Jaws Appreciation Thread

bentley

New member
I LOVE this film!! I grew up in the 70's (I read the book first, over and over again, and remember hiding behind the sofa when it was first shown on the TV). The film was a precedent and just spectacular in almost every way.

So... I've started this appreciation society type thread.

Would love to hear your opinions...
 
I remember be a young child and my parents wouldn't let me watch Jaws. So when ever it was on TV, I would try to sneak a look at it. But I always turned over just before something big happened! I was a bit of a wimpy kid! However, I think that the anticipation helped me to really enjoy it when I was finally allowed to see it. To this day it remains one of my favourite films, and I watch it at least once a year.

P.S
I also read the book before I saw the film.
 
That first time when Jaws was shown on TV was such a memorable moment. I was about 10 and was allowed to watch this on TV.
Blimey was it the talk of school the next day.....especially the head scene. That looked severed back then for some reason, scared the crap out of me. I still get on edge when it comes on now.
Yes I can still remember watching that as a child to this day very well. A great film, but I read the book after the film and didn't appreciate the book as much.
 
One of the greatest films ever made.

The beach sequence is probably the best piece of film-making ever in my opinion - the camera and editing techniques are used perfectly to convey the emotion of the situation.

The scene begins by introducing the characters who play within it -
It starts with the boy who's later killed, walking up the beach - the camera follows him until Chief Brody comes into shot in the foreground.
Then the dog fetching sticks out of the water, and in the background the young couple in the water.
The boy goes into the sea with his lilo
Brody watches. Then a great editing technique - People passing in front of the camera are used for cuts that get us closer and closer to Brody, and also to cut between Brody and his view of the ocean.

Then the false alarm with the old man in the black bathing cap.
Brody peers over the shoulder of the guy who's trying to talk to him, which adRAB a bit of nervous humour, but it's very quickly followed by the next false alarm with the girl screaming and being thrown around in the water in a scene that echoes the first attack at the beginning of the film - it turns out to be the young couple fooling around.
Then the old man with the black bathing cap talks to Brody and reminRAB us of Brody's dislike for the sea.

Then we leave Brody for a while - More kiRAB go into the water, splashing and screaming with laughter, but the dog has gone missing. There's a great contrast between the noisy kiRAB filling the screen in the first shot and the lonely figure of the guy looking for his dog in the next shot, which foretells the later scene of the mother looking for her son.
To get us into the sea there's a shot of the lonely stick floating in the water, then we go underwater for the shark's eye view of the bathers from below, homing in on the lilo boy.

All this culminates in the attack on the boy on the lilo, filmed in real time - no slow motion and graphic detail overkill like you'd get in a modern film - so you think "what the hell happened there?", and then back to Chief Brody with the best ever use of the tracking-zoom camera technique, where the world distorts around Brody as the focus appears to zoom in on him.

Then mass panic as people run out of the sea, and stand on the beach confronted by the dead boy's mother who's out on her own at the edge of the water looking for her son. That separation of her from the rest of the crowd is brilliantly done. Her isolation is handled differently from the scene of the guy who's lost his dog; in his scene there's just him with the little kid making the sandcastle in the foreground - making the dog guy a backgound character. In the scene with the mother she's separated by being a foreground character and the the other people who haven't got her problem are in the background. She comes into close-up and fills the screen on her own, wearing a yellow hat, the same colour as the torn lilo that washes up on the beach in the scene that immediately follows, but this yellow is surrounded by red.

Spielberg said that he used colour quite deliberately in the film and avoided red except for blood, and for the wine at the dinner with Hooper at Chief Brody's house.

All done just with editing and camera moves - no cgi, no special effects. Fantastic piece of film making! Spielberg's a master at using the camera to capture emotion.

The scene is on Youtube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00fmx-DCdAA
Watch it with the sound muted because for some reason the poster has re-scored the scene - a perfect example of why the film should not be tinkered with or remade! If I recall, the sequence was generally without music - just the natural sounRAB of the beach with that strange dead acoustic that you get near the sea.
 
I was given the book on Christmas Eve when it first came out. It was so gripping that the next thing I knew it was dawn Christmas morning. Himself woke me up a few hours later because I was dreaming a shark was after me and I was attempting to swim across the bed :D

Blew me away when I saw the film on the big screen.
For once, the film was better than the book.



The opening scene with poor Chrissie Watkins is one of the most memorable starts to a film in my view.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0073195/quotes
 
Jaws is one of those timeless films that will remain with you throughout life.
It ranks alongside anything Spielberg has done since (I mean that in a good way!)
What else can I say? a perfect 10.
No need to tinker with perfection!

*On a personal note, as a child, my Grandad (who sadly died last year), informed me that Robert Shaw was born in my Uncles house (where I used to visit as a child),
His Dad was apparently a Doctor, and Robert and my Nan (my Mums,Mum) used to play together as children.
The green chicken coop was was still there up until a few years ago. I have vivid memories of this!
 
Sadly I dont, other than what Ive already posted.
I did look up Robert Shaw on wikipedia (AFTER posting this!)- and it backs up everything I remembered 100 percent.
I do remember telling the other kiRAB at school, only to be met withe ridicule and scepticism, then again we were only 12 years old (Im 38 now).
The house is around 5 miles from where I still live, and casting my mind back, was still inhabited by my Aunt and Uncle til their deaths in the early/mid 80s.
I think they bought it off the Shaw family.
According to wikipedia Roberts father commited suicide-
I did not know this til today!.
It always struck me as a child, as a VERY old fashioned place, with a pantry, grandfather clock, drawing room , coal fire , washing mangle (and yes, outside chicken coop).
Its very possible its still there to this day, as it was rock-solid only 20 something years ago. (im guessing the chickens are long gone!)
Another memory I have of the coop, is my family gathered in the house celebrating some occasion, and them wanting time to themselves, betting my younger Brother and myself that we could never catch a chicken. (apparently impossible)
Well, I chased them around the pen until i DID and proudly took it into the gathering to be met with screams of horror as it broke loose and flapped around the room (Thats the kind of kid I was!)

One recent memory is that a few years ago, before the world wide web, some American Robert Shaw fan placed an ad. in the back of Film Review, requesting information on him. I was going to write back with the information above, and photos of the house itself-but sadly never got around to it!
SORRY!!!
One last thing, in Leigh, (Near Wigan where i live)-
there is a Robert Shaw street!:)
Thats all folks!!!
 
When it was first released at the cinema I made a date to go and see it the following week with a girl I met at a party, but then my mates wanted to go and see it the next night and insisted that I come along. The queue went along the front and down the side of the cinema (the ABC in Lincoln), through the carpark to the edge of the river, then back across the carpark again and down to the river again TWICE more. A bloke from the cinema came along the queue counting people and he cut off the queue immediately behind me and my mates.

Then the next week I went to see it again on my date and I had to pretend I hadn't seen it before. :o
 
God I HATE Jaws!!!! It SUCKS!!! It's like the WORST MOVIE EVER!!! NOTHING happens, god it's like SOOOOOO BORING!!!!!

The shark is like SOOOOOO FAKE looking!!!! The movie is SOOOOOOO OLD!!!!

The fourth movie was like SOOOOOOO much better, like you know? At least the shark ROARS in that one. ;)
 
I thought the shark looked fake in the scene where it jumps out of the water onto the boat, but later I saw a documentary about sharks where one does the same thing, and it looked just like the shark in the film.
 
The shark wasn't perfect. I'll take Bruce any day over a CGI equivalent however. You have got to see "Shark Attack 3" God was that ever horrible. I actually had to watch Jaws afterwarRAB to ease the pain. :rolleyes: :D
 
Fantastic film! I was about 10 when I watched it on TV for the first time and boy did it scare me! I remember not wanting to get out of bed to go to the toilet later on that night because I thought the shark would get me if I put my feet on the floor, it still looks good even now! A classic!:)
 
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