First time watching JAWS. I'm scared.

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
  • FULL REACTION: / full-watchalong-107478593
    We're gonna need a bigger boat.
    Movie lovers, it's here. I am finally reacting to this seminal movie masterpiece. Steven Spielberg's JAWS from 1975. And better yet ... I watched it right before going to the beach. Because I'm a genius.
    🦈 Join me as I experience the suspense, the iconic score, and those chilling moments that have made Jaws a cinematic masterpiece. Whether it’s your first time or your hundredth, there’s always something new to discover in this deep-sea adventure.
    🎬 Don't forget to hit that LIKE button, COMMENT your favorite chilling moment from the movie, and SUBSCRIBE for more reactions. Tap the bell icon to stay updated on all my new uploads!
    📱 Follow me on Instagram for more updates and behind-the-scenes fun: / cristyreacts
    🎥 Feel like paying for a custom reaction? You can do that! reactr.tv/cristyreacts
    🛑 SPOILER ALERT: This video contains spoilers for Jaws. Be sure to watch the film first if you haven't seen it yet!
    🍿 I was on the edge of my seat the entire time and I can’t wait to hear what you all think. Did the movie scare you as much as it did me? Share your thoughts and let’s dive into a discussion about this legendary shark tale!
    #Jaws #StevenSpielberg #moviereaction

Комментарии • 660

  • @8RBrain
    @8RBrain 17 дней назад +24

    Susan Backlinie, the girl swimmer at the beginning, just passed away 5/13/24. She was 77 years old. RIP "Chrissie"

    • @beestingza
      @beestingza 12 дней назад +1

      My recollection was that she had run into hard times in the last years. RIP

    • @Elixear
      @Elixear 5 дней назад

      Ses cris resteront dans ma mémoire pour toujours. On ne le réalise pas toujours, mais cette scène est surtout terrifiante à cause du son, des hurlements de douleur. A eux seuls, ils permettent d'imaginer ce qui se passe sous l'eau à ce moment-là. Sans montrer l'animal, c'est une prouesse. On a rarement fait plus efficace au cinéma depuis, surtout pour une séquence d'ouverture.

  • @TheKavorka1
    @TheKavorka1 17 дней назад +85

    Ben Gardner’s head popping out of the ship’s hull is one of the best jump scares in movie history!

    • @Somehiguy
      @Somehiguy 17 дней назад +5

      Yeah, I saw this when it came out in theaters, and that was the whole theater getting startled all at once. probably the best jump scare, that and come and chum this ****

    • @BruGaleen
      @BruGaleen 17 дней назад +2

      100% agree! \m/

    • @wrldchamps04
      @wrldchamps04 17 дней назад +3

      And it was an afterthought....they were in editing when Spielberg decided he wanted one more "scare" scene. They filmed it in the woman's pool (with milk in it) that was the editor.

    • @joehoy9242
      @joehoy9242 17 дней назад +2

      A jump scare that still works as well as the day it was released almost half a century later.

    • @phj223
      @phj223 16 дней назад +2

      To this day I still look away when that scene is coming up, even when I'm just watching reactions. 😅

  • @GordoFunk555
    @GordoFunk555 17 дней назад +27

    Only Spielberg could absolutely terrify us with a moving piece of a dock. Genius.

  • @johnscott4196
    @johnscott4196 17 дней назад +26

    This was such an impactful event on the culture that SNL even had a recurring skit about a "land shark" that would knock on apartment doors using fake excuses and then eat the ones who opened the door.

    • @mochs3869
      @mochs3869 17 дней назад +13

      Love "Land Shark"..."Candygram" lol

    • @USCFlash
      @USCFlash 17 дней назад +10

      No I'm not a shark, I'm a dolphin!

    • @qwaurk985
      @qwaurk985 17 дней назад +7

      A dolphin? Well, that's different. Aaaaaaah!

    • @mochs3869
      @mochs3869 17 дней назад +2

      "Gonna form a posse" lol

    • @Dystopia1111
      @Dystopia1111 16 дней назад +3

      "UNICEF, ma'am."

  • @HeidiDenoble
    @HeidiDenoble 17 дней назад +22

    Jaws is in the top five movies of all time. It is not a horror film. It is an adventure/thriller/suspense.

  • @jviolajr
    @jviolajr 17 дней назад +29

    First reactor I’ve seen to pick up the “that’s some bad hat, Harry” line 😊

    • @presencerocks2224
      @presencerocks2224 17 дней назад +2

      I remember the first time I saw something from Bad Hat Harry productions and I nearly spit my Coke out because I was so surprised to see it

    • @corralescoyote3360
      @corralescoyote3360 16 дней назад +3

      I saw Jaws when I was little, and the first time I saw Bad Hat Harry Prod logo, I spent forever going “where do I know that from?”… LoL.. 😂

    • @mikeonthebayou
      @mikeonthebayou 13 дней назад +1

      @@presencerocks2224same. Kinda like that episode of House when in the opening scene he had a matchbox car jump a shark and wondering how many people caught the reference.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 17 дней назад +5

    31:50 "Japanese submarine slammed two torpedoes into her side."
    What Quint goes on to describe, here, is on record as the single worst shark attack in _history._ It really happened.

  • @maximillianosaben
    @maximillianosaben 17 дней назад +67

    This movie legit kept people out of the water when it came out, en masse. Quint's death was the one that sealed the deal for folks.

    • @Pinkielover
      @Pinkielover 17 дней назад +3

      Still does

    • @jsmithmultimediatech
      @jsmithmultimediatech 17 дней назад +3

      When in reality sharks hate eating us (I believe every time a persons been bitten by one the shark actually just swims away), its just they arent the brightest of animals as far as I'm aware so they mistake us for prey, not sure if they're as dumb as Pheasants are though. But they can be of course fatal, but then there's categorically some who've survived one.

    • @MrUndersolo
      @MrUndersolo 17 дней назад +3

      I didn't even want to use the local pool after I saw it!

    • @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms
      @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms 17 дней назад +5

      Yes, Quints death got to a lot of people... however the iconic "swimming girl attack" at the beginning of the movie likely had more to do with people not wanting to go into the water than any other scene. ESPECIALLY at night.

    • @Immortalheart66
      @Immortalheart66 17 дней назад +2

      Saw “Jaws “ when i was 10 in 1975,… and people were running out of the theater vomiting and screaming. Didn’t go swimming for years. Lived only 2 hours from where the movie was filmed. The first “ Blockbuster” movie that changed everything!!!!🦈🦈🦈✌️🔥🔥Epic!!!!!

  • @tofersiefken
    @tofersiefken 17 дней назад +20

    In 1975: $3,000 = $17,513 in 2024.
    In 1975: $10,000 = $58,377 in 2024.
    In 1975: $200 / day = $1,167 / day in 2024.

    • @WheresWaldo05
      @WheresWaldo05 17 дней назад +8

      You forgot the case of apricot brandy.

    • @GrumpasaurusBex
      @GrumpasaurusBex 3 дня назад

      @@WheresWaldo05 It's two cases, and dinner when he gets back. 😂

  • @ghengriff3600
    @ghengriff3600 17 дней назад +16

    Fishing reels have a mechanism that can be set to limit the speed at which the line is stripped off the reel by a fish. It’s called a drag and if a big enough fish is hooked, the drag disks become hot enough to fail, hence, cooling down the reel with water is necessary.

  • @51tetra69
    @51tetra69 15 дней назад +12

    Remarkably, Quint’s speech about the sinking of the USS Indianapolis is a historical fact. It really happened! His vivid description of the tragedy that resulted is one of the most epic monologues in cinematic history, and is the key to his character and his obsession with killing sharks. He smashed the radio not only because he wanted to secure the bounty and reward for killing the Great White, which is strictly a secondary consideration for him, but rather because he wanted revenge - or perhaps personal redemption - for his horrific experience, which he can only achieve by killing the man-eating shark himself.

  • @aricproctor6701
    @aricproctor6701 17 дней назад +62

    What quint said about his time on the USS INDIANAPOLIS was true.

    • @ziggythedrummer
      @ziggythedrummer 17 дней назад +10

      Mostly; the USS Indianapolis was on a secret mission to deliver the bomb. It did get sunk by a Japanese submarine on its way back. And some of the crew did get killed by sharks while waiting for rescue. However, the specific details Quint gives in the speech came from a combination of two scriptwriters and Robert Shaw himself.
      The vessel is recorded as having 1,195 crew aboard for the mission. Declassified records show that a distress signal WAS sent, and was received by three stations who all failed to act. And of those on board, the number of deaths attributed to shark attack varies - but doesn't exceed 150.
      The speech in the film - which is to show Quint's motivations - is mostly dramatic licence, though that doesn't detract in any way from how awesome a scene it is.

    • @raybernal6829
      @raybernal6829 17 дней назад +5

      @@ziggythedrummer When they first shot this scene Robert Shaw as usual was drunk but Spielberg decided it was good enough but then later when Shaw had sobered up he went to SS and said let's do it again... That was what made it into the film....

    • @ziggythedrummer
      @ziggythedrummer 17 дней назад

      @@raybernal6829 I missed out on seeing The Shark Is Broken unfortunately - would love to have seen it, and hopefully it'll have another run.

    • @dwaneanderson8039
      @dwaneanderson8039 17 дней назад +5

      @@ziggythedrummer But it's perfectly reasonable that Quint thought that no distress signal was sent. He wasn't in the radio room, so he wouldn't know. The fact that nobody came for days would have caused him to conclude that there was no distress signal. And being that their mission was a secret, he would natural think that was why. He also wouldn't know how many of the men were eaten by sharks. He was telling the story as he perceived it to be.

    • @maxducoudray
      @maxducoudray 17 дней назад

      @@dwaneanderson8039 You're overthinking it. It was dramatized to make it a good movie scene. It's not a documentary.

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie2112 15 дней назад +7

    "Anyway, we delivered the Bomb."
    Best line of the film, IMO.

    • @barrymiller3385
      @barrymiller3385 10 дней назад +1

      "We're going to need a bigger boat"?

    • @Stogie2112
      @Stogie2112 10 дней назад

      @@barrymiller3385 .... "You're gonna need a bigger boat." is the famous line, but for me, it pales in comparison to Quint's line. A powerful and sarcastic end to a horrifying story.

  • @Mcvthree3
    @Mcvthree3 17 дней назад +33

    LOL shes going to the beach after watching Jaws!

    • @jsmithmultimediatech
      @jsmithmultimediatech 17 дней назад

      Yeah somehow I don't think I'll mention what I was going to lol, seems somehow quite cruel to be honest (not just for Cristy but anyone scared of marine animals and wildlife in general, though a particular animal I am thinking of I don't know if they live around those parts, but can bet do live around where someone may be reading thigs and has nothing to do with sharks lol.

    • @ammaleslie509
      @ammaleslie509 16 дней назад +2

      she THINKS she going to the beach after watching Jaws...

    • @Mcvthree3
      @Mcvthree3 16 дней назад

      @@ammaleslie509 LOL, yeah. I suspect something else will come up.

    • @Dystopia1111
      @Dystopia1111 16 дней назад

      1 of my earliest childhood memories was watching Jaws 2 - then going straight to the beach right after. Good times.

    • @ammaleslie509
      @ammaleslie509 16 дней назад

      @@Dystopia1111 Jaws 2, not as psychologically powerful as Jaws by any known form of measurement

  • @TheHessian123
    @TheHessian123 9 дней назад +3

    When the child said "Coffee" he was answering his mother's question about what flavor of ice creme he wanted. In the 70's 'Mocha' ice creme was called "coffee"" ice creme. I was just a little younger then that kid in 1975 and I know I totally loved "Coffee" flavored ice creme.

    • @phillyphan1225
      @phillyphan1225 3 дня назад

      Mocha ice cream is choc & coffee (espresso) and coffee is just coffee ice cream-my fav as a kid in the 70’s ❤

  • @vudujl83
    @vudujl83 17 дней назад +12

    a classic…believe this is considered the first ever big summer blockbuster, and not a surprise that Spielberg helmed it, lol

  • @dannyropero4216
    @dannyropero4216 17 дней назад +37

    The scene when Quint takes a shot with the Chief and says, "here's to swimming with bow legged women" is a play on an old phrase, "DON'T go swimming with bow legged women", meaning stay away from loose, wild women. Hence, in the scene, Quint is actually saluting promiscuous women.
    In the hospital scene, when Brody's son requests coffee, he's actually requesting coffee flavored ice cream, very popular at the time.

    • @magicbrownie1357
      @magicbrownie1357 17 дней назад +2

      Two Bullseyes

    • @USCFlash
      @USCFlash 17 дней назад +5

      Coffee ice cream is still pretty damn popular. Loooooooove it.
      (especially coffee heath bar crunch)🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩

    • @thomasn3882
      @thomasn3882 17 дней назад +1

      I don't know why I don't like coffee ice cream. I like coffee, and I like ice cream, but the combination doesn't work for me for some reason.

    • @USCFlash
      @USCFlash 17 дней назад +2

      @@thomasn3882
      Interesting. I never liked coffee when i was younger. Did not start drinking it til I turned about 48 and even then, only out of necessity for a morning boost, not because I really liked it (later switched back to tea, which I prefer)
      But I always loved coffee ice cream. Weird.
      Always enjoyed just plain coffee ice cream, but then when they started adding stuff to it (Coffee heath bar, Cappuccino Commotion) forget it....delicious

    • @flerbus
      @flerbus 17 дней назад

      comes from an old navy song
      :"i love to go swimmin with bow legged women" and swim between their knees/legs...

  • @wolfie35p
    @wolfie35p 17 дней назад +19

    Jaws, Steven Spielberg's original horror movie, great movie, and still stands up for a movie from 1975.

    • @VladislavBabbitt
      @VladislavBabbitt 17 дней назад +2

      Yes, indeed.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 17 дней назад +3

      Second half though scary is an ocean adventure. Multi genre. Cannot be categorised to one genre.

    • @VladislavBabbitt
      @VladislavBabbitt 17 дней назад

      @@lyndoncmp5751 Some parts of are comical.
      The Mad Magazine spoof of it was really funny.

  • @jjlloyd8017
    @jjlloyd8017 17 дней назад +31

    My mother was at the very first preview screening of Jaws in Dallas in March 1975. She was pregnant with me at the time (I was born 6 months later), so I can honestly say that I was there too. My view of the screen was blocked though. Oh... Michael (the chief's son) was asking for coffee ice cream (which is awesome) in the hospital, not the drink. And the story of the USS Indianapolis is based on a true story.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 17 дней назад +3

      Very cool. They selected Dallas to see how it would do away from the coast, so if it worked inland then it'd work everywhere. ✌️

  • @adellittle3547
    @adellittle3547 17 дней назад +4

    I think Robert Shaw should of been nominated for an Oscar for this role.

    • @corralescoyote3360
      @corralescoyote3360 16 дней назад +1

      He should have, definitely, but in the long run, Oscar doesn’t mean diddly. So many bad movies have won, and so many great performances have been snubbed.
      We still know Shaw, and how great that scene is. That’s what’s important. ✌️

    • @GrumpasaurusBex
      @GrumpasaurusBex 3 дня назад

      @@corralescoyote3360 100% agree, he defo deserved an Oscar, but those awards nowadays rarely mean anything. Jaws has been my favourite movie since I was 5 years old, I've watched it well over 1300 times (It's one of my safety movies) and to this day Quint's speech STILL manages to give me goosebumps. Shaw was a freaking legend! The story behind his delivery of the scene is also pretty entertaining.

    • @clarkness77
      @clarkness77 4 часа назад +1

      Jaws would have won many Oscars but unfortunately came out same year as one flew over cukoos nest

  • @scottrabie
    @scottrabie 17 дней назад +3

    Peter Benchley said he wish he never wrote the book due to how much fear of sharks this movie provoked.

  • @ChrisReise
    @ChrisReise 17 дней назад +2

    33:34 Yep, that was a shooting star, there's actually TWO in this movie. Spielberg was famous for putting shooting stars in his movies...E.T., Jaws, Indiana Jones, Close Encounters etc.

  • @craigferron3227
    @craigferron3227 16 дней назад +4

    Filmed in Edgartown on the island of Martha's Vineyard. Fun fact. The kid on the right with the shark fin, the one that says " he made me do it, he talked me into it" is now the police chief of Edgartown

    • @SciTrekMan
      @SciTrekMan 15 дней назад +1

      He’s chief of Police of Oak Bluff, Massachusetts.

    • @jenfries6417
      @jenfries6417 14 дней назад

      @@SciTrekMan Same island, just another town.

  • @RMBittner
    @RMBittner 17 дней назад +12

    The Ben Gardner jump scare never disappoints! ;)

    • @njw5869
      @njw5869 17 дней назад

      I always rewind the reactor’s reaction !

    • @clarkness77
      @clarkness77 4 часа назад

      The subtitle almost gives it away :(

  • @danielkillian1222
    @danielkillian1222 17 дней назад +12

    Well, that's why John Williams is so great.

    • @corralescoyote3360
      @corralescoyote3360 16 дней назад +1

      John Williams is a true genius! It’s fun to listen to The Planets by Gustav Holst, BTW, to hear one of his biggest inspirations.

  • @danielmorency2242
    @danielmorency2242 17 дней назад +3

    If it wasn't for the obvious 70's clothing and hair trends seen in the first half of the movie, it could almost pass as having been filmed last year. So good.

  • @57kwest
    @57kwest 13 дней назад +1

    I sincerely love your "ay dios mio" 😂 I love how you nodded your head with him when clearly he was losing his mind 😂

  • @flarrfan
    @flarrfan 17 дней назад +6

    Hooper is played by Richard Dreyfuss...this was his second big role, his first was a wonderful George Lucas movie called American Graffiti. His next big one after Jaws was Spielberg's Close Encounters. Robert Shaw was Quint...he's got a great villain role in the Best Picture winner The Sting.

  • @gordonduke8812
    @gordonduke8812 15 дней назад +2

    Robert Shaw played Quint in this move, great actor. In his monologue about the ship wreck and shark attacks (true story by the way) he showed up on set drunk. He delivered the lines perfectly, but later asked how bad he screwed the scene up and was apologizing for his unprofessionalism. The cast and crew just stared at him for a second then said it was one of the greatest performances they had ever seen, and they were right.

  • @BubbaCoop
    @BubbaCoop 17 дней назад +11

    The shooting star was real.
    Such a serendipitous shot.

    • @dabe1971
      @dabe1971 17 дней назад

      That's a myth, they were added in post production. A 1995 documentary claimed they were real but in reality all the "night" shots are actually filmed in daylight and just processed to look dark so there's no way a natural shooting star would be visible. It's generally accepted that it's an 'Easter Egg' hinting at Spielberg's next movie - CEOT3K. He was asked about it at a Party and he congratulated the guest for "...seeing the UFO."

    • @adamdallas6096
      @adamdallas6096 12 дней назад

      It was not real, that scene was shot day for night.

    • @BubbaCoop
      @BubbaCoop 12 дней назад

      @@adamdallas6096
      "The Making of Jaws" confirms it's real.

  • @PatrickChachulski
    @PatrickChachulski 15 дней назад +2

    The speech from Quint is a true story and although you don't see what is described, it is so creepy and scary!

  • @vincentpuccio3689
    @vincentpuccio3689 17 дней назад +6

    A beer can back then was like a soup can not the thin aluminum cans today. So he was definitely showing off to Hooper

    • @USCFlash
      @USCFlash 17 дней назад +1

      Not really.
      This was filmed in 1974....those old heavy steel gauge cans were about 99.9% gone by 1970.
      Alcoa's first aluminum can was a massive hit with beer makers in 1962.
      Aluminum cans with the pull top tab was king in 1974. They then got banned the next year in 1975 in favor of the sta-tab.

    • @Hayseo
      @Hayseo 17 дней назад

      As far as bottles go - I’ll bet today’s generation does not know what the Jimmy Buffett lyric means: “l stepped on a pop top, shredded my heal, had to cruise on back home” means.

    • @USCFlash
      @USCFlash 17 дней назад

      @@Hayseo
      Well, they prolly don't know who Jimmy Buffet is, let alone know his lyrics, either. 😎😁

  • @dabe1971
    @dabe1971 17 дней назад +11

    9:54 $10K is about $60k today....

  • @joek468
    @joek468 17 дней назад +8

    Years ago the tv show Mythbusters disproved that you can explode a scuba tank by shooting a hole in it. But the use of it for the movie was pretty cool.

    • @presencerocks2224
      @presencerocks2224 17 дней назад +1

      Much better than the book ending

    • @daave365
      @daave365 17 дней назад +1

      I read an article about the scuba tank thing a year or two ago. Back in the late 60’s and early 70’s there was an issue with the way scuba tanks were manufactured that did cause structural weaknesses in the tank that could allow it to blow up if it took too many hard impacts and that people did have tanks blow up on their backs, but it was rare. They changed the way they were manufactured and it stopped happening. If they had a tank from that time period on Mythbusters, it could very possibly blown up if shot. But I agree, still a cool scene and better than the book 👍

    • @WheresWaldo05
      @WheresWaldo05 17 дней назад +2

      If it could not have happened, Spieldberg would not have done that.

    • @joek468
      @joek468 16 дней назад

      @@WheresWaldo05 Google it, a lot of thigs that cant be done are put in movies.

    • @piotrk.8652
      @piotrk.8652 13 дней назад

      True, bro. Ronon Dex try this and effect was different than in Jaws :)

  • @francisalbert1799
    @francisalbert1799 17 дней назад +29

    One of many classics from Spielberg! This is considered the first summer blockbuster!

    • @maximillianosaben
      @maximillianosaben 17 дней назад +3

      Quentin Tarantino has even called it the greatest movie ever made. Not film, but everything a movie is supposed to be this movie does in spades and just excellently. He explains it well better, but it goes along with you mentiong a "summer blockbuster".

  • @Immortalheart66
    @Immortalheart66 17 дней назад +2

    Good ole’ Ben Gardner. Never disappoints. In 50 years,.. i have only seen 1 person that had no reaction to that scene. I jump every time,.. and i have seen this movie at least 1000 times. Thank you Ben!!!!!

  • @57kwest
    @57kwest 13 дней назад +1

    Your face when Quint got eaten should've been the thumbnail 😂

  • @johnfullbrook628
    @johnfullbrook628 17 дней назад +5

    This is one of my all time favourite movies. It scared me as a child when I first saw it but I still love it to this day. You should check out the history of the movie and see the problems Spielberg encountered making it

  • @msgSharke
    @msgSharke 17 дней назад +3

    Rodney Fox is the guy in the book that was attacked by a great white and survived. For quite a few years he hunted great white sharks until about 20yrs later after knowing more about sharks and their behavior…he became an advocate for the protection of the great white. Love your reacts and just know sharks are not out to eat you 😅😊❤❤❤

  • @tomstanziola1982
    @tomstanziola1982 16 дней назад +1

    30:33......The barrel, Cristy, acts like a float, or a giant bobber. Because it's empty, the fish has a hard time pulling it under the water. This makes the barbed head of the harpoon pull against the wound, which opens it up and makes the fish bleed out faster. Great reaction!!! You're very beautiful!!! Love to you and your family!!! ❤❤❤❤

  • @ace1usmc
    @ace1usmc 16 дней назад +1

    So, I grew up fishing almost every weekend on the Chesapeake Bay right where it met the Atlantic Ocean. From the time I was about 3 or 4, I would play on the beach, play in the water, and hunt for shark teeth on the beach. By the time I was in 4th grade, I had a collection of over 1,000 shark teeth, ranging in size from a quarter inch all the way to 3 full-size Megalodon teeth that were about 4" in length. I also had found quite a lot of Great White and Tiger Shark teeth. It never occurred to me that where there were shark teeth to be found by the 100's, there would be 1000's of sharks around. Until I saw this movie in 1975 when it was released. I saw it with my old man, and it terrified me. You couldn't get me to put a big toe in the water for at least the next two years. This movie terrified me like no other ever has since.

  • @johndough3809
    @johndough3809 17 дней назад +2

    24:13 As in coffee flavored ice cream, that his mom just asked him about

  • @drb6771
    @drb6771 17 дней назад +7

    Classic, never gets old!! ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @Ray_Ridley
    @Ray_Ridley 16 дней назад +1

    Sadly, Susan Backlinie, who played Chrissie in that terrifying opening scene, passed away in May of this year. I saw this when it premiered in 1975 - the audience gave a standing ovation at the end - very rare for a movie !

  • @kegr1066
    @kegr1066 11 дней назад

    The movie that started John Williams' golden era of scoring movies. Jaws '75 Star Wars '77 Superman '78 Empire Strikes Back '80 Raiders of the Lost Ark '81 sweet baby Jesus that was a fantastic time for movie audiences. The theme music that man wrote during that time just wow.

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden3091 17 дней назад +1

    In 75 I saw it at the Brazos Twin drive in. When the face came out of the boat hull was hilarious listening to everyone screaming 😂😂

  • @victorpena9824
    @victorpena9824 17 дней назад +1

    Cristy,
    I saw Jaws when it first came out in the Theater. The Jump Scare when Hooper found the tooth had popcorn and sodas flying in the air. Pretty damn funny.😅
    When you said seagulls eating what was left of the shark, I immediately thought, "Sushi".😋
    Good Reaction, Kiddo.
    Love from Texas.❤

  • @bekindandrewind1422
    @bekindandrewind1422 17 дней назад +2

    30:32 --- The barrels are for seeing where it is yes... But they also serve another purpose.. Each barrel has a lift of ABOUT 250 pounds.. So to be able to go under, the shark would have to pull an additional 250 pounds of weight or force for each barrel. --- As it swims, the barrels also make drag. So the idea is to tire him out.

  • @henrytjernlund
    @henrytjernlund 16 дней назад +2

    I think Quint suffered from survivor's dilemma and harbored a secret death wish causing him to take unusual chances. I think "You're going to need a bigger boat" was one the best lines of all time. Which I think was improv. Great reaction, thanks.

    • @SciTrekMan
      @SciTrekMan 15 дней назад

      It was Captain Ahab and Moby Dick all over again!!

  • @jabecker21
    @jabecker21 17 дней назад +2

    My parents took me and my sister to see this at the drive-in when we were little kids. We sat in the back seat and held our feet up off the floor the entire time because we were afraid the shark would get us. It's been both of our favorite move ever since.

  • @danielmorency2242
    @danielmorency2242 17 дней назад +3

    H stands for HOLY...

  • @Alan-lv9rw
    @Alan-lv9rw 16 дней назад +1

    I was just a few miles away from the production crew when they filmed “Jaws” in the summer of 1974. My neighbor was an extra in the movie.

  • @jeromestracks108
    @jeromestracks108 17 дней назад +4

    Enjoy your trip to the beach Christy😅

  • @blakewalker84120
    @blakewalker84120 17 дней назад +1

    30:20 "What do the barrels do?"
    They float.
    They are very buoyant so it's hard for the shark to pull them under the water.
    Pulling one of those under the water would be like lifting 433 pounds over your head.
    "Why do they need two barrels?"
    Twice as as much buoyancy.
    Now the shark has to pull 866 pounds.
    Even if it can, how long can it keep on exerting the effort to pull them down before it gets exhausted?

  • @Rick-jf6sg
    @Rick-jf6sg 15 дней назад +1

    One of the reasons they cast Robert Shaw as Quint is because Shaw, based on his performance as the very dangerous Grant in "From Russia With Love," looked and acted like somebody who could give this shark some trouble.

  • @blanewilliams5960
    @blanewilliams5960 17 дней назад +3

    Brody was on the boat so he could kill the shark of coarse. Seriously, he felt he had to go and help anyway he could. Hooper could not shoot at the shark(when he was in the cage) because he had a spear not a spear gun. Michael was asking his mom for coffee flavored ice cream. Thank You, really enjoyed your reaction!

    • @richardburdon3241
      @richardburdon3241 15 дней назад +1

      I think Brody going on the boat was probably one of the conditions of the money the town paid, for verification.

    • @stinkbug4321
      @stinkbug4321 14 дней назад

      The mayor wanted people to go into the water because he had an under the table deal with the shark. He would supply it with fresh people to eat in exchange for illegal votes.

  • @3dbadboy1
    @3dbadboy1 16 дней назад +1

    Yes, the music is perfect. We can expect no less from John Williams, who also wrote the music of Superman, Star Wars, Close Encounters, Harry Potter, on and on and on.

  • @countzero1136
    @countzero1136 17 дней назад +2

    Love your reaction when the head comes out of the boat :D
    Seriously that's one of the best jump scares in movie history - I remember watching this on the cinema when it first came out - I guess I was around 11 or 12 years old at the time and holy crap I jumped out of my skin when that head appeared! - along with just about everybody else there :)
    They don't make movies like this anymore :(

  • @blakewalker84120
    @blakewalker84120 17 дней назад +1

    6:40 'He ain't wrong."
    Yes!
    Thank you for getting that.
    Most reactors think he's just greedy.
    This town is so far north tht it's practically Boston. Not quite, but almost.
    Most of the year, it's too cold for people to enjoy the beach.
    But the tourism in the summer, especially the week around July 4th, is what keeps this town alive.
    The majority of the town's businesses make most of their annual income during the summer.
    Closing the beaches and driving the tourists awy to other beaches could bankrupt half the town.

  • @matthewkirkhart2401
    @matthewkirkhart2401 17 дней назад +1

    I was 10 years old when this movie was released. My parents took me to the theater and dropped me off to see it ... parenting back then! Watching your reaction, I now know what my face looked like in that theater when Quint got eaten. It was, and still is, the most horrific and terrifying thing I have ever seen on film.

  • @jsapcakrrow
    @jsapcakrrow 11 дней назад

    When the mom asked Michael if he wanted ice cream he asked for coffee ice cream. Coffee flavored ice cream was popular in the 70’s. My mom used to buy it often for herself, one of her favorites.

  • @jenfries6417
    @jenfries6417 14 дней назад

    The reason Chief Brody was on the boat is that he was the client who chartered the trip on behalf of the town. The movie didn't give Brody's character background, but from the book, Brody was a police officer in New York City. He was highly experienced and a sharpshooter. He moved to Amity to raise his family in a nicer, safer place. Police chiefs are usually a hired civil service position, so he probably answered an ad from the town of Amity. I'm sure he never thought his skill with shooting would come in so handy on a fishing trip.

  • @johto
    @johto 17 дней назад +2

    The practical effects vs crappy cheap CGI what makes the difference, and of course the analog film vs digital they used. Way easier to "remaster" these later in high def and still keep the original look of the era. Classics are classic for a reason 👍 There's something about good old analog film stock from the 70's that makes things so "real". 🤓

  • @Andre_Ons_Marshall
    @Andre_Ons_Marshall 17 дней назад

    “Heres to swimming with bow-legged women” meaning stay away from the “loose” girls. In Jaws, Quint gives a toast to Chief Brody, “here's to swimming with bow-legged women.” Basically, just flexing on Brody to show he isn't afraid to do anything.

  • @danmcn61
    @danmcn61 5 дней назад

    One of the best Steven Spielberg movies is called 'Duel" starring Dennis Weaver. It was only a TV movie of the week, but I saw it when I was ten years old and it terrified me. Just like the shark in Jaws, the viewer never really sees much of the truck driver.

  • @lashutterbug
    @lashutterbug 17 дней назад +1

    The hundreds of sharks gathering along your beaches is a perfectly natural phenomenon. Most of those sharks are bottom dwellers who are after stingrays and the like; they're not interested in people at all and are quite harmless. Of the larger, more oceanic sharks that are in those groups, only a few of them are considered dangerous to people--in Florida, that would be primarily the blacktip reef shark, the lemon shark, the bull shark, the mako, and the tiger shark. And of those species, most of the time they're also not all that interested in people. Some look scary but actually aren't, like the hammerhead...they get into shallow water quite a bit but they're also after stingrays, and turtles, not bathers. Not many great whites mulling around Florida, at least not as permanent residents.

  • @steveg5933
    @steveg5933 13 дней назад

    Quint's story about the USS Indianapolis was actually the first time it had been publicly discussed. Spielberg arranged a screening for the few survivors still alive (the last of them passed just this year) because of the atomic bomb aspect of their mission, it was highly classified and crewmembers were encouraged to never discuss it. The captain of the Indy was basically used as a scapegoat, all of the blame fell on him. He took his own life in digrace. He was not cleared of wrong doing until 2015

  • @RichardM1366
    @RichardM1366 17 дней назад

    My mother Loved this movie. One day we went to the theatre to see Jaws. Seeing it in the theatre was wonderful. My mom never went to the beach again. We got a swimming pool. We would watch Jaws every summer. She passed away in 2011. I think all the time how special The Summer Of 1975 was. Yes, I do not go swimming in the ocean!

  • @johnscott4196
    @johnscott4196 17 дней назад +1

    Lol "I know the shark can't get in it"

  • @vincentpuccio3689
    @vincentpuccio3689 17 дней назад +10

    It’s not a Spielberg movie it’s THE Spielberg movie

    • @corralescoyote3360
      @corralescoyote3360 16 дней назад

      LoL…Your comment has the same rhythm as Po, “THE big fat Panda!!” LoL… ✌️

    • @hoibsh21
      @hoibsh21 15 дней назад +3

      If you love Jaws you'll also love Duel which is the precursor to this movie.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 17 дней назад +2

    10:06 "People don't even know how old sharks are."
    We've learned a _lot,_ since then.

  • @allenreeves2924
    @allenreeves2924 13 дней назад

    My tio was a professional shark hunter, based out of kaneohe, Hawaii. He basically had the same job Quint had (except on a more modern boat). 99.99% of the time a shark could be caught on a rod and reel. However, using the barrels was sometimes called for. To answer your questions about the barrels (almost every reactor asks about them), they serve multiple purposes. Mainly they are used to exhaust the shark, because it takes incredible strength to pull a barrel under water and HOLD it there. The shark would have to rise to the surface enough to relieve the pressure. I, personally, have never seen a shark large enough to pull ONE barrel under at all. A shark the size of the one in this movie could probably never pull two under, and being able to pull three under is pure cinematic fiction. A secondary function of using the barrels is to help track the shark once you got a barrel in it. Presumably that was why Quint's barrels were florecent yellow (although tio Wayne's were florecent orange).

  • @JRoger777
    @JRoger777 17 дней назад +1

    In 1975 a Chevy Corvette cost about $7000. $3000 was a lot of money

  • @granadosvm
    @granadosvm 15 дней назад

    I've read some place that the mechanical shark they used for the special effects was constantly malfunctioning. Spielberg hated it and named it "Bruce", after his lawyer.
    The movie was initially though to be very different, but because of the constant malfunctions they resorted to implying the attacks in most cases, leaving the use of the shark for the third act. This led to the use of "the less you see it, the more your brain fills in the scary details" concept that was later used in many other movies.

  • @J_Rossi
    @J_Rossi 16 дней назад

    One of the very best films of the last (nearly) fifty years. No question in my mind about it.

  • @CopyKatnj
    @CopyKatnj 17 дней назад

    In 1975 I was 23 years old, went to Miami to visit relatives, saw the movie and have never gone into the ocean again. My home is in NW New Jersey, in the foot hills, 30 miles away from the ocean and that is close enough. I've had brown bear encounters over the years and would rather face that seen threat than deal with an unseen threat from under water.. Seems to have worked well as I am now 72 years old.

  • @positivelynegative9149
    @positivelynegative9149 17 дней назад +2

    3:41 Editor strikes again. 😄👍

  • @markpekrul4393
    @markpekrul4393 17 дней назад +2

    Jaws is great in so many ways but for me the best moment is when Brody and his some mimic each other.

    • @mmhdata
      @mmhdata 17 дней назад

      It's a great moment, and it wasn't in the script, entirety improvised.

  • @vincentpuccio3689
    @vincentpuccio3689 17 дней назад +3

    The USS Indianapolis is a true story there’s plenty on the internet about it. A true horror story Me

  • @kenpatton8761
    @kenpatton8761 13 дней назад

    When I was a kid, we’d go to the beach with our blowup rafts, body surfing and just floating around and having a good time. Sometimes you see dark shadows under the rafts, couldn’t tell if it was your shadow, a patch of sea grass or a fish. Fast forward to 1982, I’m now in the USAF stationed in south Florida. I’m going out in helicopter’s flying along the coast line. We could see the sharks swimming around the folks in the water just off the beach. I quit swimming in the ocean, and will only go into the water long enough to cast a line while fishing. Today folks with drones are filming along the coasts and finding that there are still a lot of sharks but that they normally keep a wary distance from the people….until someone gets bit anyways. And it’s true…most shark attacks happen in 3 feet of water or less. Cheers

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 17 дней назад +1

    great reaction Cristy. This movie stopped people from visiting beaches. jajajajaja "beautiful beach but I'm swimming in the pool"

  • @8RBrain
    @8RBrain 17 дней назад +3

    20:56 The reporter on the beach is Peter Benchley The author of the book.

    • @rccaiarktek2890
      @rccaiarktek2890 13 дней назад

      He wrote the book here in Pennington, NJ. He lived above the pizza shop in the middle of town. He moved, a few miles away, to Princeton after the book and movie. He donated to organizations helping to save sharks for many years. I think Jaws was partly inspired by the shark attacks along the NJ coast in 1916 that killed four people. The book about those attacks, Close To Shore, is very good.

  • @danielsdimension7828
    @danielsdimension7828 17 дней назад +1

    Sometimes you forget how old this movie and the cast are. Roy Scheider and Robert Shaw were kids when WW2 happened.

  • @ChrisReise
    @ChrisReise 17 дней назад

    13:53 Fun Fact: This scene with the captured shark and another scene later on regarding the shark was not in the script. This tiger shark was actually caught by coincidence while filming the movie. The writer, Peter Benchley was on set, did some revisions to include this and the other scene in the film. Later, we can see Peter Benchley in the film...he is the newscaster being filmed on the beach.

  • @SarumanTheFab
    @SarumanTheFab 17 дней назад

    This movie actually caused a massive shark scare. Sharks were killed en masse because people were so terrified. Peter Benchley (the author of the book) actually stated he regretted writing it the way he did and he became a conservationist after learning more about sharks. Kind of insane how this wonderful movie had such an impact on a marine ecosystem.

  • @bradosborne1706
    @bradosborne1706 14 дней назад

    "Bro, are you not full?" LMAO :)

  • @commieRob
    @commieRob 17 дней назад

    At the time this film was made, sharks weren't protected from sport fishing. Actually, there was a huge spike in trophy fishing for sharks after this movie came out. Some people blame it for the massive decline in shark population. However, it was really more about overfishing and limiting sharks' food supplies.
    But, yes, it's now illegal to hunt sharks in most circumstances. But if one were skulking around a populated area, I think there are ways to get around it. They don't usually do that.

  • @TreysBlindSpot
    @TreysBlindSpot 17 дней назад

    As anticipated when I first saw this thumbnail, your reaction was hilarious. Your faces, especially at the end! Priceless! 😁😎

  • @willcool713
    @willcool713 17 дней назад +1

    Don't ever jump off a long pier, it might as well be a reef -- there is always a big shark or two, sometimes schools of them. Deep draught docks are just as bad, it's a whole ecosystem in the pilings. Not to mention the wave action likely to knock you around in there, but the movie isn't called, Wave.

  • @51tetra69
    @51tetra69 15 дней назад

    here is a good example of foreshadowing in this movie that everyone seems to miss: when Chief Brody is looking through books about sharks, researching the subject, while thumbing through the books, he comes across a photo of a giant shark with a compressed air tank from a diver in its mouth. Of course, this comes full circle at the end of the movie when Brody destroys the shark by shooting the compressed air tank in its jaws. I am always surprised that no one ever points that out; it seems like such an obvious oversight to me…
    Both the “Jaws” novel and the movie were inspired by a series of deadly shark attacks along the Jersey shore over a short period of time, resulting in multiple fatalities, all of which were caused by a single rogue bull shark. In short, incidents like those portrayed in Jaws do indeed take place in real life. Check the shark attack records for Florida, Australia, and California for more evidence.

  • @wren7195
    @wren7195 17 дней назад +2

    In the eighth grade I decided I wanted to be a marine biologist. I read EVERY single book in the library, especially Cousteau's two entries on dolphins. It took me twenty years to realize I actually did this because a young Jessica Alba was on the remake series of Flipper.
    Fucking *LOVE* dolphins.

  • @richardpoindexter6322
    @richardpoindexter6322 15 дней назад +1

    Great reaction to Spielberg 's first masterpiece......

  • @luckyskittles8976
    @luckyskittles8976 17 дней назад +1

    Glad you watched this one!!! Great reaction, I saw this in the theater when it came out and almost walked out during that opening scene and that threating music was scarerier than the shark.

  • @davemcbroom695
    @davemcbroom695 17 дней назад +13

    I saw this at the age of 11, didn't go in the water till I was 14. It's a little hoky now, but in '75 it terrified folks.

    • @WheresWaldo05
      @WheresWaldo05 17 дней назад +2

      Hoky yet still no shark movie has gotten even remotely close to this one. Sorry, but i call cap.

  • @jamescanole3940
    @jamescanole3940 15 дней назад

    According to the CBS Sunday Morning show, the actress who played the girl killed by the shark in the opening scene died a couple weeks ago. RIP

  • @raybernal6829
    @raybernal6829 17 дней назад +1

    Btw ... Coffee Ice Cream is what their son was asking for at the hospital not actull coffee 😉🙄

  • @brom00
    @brom00 17 дней назад +2

    Loved your reactions, Christy. this is a great film, but not Spielberg's first work. He directed several episodes of different TV shows as well as a few TV movies. His best was one called 'Duel', about an ordinary guy being followed and harassed by a faceless driver in his big rig truck.

  • @peterbriggs6857
    @peterbriggs6857 17 дней назад +1

    That's so crazy you haven't seen that before...so much fun to see it through new eyes (especially of somebody who is fun to watch movies with.)

  • @michaelcoffey1991
    @michaelcoffey1991 17 дней назад +1

    @Christy So glad you saw this one of the top 10 horror films of all time because it HAD to be. Spielberg's first real film, the shark would never work so Steven had to write and re write dialog thus the story and character development so good when in so many horror films it is worse then porn lol. Yes the score is amazing to this day if you played it at a pool people would get out quick :)

  • @ChrisReise
    @ChrisReise 17 дней назад

    44:37 The reason we didn't see the shark as much as we all thought was because the salt water kept causing it to break down. Same thing happened in Jurassic Park with the T-Rex under the rain making machines...but with JP Spielberg had more money.