
Steven Spielberg hadn’t even finished casting "1941" when he scribbled one name next to the part of Captain Wild Bill Kelso: John Belushi. It wasn’t a suggestion, it was a declaration. Belushi had just blown Hollywood open with "National Lampoon’s Animal House", and Spielberg, fresh off the success of "Jaws" and "Close Encounters of the Third Kind", wanted to harness that same volcanic energy. Producer Ned Tanen was initially skeptical. Belushi had never carried a film with such massive physical comedy demands, and he was juggling his chaotic schedule on "Saturday Night Live". But Spielberg insisted. “He’s the only man who can fly a plane and blow up a city block and still make it funny,” he told his team.
The first time Spielberg met Belushi about the role, the actor showed up wearing mirrored aviators, chomping a cigar, and pretending to shoot imaginary Zero fighters in the sky. He hadn’t even read the script. “I already am Kelso,” he told Spielberg. That one line sealed it. The next week, the studio signed him, and Belushi began prepping for the most unhinged role of his short but blazing career.
His arrival on set was no less theatrical. Belushi came barreling down the Warner Bros. lot riding a motorbike, in full flight jacket and goggles, screaming “INCOMING!” at the grips and camera operators. He was method without realizing it, existing in a constant state of Wild Bill Kelso. Spielberg quickly realized there was no need to rehearse Belushi in the traditional sense. Instead, he let him riff, wander, yell, crash through props, and come up with entire monologues that weren’t in the script.
One night, Belushi snuck onto the lot after hours and painted “JAPS KEEP OUT” on a fake submarine as a joke. The next morning, the crew found him asleep inside it. Spielberg laughed so hard he nearly called off that day's shoot, later telling a friend, “Belushi doesn’t act like Kelso. He is Kelso.” What wasn’t as funny to the production crew was Belushi’s unpredictable work schedule. Filming had to be coordinated with his grueling "SNL" tapings, and some nights he arrived straight from New York, bleary-eyed and twitching with caffeine. Still, once the cameras rolled, he was unstoppable.
His scenes in the film, whether crash-landing into buildings or accidentally destroying a service station, were mostly choreographed chaos. But the intensity came from Belushi’s physical commitment. He threw himself into walls. He climbed onto moving vehicles. He chewed through cigars like they were oxygen. In one take, he misjudged a rooftop landing and nearly fell two stories. When asked if he wanted to redo the scene with a stuntman, Belushi wiped the blood from his elbow and said, “You’ll never get that panic from a double.”
Spielberg allowed him more freedom than any other actor on set. That meant some days ran longer and wilder, but it also meant lightning in a bottle. Aykroyd later said, “We were all following the script. Belushi was setting fire to it.” Critics were divided about "1941", but even the harshest reviews praised Belushi’s mania. The New York Times described him as “an airborne wrecking ball with the soul of a vaudeville clown.”
Belushi said in an interview that he approached the character like “a guy who’s watched too many war movies and believes he’s in one.” He wasn’t trying to play a hero. He was trying to play a delusion. “That’s what makes Kelso funny. He’s dangerous because he believes everything he’s doing is for the flag. And the country’s more at risk because of him.”
Every frame he appeared in seemed moments away from explosion, both literally and comically. Spielberg later called Belushi’s performance “a controlled disaster. And that’s exactly what I wanted.” Belushi turned a side character into the loudest, wildest, and most unforgettable presence in the entire film.