcefully winked at them...

MADem

(135,425 posts)
6. Anyone getting an idea from a comedy film
Sun Aug 13, 2017, 06:51 PM
Aug 2017

paying homage to soul music that was probably in their grandpa's VHS collection is traveling a long way for revenge.

I suspect that asshole wanted to out ISIS ISIS. He saw himself as the Nice or London truck slaughterer. What an idiot. VA has the death penalty... He'll probably be sobbing for the Death Row nun if they put that on the table.

mucifer

(23,599 posts)
8. The historical reason Ackroyd said "Illinois nazis" is
Sun Aug 13, 2017, 10:06 PM
Aug 2017

that a few years before the film nazis had obtained a permit to march in Skokie Illinois. Skokie is a suburb that borders Chicago on the north. Skokie was also at that time a town that had one of the most concentrated areas of Jewish survivors of the Holocaust. John Landis the writer and director of the film is Jewish and from Chicago.

The nazis did march and it was a huge deal. Lots of protesting and the groundwork for the Holocaust Museum in Skokie happened shortly after.

Latest Discussions»Retired Forums»Video & Multimedia»'I hate Illinois Nazis.'