logo
‘Jaws' changed movies forever, but Hollywood could still learn from it

‘Jaws' changed movies forever, but Hollywood could still learn from it

NEW YORK (AP) — Fifty years after 'Jaws' sunk its teeth into us, we're still admiring the bite mark.
Steven Spielberg's 1975 film, his second feature, left such a imprint on culture and Hollywood that barely any trip to the movies, let alone to the beach, has been the same since.
Few films have been more perfectly suited to their time and place than 'Jaws,' which half a century ago unspooled across the country in a then-novel wide release accompanied by Universal Pictures' opening-weekend publicity blitz. 'Jaws' wasn't quite the first movie to try to gobble up moviegoers whole, in one mouthful (a few years earlier, 'The Godfather' more or less tried it), but 'Jaws' established — and still in many ways defines — the summer movie.
That puts 'Jaws' at the birth of a trend that has since consumed Hollywood: the blockbuster era. When it launched in 409 theaters on June 20, 1975, and grossed a then-record $7.9 million in its first days, 'Jaws' set the template that's been followed ever-after by every action movie, superhero flick or dinosaur film that's tried to go big in the summer — a sleepy time in theaters before 'Jaws' came around.
And yet the 'Jaws' legacy is so much more than being Hollywood's ur-text blockbuster. It's not possible to, 50 years later, watch Spielberg's film and see nothing but the beginning of a box-office bonanza, or the paler fish it's inspired. It's just too good a movie — and too much unlike so many wannabes since –— to be merely groundbreaking. It's a masterpiece in its own right.
'It supercharged the language of cinema,' the filmmaker Robert Zemeckis says in the upcoming documentary 'Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story,' premiering July 10 on National Geographic.
That documentary, with Spielberg's participation, is just a small part of the festivities that have accompanied the movie's anniversary. Martha's Vineyard, where 'Jaws' was shot, is hosting everything from concerts to 'Jaws'-themed dog dress-ups. 'Jaws,' itself, is streaming on Peacock through July 14, along with a prime-time airing Friday on NBC, with an intro from Spielberg. The 'Jaws' anniversary feels almost more like a national holiday — and appropriately so.
But if 'Jaws' is one of the most influential movies ever made, Hollywood hasn't always drawn the right lessons from it. 'We need a bigger boat' has perhaps been taken too literally in movies that have leaned too much on scale and spectacle, when neither of those things really had much to do with the brilliance of Spielberg's classic.
For the film's 50th anniversary, we looked at some of the things today's Hollywood could learn from 'Jaws' 50 years later.
Local Color
Every time I rewatch 'Jaws' — which I highly recommend doing on some projected screen, even a bedsheet, and preferably with an ocean nearby — I marvel at how much it gets from its Martha's Vineyard setting.
Where U.S.-made film productions are shot has been a hot button issue lately. Various incentives often determine movie shooting locations, with set dressings, or CGI, filling in the rest. But 'Jaws' shows you just how much more than tax credits you can get from a locale.
Spielberg was convinced the adaptation of Peter Benchley's novel — inspired by Benchley's childhood summers on Nantucket — shouldn't be done in soundstages. After looking up and down the Atlantic coast, he settled on Nantucket's neighboring island. Like his first film, the Mojave Desert-set 'Duel,' Spielberg wanted his mechanized shark to swim in a real, definable place.
'I felt the same way about 'Jaws,'' Spielberg says in the documentary. 'I wanted to go to the natural environment so there was some kind of verisimilitude. So it needed to be in the ocean, out to sea.'
It wasn't easy. The budget for 'Jaws' nearly tripled to $9 million and the shoot extended from 55 to 159 days. Spielberg would never again be under financial pressure on a picture, but the tortured 'Jaws' production put him under a microscope. An AP report from 1975 began: 'It is news when a 26-year-old film director goes $2 million over budget and two and a half months over schedule and manages to avoid getting fired.'
More than any other time in his career, Spielberg fretted.
''Jaws' was my Vietnam,' he told Richard Schickel. 'It was basically naive people against nature and nature beat us every day.'
It also infused every inch of the frame with smalltown New England flavor in the way that no soundstage, or CGI, ever could.
Less is more
When Spielberg was ready to start filming, his star attraction wasn't. The mechanized shark, nicknamed 'Bruce' after the director's attorney, suffered frequent failures that forced Spielberg to find different approaches to shooting his shark scenes early in the film.
'Jaws' instead became, to Spielberg, a kind of homage to Alfred Hitchcock's 'Psycho.' The suspense came less from the shark than the fear of the unknown and that spine-tingling question: What's in the water? Spielberg, with the significant aid of John Williams' instantly iconic score, delayed the appearance of his Great White until well into the film.
'The visual ellipsis,' the critic Molly Haskell wrote, 'created far greater menace and terror, as the shark is nowhere and everywhere.'
Spielberg once estimated that Bruce's mechanical delays added $175 million to the movie's box office. On its initial run, 'Jaws' grossed $260.7 million domestically in 1975. Adjusted for inflation, that's about $1.5 billion. Nowadays, the shark would almost certainly be done, like most movie creatures, with computer animation. But 'Jaws' showed that often the most powerful source of dread is our imagination.
Human-scale
This is the time of year when the fate of the world often hangs in the balance. All manner of summer movies have had no bones about destroying cities for a mere plot point. Yet for all its terror, 'Jaws' features only a handful of deaths. All of its drama is human-scaled. Compared to more swaggering blockbusters today, 'Jaws' would be considered a modest, mid-budget movie.
That's partially why you have to almost remind yourself that the movie has only three main characters in Martin Brody (Roy Scheider), Matt Hooper (Richard Dreyfuss) and Quint (Robert Shaw). Casting director Sherry Rhodes peopled the cast with locals from the island, many of whom inject the film with little moments of day-to-day humanity. 'Jaws,' in that way, feels more like a community than a cast.
Escapism with something to say
On the one hand, 'Jaws' had little to do directly with its times. The Vietnam War had just ended. Watergate had just led to the resignation of President Nixon. The heart-stopping story of a shark off the Massachusetts shoreline promised escapism.
Yet 'Jaws' has endured as a parable of capitalism, pulled out time and time again to illustrate those endlessly repeating clashes of cash versus social safety.
'Amity is a summer town,' says Amity's mayor, Larry Vaughn (Murray Hamilton) in the film. 'We need summer dollars.'
The shark gets the theme song and the movie poster, but the real villain of 'Jaws' wears a pinstripe suit and smiles for the cameras. 'As you can see, it's a beautiful day and the beaches are open,' he says. More than the predator in the ocean, he, and the town, feast on human flesh.
Wednesdays
Columnist Jen Zoratti looks at what's next in arts, life and pop culture.
'Jaws' is untouchable
There are boatloads of movies — including the three sequels that followed after — that have tried in vain to capture some of the magic of 'Jaws.' But what happened in June 1975, let alone on Martha's Vineyard the year before, isn't repeatable. Even the greatest movies are products of a thousand small miracles. That title? Benchley came up with it minutes before going to print. The iconic poster came from Roger Kastel's painting for the book. Scheider, for instance, learned about the movie by overhearing Spielberg at a party. Williams relied on just two notes for one of the most widely known film scores in movie history.
But no ingredient mattered more on 'Jaws' than the man behind the camera. Filmmaking talents like Spielberg come around maybe a couple times a century, and in 'Jaws,' he emerged, spectacularly. What's maybe most striking about 'Jaws' 50 years later is how much it still doesn't look like anything else.
___
Jake Coyle has been writing about movies for the AP since 2013. He's seen 'Jaws' at least a dozen times, and screened it for his kids when they were debatably too young for it.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rebirth of franchise more like a retread
Rebirth of franchise more like a retread

Winnipeg Free Press

time6 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Rebirth of franchise more like a retread

As the Jurassic Park franchise has devolved from awesome to awful, it's often pointed out that the movies themselves seem to follow the doomed paths of their characters. Like the scientists so preoccupied with what they can do they don't stop to think if they should, the studio keeps creating unnecessary sequels to Steven Spielberg's 1993 original. Like the corporate owners of the dinosaur parks trying to lure back jaded audiences with larger, toothier, genetically engineered monsters, the writers and directors keep making the action pointlessly bigger and noisier. Like the experts who ought to know better but return to the island because they can't resist that InGen money, the stars keep reprising their roles purely for the paycheques. With the word 'rebirth' right there in the title, this seventh Jurassic movie feels like a conscious self-correction after some really dire entries. And, thankfully, the charisma-free pairing of Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard has disappeared and the convoluted dinosaurs-among-us plots have gone extinct. Universal Pictures photos Jonathan Bailey, as pharmaceutical exec Martin Krebs, extracts dinosaur blood samples as mercenary Scarlett Johansson observes in the seventh Jurassic Park movie. Director Gareth Edwards (Rogue One, the 2014 Godzilla) is new, and he's a confident craftsman who knows how to execute big — like, really big — set pieces. The dinosaur sequences are always competent and occasionally thrilling. Fans of the original novel will be happy to finally get a well-constructed T-Rex river-raft scene. The human beings, unfortunately, fare less well. Jurassic World: Rebirth Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali, Jonathan Bailey and Rupert Friend ● Garden City, Grant Park, Kildonan, McGillivray, Polo Park, St. Vital ● 134 minutes, PG ★★½ out of five Scripter David Koepp, who co-wrote the first film with author Michael Crichton, is back, but he's not exactly on form, and the characters and their emotional backstories are flat, predictable and perfunctory. By the end, Jurassic World Rebirth feels like a barely fleshed-out Universal theme-park ride — sort of fun and completely forgettable. The story opens by making it clear that the dinosaurs that have made their way into our world are mostly dying out, unsuited to our 21st-century environmental conditions. Humans are now so blasé about the creatures that a sickly brachiosaurus that's somehow got loose in downtown Manhattan is just another reason for New Yorkers to complain about the traffic. Dinosaurs in the wild survive only in a band of islands around the equator where people are forbidden to travel. Pharmaceutical exec Martin Krebs (The Phoenician Scheme's Rupert Friend) doesn't care about the rules, though: he's planning an illegal but lucrative expedition to Ile Saint-Hubert, home to the dinosaur mutations that were too hideous or dangerous to make it to the Isla Nubar park. Krebs wants blood samples from a Titanosaurus, a Mosasaurus and a Quetzalcoatl (and, yes, as junior dinosaur scientists will point out, technically these last two are not dinosaurs but dino-adjacent prehistoric animals). Their genetic material will be used to make a drug that prevents heart disease. Jasin Boland/Universal Pictures Philippine Velge narrowly avoids being eaten in a scene from Jurassic World: Rebirth. Krebs hires Zora Bennett (Scarlett Johansson, also recently seen in The Phoenician Scheme), who is said to be 'untroubled by legal or ethical complications.' Basically, she's a mercenary, though she prefers the term 'situational security reaction' specialist. Zora teams with an old colleague, Duncan Kincaid (Mahershala Ali of Moonlight). Krebs also brings on a mission scientist, Dr. Henry Loomis (Wicked's Jonathan Bailey), who's running a dinosaur museum that has just been mothballed because of lack of public interest. He wears glasses and says things like 'intelligence is overrated as an adaptive trait.' It's always astonishing to think that these beasts did once roam the Earth and it was this thought that stopped me slipping into sleep. — Deborah Ross, the Spectator It's always astonishing to think that these beasts did once roam the Earth and it was this thought that stopped me slipping into sleep. — Deborah Ross, the Spectator Rebirth's dinosaurs are everywhere, but the more you see, the less it means. They're good for a scare now and then, but the sense of awe is long since gone — Sam Adams, Slate In a franchise built on the thrill of discovery, this latest entry offers only the comfort of the all-too-familiar, and the sinking feeling that some cinematic wonders are best left extinct. — Peter Howell, Toronto Star The effects are uniformly effective — we believe these dinosaurs, even as we don't believe that any humans could be quite this clueless — and it all goes down perfectly nicely with popcorn, which is all you can ask of a Jurassic movie. — Moira MacDonald, Seattle Times Finally, there's a separate group. Loving father Reuben Delgado (The Lincoln Lawyer's Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) is inexplicably taking daughters Teresa and Isabella (Luna Blaise and Audrina Miranda), along with Teresa's slacker boyfriend, Xavier (David Iacono), on a small boat through seas known to teem with Mosasaurs, just to fulfil the Jurassic franchise requirement for a child-in-jeopardy subplot. They all end up on the island together and while these characters aren't actively offputting, they don't make much of an impression. This is a talented cast with nothing much to do except run and shout. Zora is dealing with PTSD from a mission gone wrong and guilt about her mother, who died of heart disease. Duncan is haunted by a personal tragedy. The Delgado family is working through some stuff — dad needs to loosen up and Xavier needs to man up. These motivations are outlined in a box-ticking kind of way but barely followed through. Meanwhile, there's the assignment to collect samples from one flying, one swimming and one land-based creature, which gives a Pokémon-like simplicity to the action-adventure plot. After some needlessly complicated Jurassic storylines, this may be refreshing, but it rarely feels original. Koepp makes an early reference to the 'Objects in mirror are closer than they appear' joke from Jurassic Park, but ensuing echoes are not so much clever callbacks as tired retreads. There are mutated dinos hunting humans in a big room with rows of metal shelving. There is a large scary dinosaur about to eat someone and then at the last moment being itself eaten by a larger, scarier dinosaur. Jasin Boland/Universal Pictures From left: Bechir Sylvain, Jonathan Bailey, and Scarlett Johansson in Jurassic World: Rebirth. In Jurassic terms, Krebs has total 'lawyer on the toilet' vibes. Henry, who has studied under the original movie's Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), is given a moment of pure wonder at the sight of a dinosaur herd that is nicely acted but still feels like a pale reiteration of his mentor's. Jurassic World Rebirth isn't egregiously awful, then, but it is creatively underwhelming. It seems to be roaring at the box office, though, meaning that this instalment's cautionary tale warning, which warns that people should matter more than profits, probably isn't going to reach studio executives any more than the franchise's earlier lessons. Alison GillmorWriter Studying at the University of Winnipeg and later Toronto's York University, Alison Gillmor planned to become an art historian. She ended up catching the journalism bug when she started as visual arts reviewer at the Winnipeg Free Press in 1992. Read full biography Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Excitement mounts as the Oasis reunion tour prepares to kick off in Cardiff
Excitement mounts as the Oasis reunion tour prepares to kick off in Cardiff

Winnipeg Free Press

time8 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Excitement mounts as the Oasis reunion tour prepares to kick off in Cardiff

LONDON (AP) — Oasis is due to take to the stage in Cardiff, Wales on Friday, kicking off a hotly, and somewhat anxiously, anticipated reunion tour. The return of the Britpop-era rockers after a 16-year hiatus is a major moment for fans. Will it be a storming success? Definitely maybe. Predictions are tricky when it comes to Noel and Liam Gallagher, the sparring siblings who give Oasis its charisma, and its volatile chemistry. 'That's one of the attractions about Oasis — they bring this element of risk,' said author and music journalist John Aizlewood. He said the 'alternative aura that they have cultivated with the age-old pop story of fractious brothers' is part of the band's appeal. Unless the brothers' combustible relationship derails proceedings, two nights at Cardiff's 70,000-capacity Principality Stadium on Friday and Saturday raise the curtain on a 19-date Live '25 tour in the U.K. and Ireland. Then come stops in North America, South America, Asia and Australia, ending in Sao Paulo, Brazil on Nov. 23. Founded in the working-class streets of Manchester in 1991, Oasis released its debut album, 'Definitely Maybe,' in 1994 and became one of the dominant British acts of the 1990s, releasing eight U.K. No. 1 albums and producing hits including 'Wonderwall,' 'Champagne Supernova,' 'Roll With It' and 'Don't Look Back in Anger.' The band's sound was fueled by singalong rock choruses and the combustible chemistry between guitarist-songwriter Noel Gallagher — a Beatles and glam rock-loving musician with a knack for memorable tunes — and younger brother Liam, a frontman of compelling swagger and style. Then and since, the brothers have often traded barbs — onstage, in the studio and in interviews. Liam once called Noel 'tofu boy,' while Noel branded his brother 'the angriest man you'll ever meet. He's like a man with a fork in a world of soup.' Oasis finally split in 2009, with Noel Gallagher quitting the band after a backstage dustup with Liam at a festival near Paris. The Gallagher brothers, now aged 58 and 52, haven't performed together since, though both regularly play Oasis songs at their solo gigs. They long resisted pressure to reunite, even with the promise of a multimillion-dollar payday — though Liam sounded more open to the idea. The singer told the Associated Press in 2019 that Noel 'thinks I'm desperate to get the band back together for money. But I didn't join the band to make money. I joined the band to have fun and to see the world.' Now they have agreed on a tour that will see them joined — if reports are right — by former Oasis members Paul 'Bonehead' Arthurs and Gem Archer on guitars, bassist Andy Bell and drummer Joey Waronker. The announcement of the U.K. tour in August sparked a ticket-buying frenzy, complete with error messages, hours-long online queues, dashed hopes and anger at prices that surged at the last minute. Some fans who waited online for hours at the Ticketmaster site complained that they ended up paying 355 pounds ($485) for regular standing tickets instead of the expected 148 pounds ($202). The ticketing troubles sparked questions in Britain's Parliament, where Arts Minister Chris Bryant criticized 'practices that see fans of live events blindsided by price hikes.' Britain's competition regulator has since threatened Ticketmaster — which sold some 900,000 Oasis tickets — with legal action. Tickets for the U.K. shows sold out in hours, with some soon offered on resale websites for as much as 6,000 pounds ($7,800). That suggests major pent-up demand, both from the original fans — a male-dominated cohort now well into middle age — and from a younger generation. No plans have been announced for Oasis to record any new music, and the tour is being presented as a one-off. Aizlewood said it's an opportunity for Oasis to 'tend the legacy' of the band, and remind people of the power of the Oasis brand. 'There should be a sense of huge joy and life affirmation about these shows. And I think if they can just play it right, then that can be a massive burnishing of their legacy,' he said. '(There is) this enduring love for Oasis — and love means money.'

Joey ‘Jaws' Chestnut hopes for a comeback victory in annual Nathan's Famous hot dog eating contest
Joey ‘Jaws' Chestnut hopes for a comeback victory in annual Nathan's Famous hot dog eating contest

Toronto Star

time8 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

Joey ‘Jaws' Chestnut hopes for a comeback victory in annual Nathan's Famous hot dog eating contest

NEW YORK (AP) — The Nathan's Famous Fourth of July hot dog eating contest is back, and famed competitive eater Joey 'Jaws' Chestnut is hoping for a comeback 17th win on Friday. The 41-year-old, from Westfield, Indiana, was not in last year's event due to a contract dispute involving a deal he had struck with a competing brand, the plant-based meat company Impossible Foods. But now he's back, saying things have been ironed out.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store