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Jaws
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Directed by Steven Spielberg.
Based on Peter Benchley's best-selling novel, Steven Spielberg's 1975 shark saga set the standard for the New Hollywood popcorn blockbuster while frightening millions of moviegoers out of the water. One early summer night on fictional Atlantic resort Amity Island, Chrissie decides to take a moonlight skinny dip while her friends party on the beach. Yanked suddenly below the ocean surface, she never returns. When pieces of her wash ashore, Police Chief Brody (Roy Scheider) suspects the worst, but Mayor Vaughn (Murray Hamilton), mindful of the lucrative tourist trade and the approaching July 4th holiday, refuses to put the island on a business-killing shark alert. After the shark dines on a few more victims, the Mayor orders the local fishermen to catch the culprit. Satisfied with the shark they find, the greedy Mayor reopens the beaches, despite the warning from visiting ichthyologist Hooper (Richard Dreyfuss) that the attacks were probably caused by a far more formidable Great White. One more fatality later, Brody and Hooper join forces with flinty old salt Quint (Robert Shaw), the only local fisherman willing to take on a Great White--especially since the price is right. The three ride off on Quint's boat "The Orca," soon coming face to teeth with the enemy. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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usesoapusesoap Episode V: Jaws
by usesoap in Natsukashi
loved it.
"Film: JawsRated: PGDirected by: Steven Spielberg Starring: Roy Scheider: Sheriff Brody Richard Dreyfuss: Hooper Robert Shaw: Quint Tagline: Don’t go in the water By: Efferdent Johnson Past memories: In 1975, I was doing my best to propagate the best hair helmet any pre-teen had ever hoped to wear. My interests were few and my fears were many. Some of which were brought to the surface by a frightening grey machine with a zillion teeth and a thirst for blood. By my tenth year of life, the most frightening movie experiences were the ever-so-scary villains of Disney. I can remember sinking in my seat during Willy Wonka’s boat ride, or almost all of Chitty Chitty Bang AHHHHHHHHH!!! Jaws would never affect me… or so I thought. The chances of me seeing the movie were less than my chances for a Senate seat. My mom would make sure that her young sons would not be turned to evil, sexually confused or exposed to the violence of ... " [More]
SaraAnneSaraAnne Re:Scarred for Life - Most trau ...
by SaraAnne in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"We were supposed to be going to the drive-in to see The Cat From Outer Space, but Uncle Joe said we got in the wrong line, and we couldn't turn around because of all the cars behind us. I thought at the time that he had tricked us, and cried loudly, to no avail. He said we could either watch the movie we'd inadvertantly lined up for or no movie at all. My sister and I huddled at the back window of the van, able to see the big screen antics of Haley Mills and the kitty in the shiny collar, but the soundtrack was that of the panicky last moments of Nantucketers being devoured by a man-eating shark . Uncle Joe had 'accidentally' taken us to see Jaws 2. I was afraid of water for the next six years. " [More]
lopezdashlopezdash Re:Scarred for Life - Salvador ...
by lopezdash in Filmgaming
liked it.
"[quote user="mercurial"] Growing up on the California coast had an immensely adverse effect on me as a child, especially the fact that I had an older brother that despised my very birth. At the age of 7 he exposed me to Jaws and used his gargantuan older-brother hands to keep me planted on the couch to view the film despite my repeated attempts at escaping the horror on screen. I have no recollection of going into the ocean before this but vividly recall every attempt thereafter. When my family’s weekly Sunday brunches in Carmel, CA culminated in a walk to the beaches of the coast, I remember bursting into tears and crying until my parents allowed me to stay isolated in the backseat of the family station wagon. Approximately 28 months later my father felt compelled to break me of my fear and drag me 1 ½ miles from the coast into the sea and leave me alone to “break” me of my fear. I was subsequently dragged into the undertow after an hour of dog-paddling a ... " [More]
leeroy711leeroy711 Leeroy's 5 queue picks for June ...
by leeroy711 in leeroy711 Blog
liked it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"These may not be the greatest titles of all time, but they're the right movies for right now The summer is starting, vacations are being planned, station wagons are being packed but all you can think of is sitting down in your favorite chair and zoning out in front of the tube. These are for you. Falling Down (1993) – Some people remember Joel Schumacher as the director that tried to ruin the Batman movies, some remember him much loved generation X classic, The Lost Boys. I choose to think of him as the director of this gem of an action/drama/dark comedy. This movie is perfect for the beginning of summer because one of the most memorable images is that of Michael Douglas’ sweat beaten body stuck in traffic with no air conditioning. Intolerable Cruelty (2003) – I think of Fargo and No Country for Old Men as the Oktoberfest special batch from the Coen brothers’ brewery. This movie would be slightly dilut ... " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Scarred for Life - Salvador ...
by mercurial in Filmgaming
loved it.
"Growing up on the California coast had an immensely adverse effect on me as a child, especially the fact that I had an older brother that despised my very birth. At the age of 7 he exposed me to Jaws and used his gargantuan older-brother hands to keep me planted on the couch to view the film despite my repeated attempts at escaping the horror on screen. I have no recollection of going into the ocean before this but vividly recall every attempt thereafter. When my family’s weekly Sunday brunches in Carmel, CA culminated in a walk to the beaches of the coast, I remember bursting into tears and crying until my parents allowed me to stay isolated in the backseat of the family station wagon. Approximately 28 months later my father felt compelled to break me of my fear and drag me 1 ½ miles from the coast into the sea and leave me alone to “break” me of my fear. I was subsequently dragged into the undertow after an hour of dog-paddling and taken further out from ... " [More]
CharlesInCharge99CharlesInCharge99 Re:Scarred for Life - Most trau ...
by CharlesInCharge99 in Filmgaming
loved it.
"[quote user="PlantPage55"] I've always been something of a fradie-cat when it comes to classic movies. Whether it was my older brother chasing me around with a 12-inch C-3PO doll (yes, I was afraid of C-3PO) or him going trick-or-treating as ET one year, causing me to opt out of having to look at his frightening visage in the low-lit night. But leave it to Pee Wee Herman to scare me so badly that I will not even revisit the scene as an adult to face my demons. If you have witnessed Pee Wee’s Big Adventure, then you know exactly the scene I am about to reference. Here I was, sitting in the basement with my older brother and his friends – feeling so cool that they would let me hang out with them and enjoying some offbeat (pre-“beat off”) Herman antics. The Large Marge scene comes and I was on the edge of my seat - waiting for the joke - when Large Marge transform into the grotesque, claymation monster, my heart felt like it was going to burst out of my chest, ... " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:How has horror scarred (yes, ...
by mercurial in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"[quote user="Phantasma-gore-ia"] How has watching a horror movie, any one, it doesn't matter what or when, so freaked you out that to this day you still can't deal with that subject? Or what have you always felt strongly about that makes watching a particular scene in a movie hard or impossible ? [/quote] The one that I'm sure I'm not alone in: Jaws. I literally am frightened of going into any body of water alone. Whether it be the pool in my backyard, any one of the lakes nearby, or the ocean. The times I have pushed myself to do so I honestly freaked the f**k out: shaking, crying and thrashing until I'm back on solid ground. I'm one of those persons that doesn't really dream or have nightmares, but when I do they all seem to involve Great White Sharks and scare me awake. Even watching Shark Week on the Discovery Channel gets me to lift my feet off the ground and constantly look around for fear that something is going to bite me. Completely irrational and horrible. I hate it. " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:$7 Champagne
by Risselada in B Movies
loved it.
"[quote user="Dr_Gor"] [quote user="Risselada"] I agree. And what about Steven Spielberg whose greatest movie in my opinion is Duel. Then they gave him quite a bit more money to do Jaws which was just as awesome. But after that I think his movies got too "big". [/quote] Interesting that you should mention those two movies, Rizzo. Did you know that Spielberg intended for JAWS to be a sequel to Duel ? I actually heard him say this in an interview. Actually there ARE a few similarities... raplace the truck with a shark and Dennis Weaver with 'Martin Brody' and there you have it. Also, you will notice that he used the exact same orchestral sound effect at the end of both movies... When the truck is plunging over the cliff and when the exploded shark is sinking to the bottom of the ocean it is the exact same sound effect! check it out! I also heard that he 'lifted' this sound effect from an earlier dinosaur movie, The Lost World I think, where it was the sound ... " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re:$7 Champagne
by Dr_Gor in B Movies
loved it.
"[quote user="Risselada"] I agree. And what about Steven Spielberg whose greatest movie in my opinion is Duel. Then they gave him quite a bit more money to do Jaws which was just as awesome. But after that I think his movies got too "big". [/quote] Interesting that you should mention those two movies, Rizzo. Did you know that Spielberg intended for JAWS to be a sequel to Duel ? I actually heard him say this in an interview. Actually there ARE a few similarities... raplace the truck with a shark and Dennis Weaver with 'Martin Brody' and there you have it. Also, you will notice that he used the exact same orchestral sound effect at the end of both movies... When the truck is plunging over the cliff and when the exploded shark is sinking to the bottom of the ocean it is the exact same sound effect! check it out! I also heard that he 'lifted' this sound effect from an earlier dinosaur movie, The Lost World I think, where it was the sound of a T-Rex dieing or s ... " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot Re:$7 Champagne
by SkyPilot in B Movies
liked it.
"[quote user="Risselada"] And what about Steven Spielberg whose greatest movie in my opinion is Duel. Then they gave him quite a bit more money to do Jaws which was just as awesome. But after that I think his movies got too "big". [/quote] I like Jaws too, and to me it's more of an exploitation creature feature than a blockbuster. Can you think of anyone who has given more consistently thrilling movies after they hit the big time? I'm pretty ignorant about Hitchcock (I've only seen Rope and Rear Window) but from the reviews I've seen, his later movies are more revered than his earlier contract work. " [More]
[More reviews]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Shooting on Martha's Vineyard with a mechanical shark dubbed "Bruce," 27-year-old Steven Spielberg wanted to shoot Jaws on the open water for as much terrifying realism as possible. Between rewrites of Robert Benchley's and Carl Gottlieb's script, the unruly ocean, and the glitch-laden shark, the shoot went way over schedule and the budget ballooned to $10 million, leading everyone to believe that they had a B-movie disaster on their hands. However, Spielberg and editor Verna Fields turned the liability of an obviously fake Bruce into a potent source of fear by leaving the shark unseen until the final battle. Instead, swift cuts between swimmers above the surface and underwater shark's-eye views of helplessly dangling legs, combined with John Williams's pounding score, create a relentless atmosphere of primal horror. With an ad image of a giant shark aiming for a tiny female, Universal Studios aggressively marketed Jaws as a thrilling "event," especially in primetime spots on TV, a then seldom-used advertising venue for movies. Bucking the old practice of using wide releases for stinkers, Universal opened the heavily-anticipated film in over 400 theaters in June 1975, and it shattered box office records. Tapping into an abiding dread of the unknown, made scarier by the reality of Great White sharks and corrupt bureaucrats as well as by Spielberg's effective orchestration of excitement, Jaws became the first film ever to return over $100 million to its studio. Producers David Brown and Richard D. Zanuck received a Best Picture Oscar nomination, but wunderkind Spielberg was passed over for Best Director. The film's technical achievements were rewarded with Oscars for Editing, Sound, and Score. With the lines at the box office, the proliferation of Jaws products, and a rash of reported shark attacks, Jaws became a cultural phenomenon and the first bona fide summer event movie, leading the thrill-packed and profitable way for summers to come. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 



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