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  2. Feb 7, 2020 · The word first appeared in the pages of TIME in a Nov. 29, 1942, article on the Allied bombing of key industrial targets in fascist Italy; the bombs used for such missions were called...

  3. The word is from a World War II bomb, and its usage in media dates back to the first war films and the media which made word plays out of this fact to describe the films as "block busters".

  4. Nov 3, 2023 · But where did the term "blockbuster" come from? It was first used on November 19, 1942, in a Time magazine article about the Allied forces dropping explosives in fascist Italy. The bombs used for the mission were called "blockbusters," as they were able to decimate an area equivalent to a city block.

    • Jean Mendoza
  5. Nov 13, 2023 · It seems that the origin of the word was from WWII when the RAF were designing “block-buster bombs”. I tried looking for an early source in the 1940s that used the term. The Advertiser ...

  6. May 3, 2024 · Today, the word blockbuster is usually associated with movies, whether you’re talking about a film that achieved massive success at the box office or a certain defunct video rental chain....

    • Michele Debczak
  7. Aug 3, 2018 · As Julian Stringer wrote in his 2003 book Movie Blockbusters, the word was coined to “describe a large-scale bomb in World War II.” The bomb was supposedly able to take out a whole city block and was used by the British Royal Air Force.

  8. May 4, 2017 · The first blockbusters were bombs, specifically bombs that were able to bust an entire block. In 1942 the word began being used in newspapers; an article from the Bellingham Herald on July 27th has the headline “Those ‘Big, Beautiful’ Bombs Are Called ‘Block Busters’ By Germans.”

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