Jaws: The U.S.S. Indianapolis Speech

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 авг 2008
  • After comparing scars, Quint (Robert Shaw) tells Brody (Roy Scheider) and Hooper (Richard Dreyfuss) what happened when tiger sharks attacked the stranded crew of the U.S.S. Indianapolis.
    Copyright with Universal Pictures.
    Jaws, 1975, directed by Steven Spielberg. Go buy it if you haven't.
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @ThatWeirdCreator
    @ThatWeirdCreator Год назад +2809

    It's crazy how one of the greatest scenes in cinematic history is just a guy sitting telling a story. No big flashback, no set pieces, just three guys in a boat. Brilliant.

    • @threalismaradona9899
      @threalismaradona9899 Год назад +130

      Its called real acting and writing sorry to say its a lost art

    • @ThatWeirdCreator
      @ThatWeirdCreator Год назад +39

      @@threalismaradona9899 It’s all around you just gotta dig really hard to find it

    • @RenegadeShepTheSpacer
      @RenegadeShepTheSpacer Год назад +44

      @@ThatWeirdCreator Exactly. It's not lost, but it is increasingly rare.

    • @scorptarget
      @scorptarget Год назад +4

      💯💯

    • @j2msu341
      @j2msu341 Год назад +27

      Yes ! But what a story, a real story

  • @ziweiyuan
    @ziweiyuan Год назад +1036

    The way Robert Shaw tells this story you'd swear he was there himself. Brilliant, brilliant actor.

    • @montythebugman6308
      @montythebugman6308 11 месяцев назад +30

      Brilliant actor and not a bad writer. In addition to several novels and plays he is credited with the rewrite of this very scene. According to Carl Gottlieb, who rewrote Peter Benchley's initial screenplay, Shaw took several drafts of this scene and consolidated them into this 6:12 piece of cinematic brilliance.I
      What a talent.

    • @billyruprecht9581
      @billyruprecht9581 9 месяцев назад +41

      Even the surviving crew of the Indianapolis gave their respects to Robert Shaw.

    • @gumborambo4540
      @gumborambo4540 9 месяцев назад +26

      the pauses he makes in the speech radiate truth. Shaw was an amazing actor, he played a New England Islander perfectly.

    • @Buffalobills-fh2be
      @Buffalobills-fh2be 8 месяцев назад +9

      He fought in Ww2 for the English he allowed to fake it

    • @Maximillian200HP
      @Maximillian200HP 8 месяцев назад +13

      @@gumborambo4540 I dunno if it was intended or just coincidental, but you really get the vibe that Quint suffers from PTSD as a result of that incident and he seemed almost like he was on the verge of a flashback while telling the story and looked like he even struggled to maintain his composure and control all the anger he still had towards sharks. I've only ever seen Robert Shaw in two films (This and From Russia with Love) but he was a fantastic actor. A shame he died only a couple years after this film was released.

  • @floralwallpaperenthusiast6631
    @floralwallpaperenthusiast6631 Год назад +572

    Convincingly acting drunk is hard. Convincingly acting drunk and knowing how to deliver a heartfelt monologue like this is probably some of the best acting ever

    • @ssaepa1
      @ssaepa1 10 месяцев назад +31

      They say Shaw did a fair bit of drinking during the shoot with so much downtime due to weather and ol Bruce the shark malfunctions. I have said many times if I could pick one celebrity to shoot the shit and drink with it would be him.
      I did come across a RUclips video that showed his son, who is the spitting image of him starring in a play about the making of the movie.

    • @gumborambo4540
      @gumborambo4540 8 месяцев назад +11

      @@ssaepa1 Shaw was a mean and violent drunk. You would be facing a Ginger Baker situation. Id kill to have a chat with Scheider, this movie and the French Connection started my love for film.

    • @ohioexpax1592
      @ohioexpax1592 8 месяцев назад +23

      He was drunk when he did that.

    • @altarofkubrickfloyd
      @altarofkubrickfloyd 6 месяцев назад +11

      He’s drunk in certain shots, sober in others. It seems like the first few minutes he’s inebriated.

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 6 месяцев назад +1

      Not to mention seasick.

  • @laurabogue3503
    @laurabogue3503 8 месяцев назад +117

    The moment he says USS Indianapolis all the air got sucked out of the room and it became real, real fast.

    • @mexman000
      @mexman000 22 дня назад +3

      for Mr. Hooper, because he knew. Chief said "what happened?" I would think in 1977, it was only about 32 years after the Indianapolis went down, i would think chief should of known

  • @johnrotten3268
    @johnrotten3268 3 года назад +1778

    The fact that Shaw didn't win an oscar for this scene speaks volumes how the academy isn't worth a shit.

    • @brian-td2um
      @brian-td2um 3 года назад +53

      Especially if you read the book. In the book quint has no personality at all.

    • @thomaspetersen3208
      @thomaspetersen3208 3 года назад +16

      Amen brother!!

    • @asburypark1516
      @asburypark1516 3 года назад +41

      Funny fact is that Shaw was drunk most of the time during shoots like this one. Fact is there were days where they called the shoot off all together and delayed it because Shaw was to drunk. Either way his best is this and The Sting.

    • @StevenVerd
      @StevenVerd 3 года назад +12

      I understand he died shortly after filming Jaws.

    • @brian-td2um
      @brian-td2um 3 года назад +14

      @@StevenVerd a few years after. He did a couple movies after Jaws. August 1978 he died.

  • @texasrockshillcountry6574
    @texasrockshillcountry6574 3 года назад +2386

    I love how when Quint tells Hooper that the tattoo was the U.S.S. Indianapolis, and Hooper's laugh immediately dissipated. He knew...

    • @THEGODDAMNDINOSAUR
      @THEGODDAMNDINOSAUR 3 года назад +123

      yeah he knew, probably knows a lot of naval history

    • @madcapmakov2
      @madcapmakov2 3 года назад +157

      Not only that, I love Quint grabs Hopper when Hooper makes the joke about that tattoo...
      Subtle body acting to add on Shaw’s performance.

    • @Ducksoup67
      @Ducksoup67 3 года назад +114

      And the way Shaw played it...the wincing grin and firm, but not threatening grip on Hoopers arm. ACTING!

    • @danielmunoz456
      @danielmunoz456 3 года назад +104

      One of my favorite examples ever of "show, don't tell." Hooper goes from jovial drunk to just frightened so quick it draws everyone in.

    • @argustuft2394
      @argustuft2394 3 года назад +132

      @@THEGODDAMNDINOSAUR He wouldn't necessarily know a lot of naval history, but as an ichthyologist specializing in sharks he would surely have known about the worst single shark attack event in recorded history.

  • @joescott8877
    @joescott8877 Год назад +806

    I love how Quint grabs Hooper's arm after Hooper's lighthearted "Mother tattoo" joke is made. It's like Quint is communicating: Dude, I know we were making all kinds of silly jokes literally seconds ago, and you may feel bad about making that last one when you hear what the tattoo REALLY said, but it's all good, I won't hold it against you. And yes, I DO know that you will INSTANTLY know the significance when I say "The U.S. Indianapolis." Prepare to hear a riveting tale, my friend." Anyhow, I think that brilliant little arm grab by Shaw/Quint communicates all of that.

    • @missygoldstein12
      @missygoldstein12 Год назад +27

      Yes that was superb.

    • @petergandenberger8154
      @petergandenberger8154 Год назад +33

      Agreed. That small gesture communicated so much.

    • @frysause934
      @frysause934 Год назад +21

      That's how real men communicate. It comes from our hunter/ gather days. When we needed to communicate but remain silent. To get the meal to feed our family.

    • @mr.eldritch1589
      @mr.eldritch1589 Год назад +34

      I like hooper immediately went sober when he said it was from Indianapolis.

    • @heidireynolds9587
      @heidireynolds9587 Год назад +10

      Best acting in American history. RIP Robert Shaw.

  • @fireboy93939
    @fireboy93939 11 месяцев назад +280

    No CGI, No dramatization, no Bs. Just 3 guys, a ship, and a harrowing real life story. Greatest scene ever from the greatest movie ever

    • @wcw2793
      @wcw2793 7 месяцев назад +5

      And the great John Williams’ music to help with the mood.

    • @troutwalker475
      @troutwalker475 7 месяцев назад +5

      Let’s drink to our legs

    • @AlexanderNixonArtHistory
      @AlexanderNixonArtHistory 5 месяцев назад +1

      Dreyfus was cgi.

    • @moemanncann895
      @moemanncann895 3 месяца назад +1

      I think Spielberg threw in his signature CGI shooting stars in the background during the boat scenes

    • @James-zp5po
      @James-zp5po 3 месяца назад +1

      It was not real life because nukes don't exist Hiroshima and Nagasaki were fire bombed only leaving brick buildings standing this was a subliminal propaganda movie

  • @gssheriff7278
    @gssheriff7278 5 лет назад +1333

    Robert Shaw should have got academy award for this role

    • @mrspicolli
      @mrspicolli 4 года назад +35

      No kidding. Even as a kid I felt something significant about this. As an adult knowing the story it’s just that much more intense. It’s kinda hard to listen to when u realize this shit happened. Shame the Indianapolis movie sucked....it was shot in bama. Shame

    • @wolfy5svn945
      @wolfy5svn945 4 года назад +1

      Shut up. He wasn't even acting in this scene he was plastered and ad libbing. According to interviews with the cast they actually said they hated him and he was an obnoxious alcoholic. Robert Lee Errmey never got no academy award for full metal jacket.

    • @gssheriff7278
      @gssheriff7278 4 года назад +22

      No need to get personal man, just my opinion. I agree Lee Emery should have received academy award for full metal jacket.

    • @wolfy5svn945
      @wolfy5svn945 4 года назад

      @@gssheriff7278 my bad 😂 my comment was directed at J B. Id never disagree with someone's opinion on movie awards unless it involves Jared Leto being joker lol

    • @gssheriff7278
      @gssheriff7278 4 года назад +2

      Well my opinion on Leto, is I was expecting more out of the role, bigger part in the storyline.

  • @iangillespie4013
    @iangillespie4013 2 года назад +1584

    “What happened?” I love the almost childlike innocence of that question from chief Brody, who quite clearly didn’t know what had happened to the USS Indianapolis, in contrast to Hooper suddenly getting VERY serious, knowing his history and knowing he’s about to hear a recollection of unimaginable horror.

    • @judyhopps9380
      @judyhopps9380 2 года назад +100

      though Quint isn't real, the way this story is told is so chilling and compelling, you get now why so many veterans didn't talk about the war to their kids. It took 40 odd years and their grandkids asking before some opened up, and even then, not all of them could.

    • @Shadywolf09
      @Shadywolf09 2 года назад +49

      It's like a tale told around a campfire. The kids (Brody and Hooper) asking the adult (Quint) to tell them a story.

    • @EricDKaufman
      @EricDKaufman 2 года назад +72

      And at the time, in the 1970s most people still didn't know about Indianapolis. In fact, I would argue this movie brought it back into the zeitgeist, so that conversation and proper history could be done on it. War is hell, but this was a fresh hell of fresh meat for the sharks. Pure HORROR.

    • @EricDKaufman
      @EricDKaufman 2 года назад +24

      @@judyhopps9380 even when you win war is hell

    • @brianstark2219
      @brianstark2219 2 года назад +39

      @@EricDKaufman It was such an awful story of suffering .. and negligence by the Navy, it was actively suppressed. And, of course, Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the sudden end of the war occurred soon afterward and completely overshadowed this tragedy. Nobody knew about this

  • @benwillard2673
    @benwillard2673 Год назад +141

    I read somewhere that when Robert Shaw read that part of the script he said "There are words in here that a fisherman wouldn't use. Let me rewrite some of it." One of the best scenes in movie history.

    • @montythebugman6308
      @montythebugman6308 11 месяцев назад +31

      According to Carl Gottlieb, who rewrote Peter Benchley's original screenplay screenplay, Shaw took several drafts of this scene and consolidated them into his own version. Shaw, who was an accomplished novelist and playwright, performed his version of the monologue during dinner with Spielberg and some of the other creatives. Spielberg took one look around the table and said "That's the scene."
      Robert Shaw RIP.

  • @delavalmilker
    @delavalmilker Год назад +233

    Amazing how the mood suddenly changes at 2:34, when Quint almost off-handedly mentions that he was on the Indianapolis. Hooper, as a shark expert, immediately realizes what that means.

    • @davidedwards8365
      @davidedwards8365 6 месяцев назад +9

      Richard Dreyfuss's responses to this is one of the greatest pieces of acting ever

    • @reelgoodfishing
      @reelgoodfishing 6 месяцев назад +20

      Even deeper than realizing what it means in the moment, it changes the entire context of everything he’s known about Quint since he met him. He knew he was a shark fisherman but never knew why. Hooper saw them from a research perspective and always hated that Quint had no appreciation for the scientific significance. Until he heard that he was on the Indianapolis. Now everything that Quint has said and done that pissed off Hooper makes a lot more sense to him. My take.

    • @horrorfanandy4647
      @horrorfanandy4647 5 месяцев назад +10

      ⁠​⁠@@reelgoodfishing
      Absolutely agree with you. The whole scene beforehand is Quint and Hooper drunkenly bonding and putting aside their differences, but there’s still a distance between them even though this is the closest they are with one another in the whole film. Then Quint tells this tale and instantly both Brody and Hooper are plunged headfirst into the darkness of Quint’s mind, haunted by a trauma he can never forget, by survivors guilt, by a feeling that he should have died in place of his friend.
      It’s only after this that Hooper truly understands, and even though they fight constantly throughout the rest of the film, Hooper has a begrudging respect for him that wasn’t there before. Quint equally treats Hooper more as an equal after this scene, and this respect is especially apparent when Hooper bravely decides to go down in the cage, something Quint knows he would never do.

    • @heathermillsphantomlimb9314
      @heathermillsphantomlimb9314 5 месяцев назад +13

      @@reelgoodfishing100%. That story also helps explain Quints poor decisions later on in the movie. He saw this giant shark almost from a Moby Dick/Captain Ahab perspective where it represents the trauma of the Indianapolis, and he was going to kill it no matter what the consequences. He destroys the radio because this was his kill, and he wasn’t going to let anyone else take it from him. Then, he burns up the engine because he’s desperate to kill it before anyone else can come along. My thoughts, anyway.

    • @brianfarrell3987
      @brianfarrell3987 5 дней назад

      The way Quint knocks his hat off on to the table. He means business with this story.

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 2 года назад +194

    The last survivor of the Indianapolis passed Adolfo Celaya died last year in May. Rest In Peace sir

    • @sundayakpan2663
      @sundayakpan2663 Год назад +2

      Amazing Fucking Speech that they are having a conversation

    • @h.calvert3165
      @h.calvert3165 Год назад +10

      @@sundayakpan2663
      The script was inadequate. Shaw said, I can do better than this. Young Spielberg, 25 years old, had the self-confidence to relinquish control. Do it, he said. Shaw did. And here you have the very heart of the meaning of this film: life is a constant struggle for survival. It will kill us, unless we come together to fight. 🦈

    • @benthomas8765
      @benthomas8765 3 месяца назад +2

      I am currently reading a book on the Indianapolis, and he is brought up quite frequently.

    • @fernandopessoa7077
      @fernandopessoa7077 3 месяца назад

      Which book is it, mate?

    • @woodruffokjulee5615
      @woodruffokjulee5615 3 месяца назад +4

      No, there is still one survivor left, Harold Bray, age 99.

  • @michaelkuhn402
    @michaelkuhn402 Год назад +776

    Literally one of the best scenes ever written and acted in movie history.

    • @nstix2009xitsn
      @nstix2009xitsn Год назад +3

      @Michael Kuhn Literally alert! Try the same phrase without the superfluous word.

    • @nstix2009xitsn
      @nstix2009xitsn Год назад

      @@J.F.-yy8ji Thanks for the laugh!

    • @jerramaurice7836
      @jerramaurice7836 Год назад +1

      He was actually drunk when he did half of this scene

    • @chriskrausesmovie
      @chriskrausesmovie Год назад

      literally

    • @bassplayer2011ify
      @bassplayer2011ify 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@jerramaurice7836 He probably was when they were comparing injuries. But for the monologue of the story of the Indianapolis he was sober. They originally shot it when he was drunk but Shaw wasn't happy with it. So he asked if they could redo it tomorrow. He shows up the next day sober and does it in one take.

  • @rjmq433
    @rjmq433 Год назад +342

    Ive seen this scene probably a thousand times. Never gets old.

    • @c.moriarty1178
      @c.moriarty1178 Год назад +8

      I don't know how many times, maybe a thousand

    • @degeautdfanfirst
      @degeautdfanfirst Год назад +4

      ​@@c.moriarty11786 times an hour

    • @davidedwards8365
      @davidedwards8365 6 месяцев назад +2

      I try to use it as a memory aid. And I still get it wrong. Genius level acting

  • @llongdong
    @llongdong Год назад +114

    I'm an old man. Seen a lot of movies. Shaw's acting here, in this scene, is the greatest I have ever been exposed to.

  • @zuppedepeche
    @zuppedepeche 7 лет назад +3970

    I still don't know how Robert Shaw did not win or even get nominated for best supporting actor in this film. One of the all time greatest movie characters and monologues in history. Chilling to the bone.

    • @alanmeires
      @alanmeires 6 лет назад +85

      Yes, you are so right he should at least got nominated he was so good in the hole film, not just this scene.

    • @shugaroony
      @shugaroony 6 лет назад +94

      Shaw could've got oscars for so many roles, he was excellent in everything he done.

    • @remy6885
      @remy6885 6 лет назад +27

      I heard he actually came up with this script himself but I don't know if it's true

    • @jennifersman7990
      @jennifersman7990 5 лет назад +20

      And get this, Lee Marvin & Charlton Heston were first approached for the role and turned it down

    • @J_Rossi
      @J_Rossi 5 лет назад +55

      Helen Walton He did. He rewrote a much longer version of t he speech that had been written by John Millius. Howard Sackler had conceived the idea of the Indianapolis sinking being the reason why Quint hated sharks, but he only wrote a short paragraph. Robert Shaw was the one to write the version of the speech that we hear in the film.

  • @justinbrooks9072
    @justinbrooks9072 3 года назад +1710

    "Sometimes the shark would go away. Sometimes he wouldn't go away." This monologue chills to the bone!

    • @mr.e6033
      @mr.e6033 3 года назад +64

      The crazy part is it really happened! So many of those brave men got eaten by sharks.

    • @shawnthompson2303
      @shawnthompson2303 3 года назад +40

      I'll never put on a life jacket again.

    • @derricklafrance9440
      @derricklafrance9440 3 года назад +46

      This scene alone was 10 times better than the Nic Cage movie about the Indianapolis.

    • @Dlovitz1024
      @Dlovitz1024 2 года назад +26

      ....”their lifeless eyes. You don’t know their alive until they bite you”. Great scene!

    • @benjarvis7485
      @benjarvis7485 2 года назад +22

      Lifeless eyes, like a dolls eyes…

  • @josephbateman7742
    @josephbateman7742 9 месяцев назад +17

    As soon as he heard Indianapolis, Hooper just shuts up and looks horrified and in awe..

  • @tacoscamp
    @tacoscamp Год назад +134

    "I'll never put on a life jacket again". It's an amazing bit of storytelling to find out so much about what drives a man in a few minutes of chatting. Robert Shaw re-wrote that speech himself using bits and pieces of the numerous other submissions by MIlius, Gottlieb, Zemeckis, etc., adding his own flourishes, and turned into a masterclass in movie-making. I'll never get tired of watching it.

    • @queenfan45
      @queenfan45 Год назад +8

      I saw this in the theater last week. You could feel everyone’s breath quicken in fear in this scene.

    • @johntabler349
      @johntabler349 2 месяца назад

      Later when it's all going bad and it is obvious the boat is in deep trouble, Quint grabs two life jackets throws one to Hopper and one to Brody . Little thing but it adds depth

  • @1972ibleedcrimson
    @1972ibleedcrimson 4 года назад +1832

    Considering this actually happened makes it all the more terrifying

    • @wedgeantilles4712
      @wedgeantilles4712 4 года назад +73

      BCMGunfighters1972: Indeed, the U.S.S Indianapolis event did happen. That is not just a story Quint tells.

    • @jamlym4974
      @jamlym4974 3 года назад +23

      It almost gives credibility to what happens in this movie. You never know.

    • @alphawolf1786
      @alphawolf1786 3 года назад +45

      @@yacovlk7924 then you should know it resulted in the greatest life lost in the US Navy in history and how the captain was wrongfully courted Marshall and the survivors of it were scared badly by it

    • @alphawolf1786
      @alphawolf1786 3 года назад +25

      @@yacovlk7924 ok if you are going to be like that then why are you here

    • @nibiru379
      @nibiru379 3 года назад +29

      Jacob Kauffman cough douche cough .

  • @troyc4250
    @troyc4250 4 года назад +897

    Now that I'm older....this scene is the scariest.

    • @Soundwave2423
      @Soundwave2423 3 года назад +42

      Now that I’m older and actually in the Navy....this scene is terrifying

    • @josephkelley8641
      @josephkelley8641 3 года назад +2

      for me it was about three, four years ago - i.e. still in my Youth.
      .

    • @josephkelley8641
      @josephkelley8641 3 года назад +3

      for whatever reason this was way-scarier back in 2016.

    • @hellogoodbye4061
      @hellogoodbye4061 3 года назад +30

      This scene says so much about Quint...most of all, we learn why he does what he does, what drives his unwavering, unending hatred of sharks and his lifelong quest to kill every damn one in the ocean....He is Captain Ahab seeking revenge on Moby Dick.

    • @dapperden4129
      @dapperden4129 3 года назад +19

      @K M the USS Indianapolis was a real event. Thats what makes this scene so terrifying.

  • @Maximillian200HP
    @Maximillian200HP 8 месяцев назад +21

    This not only is a brilliant piece of acting, but it's fantastic character backstory. You can tell he doesn't just kill sharks for a living, but it's for revenge, you can see on his face when he's recalling that incident, he doesn't just hunt sharks, he HATES them.

  • @macarotto
    @macarotto Год назад +60

    I absolutely love when Quint and Hooper have just shown each other their leg scars, and have that little moment of looking at each other with newfound respect. After all of Quint's jibes about Hooper being a city boy with soft hands from counting money all his life, and Hooper mocking the "working class hero crap" in return. Their realization they've got more in common than they thought and their camaraderie just makes "Mr. Hooper, that's the U.S.S. Indianapolis" hit even harder. Two outstanding actors, I can watch this scene countless times and still get chills.

    • @Grimreepa220
      @Grimreepa220 Год назад +2

      I read that they didn't get along when filming. Some of the scenes where Quint is angry at him are genuine.

    • @joescott8877
      @joescott8877 Год назад +3

      @@Grimreepa220 Heh, yeah, and then there's that scene where Hooper is at the wheel, saying in a sort of piratey-sarcastic snarl "Aye, aye, SIR!"

    • @logicplague2077
      @logicplague2077 Год назад +3

      @@Grimreepa220 Oh yeah, that animosity was real, although I don't think they ever really resolved it the way the characters did.

  • @alanw505
    @alanw505 5 лет назад +1049

    You could hear a pin drop in the theater when Robert Shaw delivered that Oscar worthy performance. Chilling.

    • @shawnkalin9337
      @shawnkalin9337 5 лет назад +20

      Did you see it on original theatrical release?

    • @ahsunraza2207
      @ahsunraza2207 5 лет назад +5

      @Jim McCracken Lucky!

    • @phillyphilhouse79
      @phillyphilhouse79 4 года назад +5

      @Jim McCracken Pretty cool. I think the first time I saw a blockbuster was when Terminator 2 came out. The next time was definitely Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace. Titanic and Saving Private Ryan both drew huge crowds as well, but not as big as The Phantom Menace did. My great grandfather was a Titanic survivor so the movie Titanic had more meaning for my family.

    • @phillyphilhouse79
      @phillyphilhouse79 4 года назад +2

      @Jim McCracken The sneak preview for T2 was The Rocketeer. My entire family went. We got 2 movies for the price of one. Love The Rocketeer and how it captured Golden Era Hollywood and people in general in 1938 USA. When the Rocketeer took that chic out hanging her laundry and skipped across the water, the crowd roared with laughter. When T2 took that dudes clothes and mounted his Harley, again a huge roaring cheer was let out. That was one of the best movie nights I've ever had even up to today.

    • @phillyphilhouse79
      @phillyphilhouse79 4 года назад +1

      @Jim McCracken True. However, the fight between human Darth Vader and Obi-Wan in The Revenge of the Sith was definitely amazing. So were the stunts in the new Mad Max and Tom Cruises hanging off a real plane in the air stunt in MI 5 was pretty damn good.

  • @MrZAP17
    @MrZAP17 7 лет назад +5742

    One of the all-time great monologues. I don't care how graphic and horrifying the rest of the movie is; this is the scariest scene in the film, full stop.

    • @michaekwstewart
      @michaekwstewart 7 лет назад +283

      Great comment. INDIANAPOLIS veterans stated this scene really shed light on their sacrifices.

    • @rembrant34
      @rembrant34 7 лет назад +184

      Agreed. Totally captivating. I feel like a kid sitting around a campfire listening to ghost stories every time I watch this.

    • @michaekwstewart
      @michaekwstewart 7 лет назад +183

      If memory serves, Spielberg stated later that Shaw was rip-roaring drunk during the scene. Shaw and Dreyfuss had had a big row over something ( they were fighting off and on during the making of the movie ) and Shaw left to go have a few. Spielberg states that he returned 'pretty lit' but when ACTION! was given, Shaw knocked it out of the ballpark.

    • @Grafferty
      @Grafferty  7 лет назад +81

      I thought there was a bit more of a gap than going off in a huff and coming back, like the next day or something. Whatever happened, he came back and killed it.

    • @JoeHynes284
      @JoeHynes284 7 лет назад +77

      This is why I joined submarines, no chance to swim with sharks, if all goes poorly, we just drown

  • @leedaniel3500
    @leedaniel3500 11 месяцев назад +27

    This scene is part of what really sets JAWS apart from a typical "thriller" or "monster" film. How quickly Hooper shuts up and his disbelief thanks to the words of Quint's mouth. Dreyfuss's continued look of awe throughout the monologue shows it all. He sees that this guy has really been through it, really knows this world and Hooper is for once at a loss for words. Anyway. We delivered the bomb.

    • @VivaLaDnDLogs
      @VivaLaDnDLogs 6 месяцев назад +1

      I love the way we see Hooper process that revelation. From drunken revelry to stone sober amazement in maybe a handful of breaths. Not instantaneously, that would eliminate realism. Each breath that catches in his throat gets him closer to being able to express his awe at the information just revealed to him.

  • @brycepatties
    @brycepatties Год назад +74

    One of the manliest scenes ever put to film, from the one-upsmanship of Quint and Hooper to the end of the monologue. Just brilliant writing.

  • @lancecampbell4323
    @lancecampbell4323 2 года назад +774

    The entire movie pivots on this scene. Up to this point they are hunting the shark. After this scene they are the ones being hunted. A brilliant scene from a brilliant film.

    • @johnkav
      @johnkav 2 года назад +23

      Good point Lance I hadn't considered that. What a brilliant moment to pivot the story.

    • @patriceaqa288
      @patriceaqa288 Год назад +18

      @@johnkav it's a brilliant way to pivot the story because quint and hooper bond, we realize quint is in no way stable and hunts sharks out of a revenge mentality, and very shortly afterwards the boat starts sinking whilst Brody the most fearful at first begins becoming the hero of the film. The film became pure fantasy versus reality at this point whereby a shark being hunted starts hunting the boat, but that's what jaws was a blockbuster that obviously had to completely play with reality

    • @richardscaife1126
      @richardscaife1126 Год назад +3

      Fantastic point, Lance.

    • @ryand141
      @ryand141 Год назад +1

      Yes, good point.

    • @michaelplumpton8873
      @michaelplumpton8873 Год назад +1

      Spot on

  • @j-rocd9507
    @j-rocd9507 3 года назад +915

    The sobering effect on Hooper as he immediately respects what he about to hear is perfect.

    • @ryanhampson673
      @ryanhampson673 3 года назад +41

      My grandfather was assigned to the Indy...He came down with a severe case of pneumonia and had to be hospitalized right before the ship left on that mission.

    • @dwissba68
      @dwissba68 3 года назад +7

      @@ryanhampson673 Did he ever wish he would have been there with those men?

    • @ryanhampson673
      @ryanhampson673 3 года назад +17

      @@dwissba68 I was very young when he told me the story. I didn't really grasp it until he was gone and I was older.

    • @redfirebonus9408
      @redfirebonus9408 3 года назад +2

      Yeah very precise attention to detail

    • @Phinal_Flash
      @Phinal_Flash 2 года назад +39

      The man has been studying sharks for years. He knew what Quint was about to talk about.

  • @pjht0488
    @pjht0488 Месяц назад +3

    Robert Shaw delivered this monologue brilliantly.

  • @usmcjawbreaker97
    @usmcjawbreaker97 Год назад +12

    The complete shift in tone when he says “Indianapolis” is stunning.

  • @jamlym4974
    @jamlym4974 4 года назад +531

    Love how he smiles the whole time just to hide his trauma.

    • @mindriot91_96
      @mindriot91_96 3 года назад +41

      And takes a big gulp from his mug of apricot brandy. You can see the pain on his face, clear as day.

    • @lairdriver
      @lairdriver 3 года назад +22

      He's actually genuinely drunk. He said he couldn't gather himself to tell the story in a sober way.

    • @mr.skeptical3071
      @mr.skeptical3071 3 года назад +16

      I love how the eerie music starts up in the background, slowly intensifying the story!

    • @liquidbraino
      @liquidbraino 3 года назад +3

      @Daniel Morris Shut the fuck up, you never served.

    • @rhapsodyinglue8758
      @rhapsodyinglue8758 3 года назад +1

      Mary Burdette love that story. Method actor to the max. He was fierce in The Sting

  • @garbagi0
    @garbagi0 3 года назад +1072

    What often gets missed is that Quint says he got that tattoo removed. Just the sight of it on his skin must have been torture for years.

    • @napoleonsolo5929
      @napoleonsolo5929 3 года назад +62

      I imagine he didn't enjoy telling the story much.

    • @claytonmachine12
      @claytonmachine12 3 года назад +95

      I think the line that sells what he felt about that more is when he says he'll never wear a life jacket again

    • @cugamer8862
      @cugamer8862 3 года назад +87

      When he points at it he says "that's the USS Indianapolis." Even tho he got the ink removed he still thinks of it every time he looks at his arm, he can probably still it in his mind's eye. He removed the physical evidence, but it's still part of him. Those are the kind of little details that really make this scene.

    • @shawnthompson2303
      @shawnthompson2303 3 года назад +58

      @@claytonmachine12 "Anyway.... we delivered the bomb. 🍺"

    • @Matthew-cw3gn
      @Matthew-cw3gn 3 года назад +28

      @@claytonmachine12 I don't think I fully understand what he means by the line about not wearing a life jacket. Just because it brings back bad memories? Because he'd rather just die? Something else?

  • @MVPCustomCues
    @MVPCustomCues Год назад +56

    I did not see this mentioned after scanning a few comments. I love how he flipped his cap off with no care about how it landed. It's like removing your hat when entering a funeral home. He couldn't wear it while talking about the death of his fellow servicemen. Baring his soul to even talk about it required uncovering his head. He didn't even remove the hat when he talked about the permanent knot he had. And it was instinctual. There was no pretention. No planned acting of "OK, I need to remove my hat now to make this a serious scene".

    • @brettdeacon3437
      @brettdeacon3437 9 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you for pointing this poignant act.

    • @v-town1980
      @v-town1980 Месяц назад +1

      That's incredible. Never picked that up.

  • @rclem87
    @rclem87 Год назад +29

    As spectacular as Robert Shawn’s monologue is, Dreyfuss’s reaction is phenomenal!

    • @aspe7187
      @aspe7187 4 месяца назад +1

      And Brody's look at his Appendix Scar.

  • @concordetconstabulary219
    @concordetconstabulary219 5 лет назад +400

    As a guy who’s known many vets I must say this is damn near perfect acting. The subtle quiver in his voice, the pauses, the forced laugh, I’ve seen it before. A man who has seen true horror, a man who had been hunted, a man who will never be satisfied doing anything else. It’s amazing how well Quint was portrayed. Bravo and god rest to this amazing actor.

    • @gabrieladerre2862
      @gabrieladerre2862 5 лет назад +21

      I spent two years being a voluntary, live-in care-giver for a Veteran. I worked for a bedroom and whatever she had left at the end of the month to pay me. If anything. I heard the stories. The ones she would talk about. I'd watch the light near instantly drain from her eyes when she'd tell some of them. She was, and is, my hero. I eventually moved out after she had a few successful surgeries.. I remember the day that I held her in my arms when they had told her that she'd never walk again. I'd have wept with her, but I KNEW that it just wasn't true. She was walking just fine when I moved out to go live with my fiance. I've had a few jobs. I made very good money at some of them. At least for a guy my age, with my background. But there's never been anything as rewarding, or that has given me as much pride and purpose as taking care of one of our nation's heros. It's a national disgace that so many of the have risked and given everything only to come home and be treated like they're nothing.. From what I witnessed on my many trips with her to the hospital, she'd have probably gotten better care and treatment of the had been some teenage crack head with five kids. I could on and on about the matter.. We live with a Veteran now. She isn't a war hero like the first one.. But thata okay, all Vets are heros to me.. She suffers from chronic debilitating migraines, so I spend my fair share of time caring for, and catering to her. I couldn't join the service even if I wanted to due to spinal condition that I was born with. But helping the Vets the way that I have makes me feel as if I've done my part. I wish that more would, even if it's just small one-time actions.

    • @jonreid7957
      @jonreid7957 4 года назад +6

      Gabriel Aderre you are a very special person. The world could do with more like you.

    • @Brandon-rq3ys
      @Brandon-rq3ys 4 года назад +10

      *a man who will never be satisfied doing anything else again*
      You just summed it up for almost every combat veteran. I got the priviledge to fight in 2 wars, several times. I hated it when it was happening. All I wanted was to go home. But now....now I'd do anything to go back for just one day. There's much more to it, but thats as much as Im willing to share.

    • @andrewjoyce9038
      @andrewjoyce9038 4 года назад +3

      I thought u meant vetenarians at first

    • @roquefortfiles
      @roquefortfiles 4 года назад +10

      John Williams score here cannot be overlooked. Subtle but effective. It is like the distant voices of all the men screaming. But muted to the background. Like a screaming nightmare. The shrill of fear up your spine.

  • @Ffollies
    @Ffollies 4 года назад +492

    "I'll never put on a life jacket again". Chilling.

    • @shawnthompson2303
      @shawnthompson2303 3 года назад +42

      Dude would literally rather drown.
      That's fucking scary as shit.

    • @AndreNitroX
      @AndreNitroX 3 года назад +27

      The scariest part he says was when he was waiting to be rescued out of the water. Like the anticipation of waiting to be saved was scarier than everything else

    • @rickogden204
      @rickogden204 3 года назад +10

      Those bloody whale songs...my god they scared me to death..what the hell are they saying to each other?

    • @JumbaFan
      @JumbaFan 3 года назад +5

      @@rickogden204 "Hey, who peed in the water? Kyle, was that you?!" "Nooo~"

    • @spacedog1978ify
      @spacedog1978ify 3 года назад +2

      Chilling, indeed

  • @Luke101
    @Luke101 8 месяцев назад +23

    The most terrifying aspect about this monologue is that it’s real. I cannot imagine the pure horror that those men felt hearing their fellow comrades being ripped apart by sharks in the pitch black ocean… makes my blood run cold just imagining it

    • @horrorfanandy4647
      @horrorfanandy4647 5 месяцев назад

      What the scene doesn’t mention was the fact that in real life, the dehydration and overheating caused by the tropic conditions made some of the men go insane and they started attacking each other. Which is even more terrifying, imagine the combined threat of the sharks circling you and all the while, your own comrades are trying to kill you. Still, it’s an absolutely terrifying scene and probably my favourite film monologue of all time!

    • @merlinoddog2197
      @merlinoddog2197 4 месяца назад +1

      Kids. Most 18 19 years old.

  • @gorethegreat
    @gorethegreat 9 месяцев назад +21

    One of the best acted pieces in any movie, ever.
    Oscar worthy.
    But wasn’t recognised.
    We recognise it.
    RIP RS.

  • @bobofloblaws
    @bobofloblaws 7 лет назад +1014

    "Sometimes the shark'd go away ... sometimes he wouldn't away." Gives me chills every time.

    • @douglaslally156
      @douglaslally156 7 лет назад +48

      Bob Loblaws If you know what happened to those poor bastards left stranded in the Pacific and decimated by sharks then everything about this monologue makes total sense. What I love most about this scene is the tribute to them. Unnecessary to the story yet hauntingly powerful.

    • @bobofloblaws
      @bobofloblaws 7 лет назад +37

      +Douglas Lally That was a good tribute. I bet a lot of people wouldn't know about the Indianapolis if it weren't for this movie. It does add to the plot of the movie though because it explains Quint's hatred for sharks and his Captain Ahab-like self-destructive behaviour that nearly gets them all killed.

    • @douglaslally156
      @douglaslally156 7 лет назад +15

      Bob Loblaws Actually I think you're right in that explains how Quint became a pathological shark killer. I also like that he never at any point comes right out and says it. The Indy monologue is all that's required.

    • @02Ctu2486
      @02Ctu2486 6 лет назад +9

      What those men didn't know was that thrashing around in the water like that would attract even more sharks to them

    • @tonyb0904
      @tonyb0904 6 лет назад +5

      The numerous times I watched this classic on three formats, this scene only recently held my attention, Quint is kinda mumbling in this scene but I understand why. This scene starts out rather rather comedic and then turns not only dramatic but terrifying before the shark reappears and that song they all start singing.
      Richard Dreyfuss the only actor still living out of this trio, apparently really got sick while examining the first shark attack victim, and at first viewing I can't judge him for that!

  • @ghostfacedude93
    @ghostfacedude93 2 года назад +401

    "...ya know that was the time I was most frightened, waiting for my turn."
    That line was always chilling to me. Imagine being a young man who floated for weeks out in the ocean, saw friends and fellow crewmates die by sharks, and then the moment rescue arrives, you can't wait to get out of the water; I can only imagine how terrifying that would truly be.

    • @elloowu6293
      @elloowu6293 Год назад +28

      It's like turning off the basement lights and running up stairs, only a million times worse

    • @truthseeker2321
      @truthseeker2321 Год назад +2

      @@elloowu6293 LMFAO ! I thought I was the only one who did that!

    • @shawnthompson2303
      @shawnthompson2303 Год назад +14

      *I'll never put on a life jacket again.*

    • @thepowerofIandI
      @thepowerofIandI Год назад +1

      @@elloowu6293 The dark is still there with you

    • @SirReginaldBumquistIII
      @SirReginaldBumquistIII Год назад +15

      They were out there 4 and a half days.

  • @TheThingOnTheBassAmp
    @TheThingOnTheBassAmp Год назад +17

    This scene gives me nothing but chills. That story is amazing. The delivery is probably the single best monologue in movie history.

  • @frankweisz5133
    @frankweisz5133 Год назад +14

    One of the greatest pieces of dialogue in cinema history...and filled with incredible nuance...Hooper running short of breath after laughing at a previous joke when he finds out Quint was on the Indianapolis...Quint grabbing Hooper's arm and throwing his hat on the table as he begins to tell his story...his knocking on the table with his fist for emphasis, his constant raising of the coffee cup holding liquor as he recalls with anguish his experience...A showcase for the incredible talent of these actors. And kudos to Spielberg, who brilliantly allowed his actors to ad lib and improvise their craft!

  • @outlaw2747
    @outlaw2747 3 года назад +689

    Two things that makes this terrifying: the fact the story actually happened, and the fact that Quint eventually meets the same fate as those sailors.

    • @clairefreeman6273
      @clairefreeman6273 3 года назад +33

      I know- your worst fear comes true, that's the scaredest he said he;s ever been and yet he gets eaten by the great white shark. terrifying- not at all how he dies in the book

    • @LeeFred78
      @LeeFred78 3 года назад +19

      @@Apesedits Yes he does....his foot gets tangled in one of the lines in the shark and gets pulled under and drowns. Hooper dies in the book too.

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 3 года назад +24

      That's the tragic irony of the situation near the movie's end. 30 years later, it seems as if 1 of them sharks was patiently waiting to claim him as many of his naval mates were fated

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 3 года назад +6

      @@LeeFred78 It was a barrel line that entangled itself around Mr. Quint's ankle and pulled him under the water causing him to drown

    • @cincinatus90
      @cincinatus90 2 года назад +2

      Wrong, not the SAME fate, the sailors were eaten by tiger sharks, jaws was a great white. Next time do your homework and avoid embarrassing yourself. Heck, maybe even just listen to the clip and you would know there was a difference.

  • @hellogoodbye4061
    @hellogoodbye4061 3 года назад +437

    This scene says so much about Quint...most of all, we learn why he does what he does, what drives his unwavering, unending hatred of sharks and his lifelong quest to kill every damn one in the ocean....He is Captain Ahab seeking revenge on Moby Dick.

    • @WorldWar2freak94
      @WorldWar2freak94 3 года назад +19

      I would say he is more than Ahab. Ahab only held anger and hatred for one particular whale. The others he had his crew kill were just victims of a trade that needed their corpses. Quint seems to view all sharks as dangerous monsters.

    • @davidharrison3711
      @davidharrison3711 2 года назад +10

      I remember watching this movie with my mom back in 1975 when it came out. This scene was chilling, to say the least.

    • @KrillLiberator
      @KrillLiberator 2 года назад

      @Carter Ruehs Mine was drowned by a conger eel. My uncle was spanked to death by a Thresher Shark.

    • @RossTrittipo
      @RossTrittipo 2 года назад +2

      @@KrillLiberator that sucks man. I know the pain. My dad's eyeballs were sucked out by a starfish and crabs ate his brain before we could get him out of the water. Destin, FL 1984. R.I.P. Dad 😔

    • @blackheart456
      @blackheart456 2 года назад

      @Carter Ruehs so sorry.

  • @RYTHMICRIOT
    @RYTHMICRIOT Год назад +46

    My favorite movie of all time. I don't care how good computer graphics or augmented reality gets. The storytelling of this film is beyond impeccable and never tires.

    • @qualmless7499
      @qualmless7499 Год назад +2

      I agree. While it's not my favorite ever (mine is The Thing 1982) it's in my top 2.

    • @aspe7187
      @aspe7187 4 месяца назад

      @@qualmless7499 Only Cool Hand Luke comes before Jaws. The Thing is good. The special effects.

  • @HardRockMiner
    @HardRockMiner 8 месяцев назад +10

    Dreyfus gave the best display I've ever seen without saying a word.

    • @johntabler349
      @johntabler349 2 месяца назад +1

      I've heard Dreyfuss say he was so mesmerized by Shaw's acting he didn't have to act

  • @lonestarwolfentertainment7184
    @lonestarwolfentertainment7184 5 лет назад +775

    To hell with a prequel about Han Solo I want a prequel about Quint on the USS Indianapolis.
    Edit: guys I just want to see Quint again for fucks sake!

    • @kevinyo1169
      @kevinyo1169 4 года назад +9

      I second this.

    • @andrewodley123
      @andrewodley123 4 года назад +9

      Yes please!

    • @furtherback6131
      @furtherback6131 4 года назад +30

      Jesus no. People don't seem to realize that you CAN'T make more of this.

    • @mrupsingod
      @mrupsingod 4 года назад +5

      They have a history channel movie on the Indianapolis

    • @postersandstuff
      @postersandstuff 4 года назад +4

      @@mrupsingod ruclips.net/video/5tfdubsv82Y/видео.html
      Thanks to mr Dreyfuss last yr

  • @gnc623
    @gnc623 5 лет назад +373

    Scenes like this are also part of the reason why no other shark movie will ever be on par with Jaws. It's not all about the shark.

    • @roquefortfiles
      @roquefortfiles 4 года назад +41

      The shark in Jaws is really just the "McGuffin" the thing that the plot revolves around. Jaws is really more about the relationship of the 3 guys and how they sort out their differences to KILL the shark.

    • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat
      @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat 4 года назад +6

      gnc623 it’s not even about the shark at all, more how we react to it

    • @Mikefantasia22
      @Mikefantasia22 4 года назад +10

      Ultimately the shark seems to me to represent our biggest fear and overcoming it.

    • @retroraider5313
      @retroraider5313 4 года назад +4

      The shark was icing on the cake

    • @WantonMyth
      @WantonMyth 4 года назад +5

      It's about what we don't see, shark or otherwise

  • @schell0118
    @schell0118 Год назад +3

    *Utterly captivating!* What a great actor he was.
    My uncle was a limo driver in London in the 1970s. He was also an alcoholic. He was once invited to join Robert Shaw for a drink after having driven him to various meetings in the city. I had, up to a certain point in his life, never seen my uncle completely sober. He would typically polish of a bottle of brandy every day. He told me that Robert Shaw drank him under the table that day. He had to leave the car in town and was worried for his job. Robert Shaw told him he'd phone his boss and make it ok, which he did.

  • @richmondstevenj
    @richmondstevenj 8 месяцев назад +5

    Shaw wins every award for acting ever.

  • @brandonallen3289
    @brandonallen3289 3 года назад +876

    This is Steven Spielberg's favorite part in the whole movie.

    • @shihanUKS
      @shihanUKS 3 года назад +22

      He always said that out of being polite. His favorite part was the shark blowing up at the end because he left the day before it was shot.

    • @BuddWolf
      @BuddWolf 3 года назад +12

      Mine also

    • @Btester2
      @Btester2 3 года назад +9

      Mine too

    • @tomaofdonewelll7810
      @tomaofdonewelll7810 3 года назад +18

      Everybody's favourite part. Top 3 monologues of all time.

    • @hugh-johnfleming289
      @hugh-johnfleming289 3 года назад +7

      Shaw is BLOODY BRILLIANT...

  • @billparrish9200
    @billparrish9200 2 года назад +387

    Only Shaw could seamlessly move from smiling, drunken revelry to the worst horror you've ever heard with a straight face. We don't get actors like this anymore. PS: Died of the whiskey in Ireland, poor fella. RIP.

    • @47imagine
      @47imagine Год назад +2

      Jennifer Lawrence is right up there. :-I

    • @adambrockie8532
      @adambrockie8532 Год назад +13

      ​@47imagine how do you put Jennifer Lawrence in the same sentence as Robert Shaw? What has she done that is even close to what Robert Shaw has done?

    • @47imagine
      @47imagine Год назад +1

      ​@@adambrockie8532 Her performance in the second Hunger Games was arguably the greatest performance ever put to film.

    • @billparrish9200
      @billparrish9200 Год назад +15

      @@47imagine You've got to be kidding.

    • @47imagine
      @47imagine Год назад +1

      @@billparrish9200 No. In fact, I don't think she's ever given a performance that wasn't Oscar-worthy. Her performance in Passengers topped anything Meryl Streep ever did.

  • @colten4573
    @colten4573 Год назад +7

    I worked for L. D. Cox. Survivor of from the Indianapolis. One of the few men that enjoyed talking about war and what really happened. Glad I got the chance to know him.

  • @AngusT.McCraken
    @AngusT.McCraken 4 года назад +406

    I forgot that movies used to depend on acting and writing instead of CGI. I miss that.

    • @guerito7571
      @guerito7571 3 года назад +9

      So do I!!

    • @deadguy775
      @deadguy775 3 года назад +7

      We all miss it, those who know. Practical effects too, god all the good films had great practical effects and that’s been lost with computers

    • @sang6799
      @sang6799 3 года назад +5

      New bad, old good?

    • @AngusT.McCraken
      @AngusT.McCraken 3 года назад +4

      Sang679
      More like movies now tend to rely on CGI and think it will carry the story, where it used to be good writing and solid acting made a good movie. CGI can’t make up for a piss poor story and crappy acting.

    • @sang6799
      @sang6799 3 года назад +6

      Angus T. McCraken That’s fair, but I feel like it’s a bit of an over generalization to lump all movies released today together. Honestly, the era where the over reliance on CGI was at its worst was probably the 90’s, with its saturation of disaster movies.

  • @crispinjulius5032
    @crispinjulius5032 4 года назад +336

    Love how Quint grabs Hooper’s arm, silently telling him: “Ok, giggles and jokes are over. Don’t laugh about this scar.” Immediate tension you can cut through with a knife. This scene is up there with some of the best ever filmed.

    • @ekathe85
      @ekathe85 3 года назад +10

      Really? I interpreted it more like "I'm sorry but if I have to talk about this it's gonna be a real downer"

    • @98765432134162
      @98765432134162 3 года назад +15

      @@ekathe85 I interpreted it to mean both.

    • @gejnormcswipe8435
      @gejnormcswipe8435 3 года назад +6

      @@98765432134162 I agree, human interactions such as these are complex and have multitude of meaning!

    • @Snuffsaid2007
      @Snuffsaid2007 3 года назад +10

      @@ekathe85 It looked like a firm grasp on his arm. My interpretation was it was purely a reproach. After Hooper cracks the joke and Brody laughs, Quint first looks hurt, then sheepishly smiles along with them briefly, then realises both of them are getting too comfortable with him and Hooper in particular is feeling bold enough to challenge and mock him. Quint told this story primarily to reassert his dominance as the alpha male on the ship.

    • @dmcrun3572
      @dmcrun3572 3 года назад +12

      @@ekathe85 he grabbed Hooper’s arm to get his attention and say hold on.

  • @paravecchiavince9685
    @paravecchiavince9685 Год назад +9

    The humor and fun all turns on a dime. I love the part as they’re drinking when Brody looks at his appendix scar.

    • @joescott8877
      @joescott8877 Год назад

      yeah, lol, that was subtle and yet very revealing, so to speak.

  • @lukes401k
    @lukes401k 10 месяцев назад +9

    This is a great exception of “show, don’t tell” Shaw makes the description of the event sound more horrible than if they actually showed the event. An absolute masterclass in acting

    • @horrorfanandy4647
      @horrorfanandy4647 8 месяцев назад +2

      Absolutely. I’ve seen a version of the scene that was put together by someone to demonstrate what a flashback might have looked like, using footage from a film about the Indianapolis, and it just doesn’t work nearly as well. I don’t think it was helped by the distractingly poor CGI for the sharks, but even so, nothing beats the lingering trauma in Shaw’s eyes, while Dreyfuss looks on in absolute horror. Perfect scene!

    • @lukes401k
      @lukes401k 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@horrorfanandy4647 I agree. It’s like he isn’t talking about sharks, he’s talking about demons from the deep

    • @stevesmith9447
      @stevesmith9447 3 месяца назад

      Depends on what you want to show. The point isn't the story - it's what we learn about Quint.
      Hooper's reaction tells us a lot. He's a scientist, not a sailor. But he knows the story, instantly, just from the name of the boat. It tells us *everybody* in his world, anybody who does anything in the ocean, knows the story. A legendary story. A legendary story of horror.
      The story unfolds and we see that our mad captain is not mad at all. He knows fear better than anyone. The laconic way he recounts the specific details of each horror, letting out his fear and pain just long enough to remember to bury it, shows us that it's always with him, ready to consume him if he thinks about it too much.
      We see that this is a man who has been on the edge for decades but has kept himself from going over. A survivor, physically and mentally. Someone who has been through terrifying trials and yet is still focused and able. A hero, and a very believable one, one who lives with the trauma of his ordeal.
      We know, therefore, to believe him. If he's worried about something, we should be VERY WORRIED. If he wants something done, it is VERY IMPORTANT that it gets done. And if he gives up, or if we lose him?
      Then we're doomed.

  • @Sunscorched
    @Sunscorched 4 года назад +1002

    Richard Dreyfuss... How he fades from a drunken mass of giggles to quiet confusion as Quint's words slowly sink in. Chief's lack of knowledge and The Speech.
    One of the greatest scenes in any movie bar none.

    • @roquefortfiles
      @roquefortfiles 4 года назад +44

      What I love about this scene is how the conflict between the characters basically ends. They all finally "Get" each other and are now allied in the common goal of killing the shark. Quint no longer hates Hooper and vice versa. When Hooper asks at the end of the movie "Uh Quint?" he really cares. And it always makes the swim home biter sweet.

    • @Zoomer30
      @Zoomer30 4 года назад +22

      Add to this that Shaw was drunk as a skunk when they shot this scene. He talks better wasted than I do never having had a drop in my life.

    • @crusader0074
      @crusader0074 4 года назад +12

      Apparently, from what I hear, this scene wasnt even in the script. One of the few times where actors actually create art. I usually think of actors as talking props and that it is the writers and directors that are more important...this one scene is an exception. Pure, chilling brilliance.

    • @zephxiii
      @zephxiii 4 года назад +29

      Dreyfuss wasn't confused, he knew, that was more of a holy shit u were on that??

    • @robmaddison8645
      @robmaddison8645 4 года назад +32

      @ Jude Ku - Quint is the man of action. He has learnt his trade on the waves and done things his own way since his days of service. Hooper has come from a wealthy background and graduated through college, yet he has also excelled and dedicated himself to his field, including seamanship and being a helmsman. The Chief commands men and is responsible for policing territory on land, yet is hopeless on the water. At this moment, Quint and Hooper bond over an appreciation of the badges of honour both have received whilst getting up close and personal to Monsters of the Seas. Both men are from different ends of the class spectrum, yet neither has been satisfied with living a life without risk and adventure. They have more in common with eachother then they both initially realise, including a shared sense of good humour. When Hooper hears Quint say that he was on the Indianapolis, and has the scar to prove it, he is instantly placed into a position whereby he is intellectually familiar with the historical event (possibly studied it), yet has no lived experience of it. In contrast, Quint has the real memories haunting him. Earlier in the relationship, Quint openly uses knowledge of Hooper's privileged background to criticise him regularly and keep him in check, and in response we gather that Hooper views Quint as somewhat ill-mannered, stubborn, coarse and binkered. It is at this moment in time that he realises that Quint is a much more complex character then he first appears to be (more then just a local shark hunter, ignorant of the wider world). I think this scene displays how it is through meeting interesting people different from ourselves that we gain a more thorough understanding of what it means to be a human being. It supplements our own subjective experience.

  • @PavyMac
    @PavyMac 2 года назад +1273

    Robert Shaw’s acting in this scene is so visceral. I don’t think Mr. Shaw knew it but with his amazing acting in this scene he brought attention to the brave men lost on the Indianapolis. May they forever be honored.

    • @flightofthebumblebee9529
      @flightofthebumblebee9529 2 года назад +11

      He really did. Is this part in the book by Peter Benchley?

    • @jamiebell5442
      @jamiebell5442 2 года назад +14

      @@flightofthebumblebee9529 Nah man, I've just finished the audio book. I was looking forward to this scene the whole book but it isnt in there. Still a great book tho

    • @hd-xc2lz
      @hd-xc2lz 2 года назад +27

      Shaw is credited with the final edit of the monologue. In addition to acting he was a published novelist and award winning playwright.

    • @sallybrown5089
      @sallybrown5089 2 года назад +7

      @@flightofthebumblebee9529 not in the book. It was added while making THE Movie.

    • @johntucker9782
      @johntucker9782 2 года назад +10

      One if the greatest movies ever. It did leave out a couple of big plot points from Benchley's book. Like how the mayor owing the mob a lot of money was his motivation for keeping the beaches open. Also, Hooper is a ladies man, not a dork. He has an affair with Cheif's wife, causing a lot of extra tension on the boat. Ending is different too, but won't ruin that one.

  • @MinusTylerWorld
    @MinusTylerWorld Год назад +10

    No shark, no jump scares, no special effects. Just a brilliant delivery by Shaw giving us the scariest moment in the whole damn film. I get goose bumps every single time he recounts this horrible moment in history.
    Classic.

  • @jamesroboyle
    @jamesroboyle 6 месяцев назад +3

    You could tell he immediately got Hoopers attention and respect when he mentioned the Indianapolis.

  • @TonyAiuto
    @TonyAiuto 3 года назад +648

    I must have seen this scene 100 times. It still commands my full attention every time.

    • @thomaspiccirillo6820
      @thomaspiccirillo6820 2 года назад +8

      Thank you Tony ! It always will for me to

    • @comeacross9
      @comeacross9 2 года назад +7

      Yup.

    • @dakotawalker7117
      @dakotawalker7117 2 года назад +6

      Yes!

    • @mikek5958
      @mikek5958 2 года назад +13

      This is without question one of the greatest, most affecting and most haunting scenes in the history of cinema.

    • @thomaspiccirillo6820
      @thomaspiccirillo6820 2 года назад +2

      @@mikek5958 Ur soooooo right Mike ty!

  • @sputnikalgrim
    @sputnikalgrim 2 года назад +296

    I love how Spielberg could just find a way to terrify you like this. No blood or guts, no tricks of light or jump scares, just your humanity. He’s a story teller not just a director, no amount of CGI can replace the darkness in our own minds to paint these pictures for ourselves.

    • @Maharv55
      @Maharv55 2 года назад +6

      Well said.

    • @judyhopps9380
      @judyhopps9380 2 года назад +16

      That John Williams soundtrack is doing some heavy lifting too. It's so sinister here, like something out of Psycho

    • @0_doodles_0
      @0_doodles_0 2 года назад +8

      Indeed, but robert shaw actually wrote his own script for the monologue

    • @spencer.kissack.the.author
      @spencer.kissack.the.author Год назад +4

      @@judyhopps9380 glad you wrote that, I totally agree.

    • @zackiej89
      @zackiej89 Год назад +3

      An amazing story teller in the fact that he made a monologue (based on historical fact), the scariest part in a horror movie, of which has yet to exist, that involved the literal eating of people by a shark in front of your eyes. It's such a testament to the talent of Steven Speilberg and Robert Shaw.

  • @jpa5038
    @jpa5038 Год назад +36

    Putting aside for a moment that this is a true story (an incredibly compelling true story that both horrifies and amazes me), you really understand Quint's motivation from this scene.
    He hates sharks. He has dedicated his life to hunting and killing them and it could not be more justified.

    • @InfamousLegato
      @InfamousLegato Год назад +6

      It becomes understandable but it's still not _really_ justified though. The USS Indianapolis was a human tragedy created by human conflict. The sharks were just being sharks.
      Quint's character is a modern day Ahab. He puts on a stoic front but he is the person most afraid of the shark. His fear drives his obsession and lust for revenge which ends up costing him his both his ship and his life.

    • @jackoliver7506
      @jackoliver7506 4 месяца назад

      ​@@InfamousLegatou sound like a liberal

  • @maxfrankow1238
    @maxfrankow1238 5 месяцев назад +4

    Love how despite their social differences both Quint and Hooper respected each other as men of the sea. Feel like they both respected each other after this.
    As for the Indianapolis… a nightmare in real life. 😢

    • @horrorfanandy4647
      @horrorfanandy4647 5 месяцев назад +1

      This is kind of the turning point for their relationship, although they will bicker constantly after this scene, there is a level of mutual respect that develops for one another during this scene, the fighting afterwards is on an even playing field, whereas before, Quint was keen to constantly put Hooper down for being a college-educated trust fund kid.

  • @robertnathan1775
    @robertnathan1775 3 года назад +320

    To Mr Edgar Harrell, the last surviving marine who just passed away. Rest well sir

    • @no.step.on.snek.2423
      @no.step.on.snek.2423 2 года назад +24

      Farewell and adieu to you, fair Spanish ladies.
      Farewell and adieu, you ladies of Spain
      For we’ve received orders for to sail back to Boston.
      And so nevermore shall we see you again”

    • @benphillips9973
      @benphillips9973 Год назад +2

      @@no.step.on.snek.2423
      Show me the way to go home. I'm tired and I want to go to bed.
      I had a little drink about an hour ago
      And it's gone right to my head.
      Wherever I may roam, on land or sea, or foam.
      You can always hear me singing this song.
      Show me the way to home...

  • @gabeminor2617
    @gabeminor2617 3 года назад +182

    Dreyfuss said he was so in awe at the speech that he couldn't say a word during the shoot. That's why he was completely silent.

    • @hoserfella
      @hoserfella 2 года назад +1

      or maybe he didn't have a line. You schmuck. He didn't have a line.

    • @nickpingleton715
      @nickpingleton715 2 года назад +1

      @@hoserfella why so rude? 🤔

    • @roquefortfiles
      @roquefortfiles 2 месяца назад +1

      He was completely silent because he had no lines after a certain point.

    • @dustywaynemusic6297
      @dustywaynemusic6297 17 дней назад

      Apparently you don't know how acting works smh

    • @roquefortfiles
      @roquefortfiles 17 дней назад

      @@dustywaynemusic6297 Meaning what?

  • @Lanedar68
    @Lanedar68 Год назад +13

    One of the great cinematic moments in movie history. This scene haunted me as a kid. Robert Shaw was brilliant.

  • @scottfallon1
    @scottfallon1 Год назад +5

    Shaw was magnificent here, but at 2:30 there's amazing acting from Dreyfuss going from a giggling drunk to stone-cold sober and horrified: "You were on the Indianapolis?"

  • @jasonmcmillan4373
    @jasonmcmillan4373 4 года назад +293

    Robert Shaw's acting is so good in Jaws, it in no way even seems like he's acting. He simply is Quint in this movie, not Robert Shaw. I think it's the best performance I've personally ever seen.

    • @Grimreepa220
      @Grimreepa220 3 года назад +5

      Agreed, I only know him as Quint.

    • @laneward3511
      @laneward3511 3 года назад +1

      Yes he was incredible..I think Al Pacino in The Godfather is the best performance i've ever seen.especially the restaurant scene

    • @andrewk2996
      @andrewk2996 3 года назад +3

      Richard Dreyfuss talked about Robert Shaw on a chat show once and was openly upset discussing his memory. The actors were perfectly cast.

    • @sololobos6969
      @sololobos6969 3 года назад +2

      Fun fact. Robert Shaw was almost always drunk while on set, and did this take over a dozen times, failing them every time. It was to the point the studio wanted to replace him. Robert went to Steven after a day of not drinking, and begged to do one more take, to which Steven agreed, and this was that take.

    • @briangoldy8784
      @briangoldy8784 3 года назад

      @@sololobos6969 Robert Shaw stated to Richard, on the Set....Give me a little help. Richard Grabbed Roberts Glass of Scotch an Threw it on the Ground,,,,,,,The whole set Gasped...lol.......True story.......Told by Richard.......

  • @gnc623
    @gnc623 4 года назад +543

    Not only is Quint telling a horrifyingly captivating story, he's also, unknowingly, foreshadowing his own death.

    • @roberthasudungan1546
      @roberthasudungan1546 3 года назад +19

      He died by drowning in the novel, though

    • @oliverholmes-gunning5372
      @oliverholmes-gunning5372 3 года назад +17

      Yep, the second I saw this scene for the first time I knew Quint had to die

    • @Dino-god69
      @Dino-god69 3 года назад +9

      Robert Hasudungan well the novel is much different lol. I mean, Hooper doesn’t survive, and Brody doesn’t kill the shark

    • @Airsoftcleaner
      @Airsoftcleaner 3 года назад +12

      What was even more horrifyingly captivating is that his story was terrifyingly true!!!

    • @TitoRigatoni
      @TitoRigatoni 3 года назад +11

      @@Dino-god69 Also Hooper bangs Brody's wife...

  • @JustJefferson
    @JustJefferson Год назад +6

    Shaw gets alot of praise and rightfully so…..but for me, Dreyfus’s facials sell this scene to perfection. From the way he goes into shock from a laugh and then the look of sheer terror on his face as Shaw delivers the speech……masterful.

  • @bunkhouse
    @bunkhouse Год назад +20

    Undoubtedly one of; and probably the greatest monologue, in movie history. Two things more "subtle" things standout to me that make this the greatest monologue. First, is Quint's subdued vulnerability. Coming from one of the most hardened characters ever in film makes it pack a punch that not only floors the viewer, but completely alters the perception of Quint. When Quint states: "sometimes they'd go away, sometimes they wouldn't" that hint of vulnerability/fear from such a tough man grabs me by the throat and doesn't let go. Secondly, most monologues are exclamation points in a movie and are usually delivered near the end of a movie (ie. Pacino in Scent of a Women, Chaplin in The Great Dictator, etc...). And that is the objective of most monologues. However, in this one it completely changes the dynamics/relationships and between the characters and is done almost mid movie. Moves me every time I watch it.

    • @Cotten55
      @Cotten55 Год назад +1

      Yes, sir completely agree.

  • @ffjsb
    @ffjsb 6 лет назад +365

    I like how this scene does a complete 180 in just a few seconds. The scene with the scars just sucks you in, and seconds later you're like 'Holy crap!!!". Just a masterful performance, the epitome of acting.

    • @dwad3ify
      @dwad3ify 4 года назад +3

      And screenwriting

    • @jamesbennett5189
      @jamesbennett5189 4 года назад

      Sound editing is great.... But i lovw how they rope you in with levity and captivate you with intesity....and then a FUCKING RUclips ADD SHOWS UP

  • @Spectans1
    @Spectans1 3 года назад +186

    One of the strongest scenes in cinema history.

  • @goldosprey
    @goldosprey 9 месяцев назад +3

    I love that the first part of the scene is just a game of one upsmanship. the moment Shaw started talking about the Indianapolis everyone sobers up

  • @user-rk8rm7dl7v
    @user-rk8rm7dl7v 9 месяцев назад +3

    Steven Spielberg...say no more. A Master at work.

  • @mikehunt4986
    @mikehunt4986 2 года назад +433

    "Anyway, we delivered the bomb." I don't think he could've ended the story any better.

    • @michaelwallbrown3726
      @michaelwallbrown3726 2 года назад +16

      and saved thousands of U.S. military servicemen including my father,uncles and my father-in-law all who were either in the pacific or on there way for the invasion of Japan

    • @mikehunt4986
      @mikehunt4986 2 года назад +3

      @@michaelwallbrown3726 That would've taken way too long and totally changes the tone of the story from a personal one to a general one. No, the ending used in the movie really is the best one.

    • @Petefx86
      @Petefx86 2 года назад +6

      Yes they did. They completed their mission. Suffered a horrible loss later. But they did it.

    • @stephenolan5539
      @stephenolan5539 Год назад +4

      ​@@Petefx86
      And the captain was arrested for failure to zigzag.

    • @petefx8662
      @petefx8662 Год назад

      @@stephenolan5539 Over the years, many came to Captain Mc Vay's defense, including survivors and even the commander of the Japanese sub that sank him. He suffered with years of mental health issues and took his own life at 70 years old. He was posthumously exonerated by congress and then president Bill Clinton in October 2000.

  • @michaellemick4193
    @michaellemick4193 3 года назад +199

    About 15 years ago I did a presentation at a friend's club. Afterwards he introduced me to an elderly gentleman who was one of the survivors of the Indianapolis. I had the same reaction that Dreyfuss had.

    • @whatareyoulookingat908
      @whatareyoulookingat908 3 года назад +2

      Really gives one perspective, doesn't it?

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 2 года назад +3

      That must've been an unforgettable experience, Mr. Lemick😔

    • @grantgarrod2232
      @grantgarrod2232 2 года назад +8

      Mike, I just found out two weeks ago that a co-workers father-in-law is an Indianapolis survivor, & still living. When she told me, it was pure shock, & icy chills went all through me. Some years before, they had visited the monument in Indianapolis, IN, & she showed me the pictures of his name on it, preceeded by a star, which indicates a survivor of the sinking.

    • @hedgehog1965uk
      @hedgehog1965uk 2 года назад +1

      I assume that gentleman was familiar with this scene. I wonder what he thought of it.

  • @chrisdixon5193
    @chrisdixon5193 10 месяцев назад +4

    Can you imagine anyone else in that role? Jaws just had all of these talents coming together at the right time. Not to mention the king of suspense Speilberg. And a great musical score of John Williams. Can't go wrong with that recipe.

  • @Kid_Charlemagne76
    @Kid_Charlemagne76 Год назад +7

    As a kid, my favorite scene from Jaws was the last battle with the shark. But as an adult, this is my favorite scene. Robert Shaw was simply perfect for this role

  • @clarkdubya2
    @clarkdubya2 2 года назад +73

    "Like a doll's eyes..." such a great line with powerful imagery

  • @angusyoung4896
    @angusyoung4896 6 лет назад +445

    This is my favourite monologue by any actor. It doesn't even feel like acting, sounds like your dad telling you a story. It's amazing, the emotion he puts behind it without going over the top with emotion...not easy to do.

    • @gssheriff7278
      @gssheriff7278 6 лет назад +11

      I read that both Shaw and Drefuss were drunk when they did the scene.

    • @washingtonwebfoot9908
      @washingtonwebfoot9908 5 лет назад +4

      Shaw was but he was so hammered the first time that it was horrible and they had to shoot a second sober. They used bits from each take

    • @BipoIarbear
      @BipoIarbear 5 лет назад +4

      It’s gripping

    • @jedisentinel1499
      @jedisentinel1499 5 лет назад +12

      This is when you really understand Quint. He's eccentric, buligerent yet charming. PTSD tied to his seemingly hatred of sharks. Spine chilling...

    • @BipoIarbear
      @BipoIarbear 5 лет назад +8

      E. Squatch I know what your saying but I don’t think he really hates sharks, think he went down the shark hunting route for his ship mates who died, he feels guilty that he survived and they didn’t, think maybe he’s looking for the shark with his name on it

  • @kencook7580
    @kencook7580 Месяц назад +1

    Work of genius, that will never be surpassed. All elements came together at right time, acting and direction incredible.
    This sort of performance can never be replicated. Genius.

  • @jam4355
    @jam4355 Год назад +7

    This has become one of the most significant and intense scenes in cinema history. But to me, when Dreyfus says “let me guess..mother”, and Shaw smiles and squeezes his arm, it shows the only thing that survivors of traumatic events can do. Others will never understand.

  • @Brandon-rq3ys
    @Brandon-rq3ys 6 лет назад +487

    "Thing about a shark, he's got _black_ eyes, _lifeless_ eyes. Like a dolls eyes. Doesn't seem to be livin'....until he bites ya..."
    That makes me shiver every time I hear it.

    • @alexsaucedo8032
      @alexsaucedo8032 5 лет назад +13

      Then YOU hear that high pitch scream
      😱😱😱😱. Got damm. 😱😱😱😱

    • @themaninthesuit5729
      @themaninthesuit5729 5 лет назад +26

      'And those black eyes, roooolll over white...'
      Still makes the hair on the back of my neck stand on end.

    • @Jayskiallthewayski
      @Jayskiallthewayski 5 лет назад +2

      Sounds like a woman I know.

    • @captainh3831
      @captainh3831 5 лет назад +2

      It's TRUE about the eyes and a great line in the film, but somehow I don't see how one would or could focus on that particular feature in that situation.

    • @1gallimaufry
      @1gallimaufry 5 лет назад +11

      @@captainh3831 Believe it or not, you absolutely do notice it when you are in the water with them. The same when you are in the water with a bottle nose, they have the exact opposite eyes. You know someone is looking back and without a doubt, someone is home.

  • @kujezzz3008
    @kujezzz3008 4 года назад +256

    I think “I’ll never put on a life jacket again” is such a brilliant line because it underscores what a lot of survivors of massive trauma know, that there’s worse things out there than just dying.

    • @JasonsDeathCurse
      @JasonsDeathCurse 4 года назад +15

      kujezzz300 yes, I absolutely agree with your assessment. That Shaw’s character, “Quint” would rather die then have go through that hell again. Summarizing that sometimes, death is the better alternative.

    • @danielkokal8819
      @danielkokal8819 3 года назад +13

      agreed..... like they said about Hiroshima aftermath " The living envied the dead "

    • @ThMnWthNNm
      @ThMnWthNNm 3 года назад +5

      The thing worse than dying is not knowing when you’re gonna die. Quint lets that show in his story.

    • @Amber417
      @Amber417 3 года назад +2

      Exactly. In times like that, all the horrors you’ve seen, the fear of the unknown. Sometimes, dead is better.

    • @kingweeb3365
      @kingweeb3365 3 года назад

      Aquaman:i bet even you fear drowning
      Scarecrow:there are worst ways to die

  • @kid_lucchese
    @kid_lucchese Год назад +5

    Academy award winning performance and scene. Simply brilliant. You feel every emotion in these 6 minutes. I sit down and listen every time.

  • @nicholasjames6763
    @nicholasjames6763 10 месяцев назад +3

    It starts beautifully with the 2 oposing characters how have nothing in common or like each other bond over scars. The way chief brody sits back not wanting to make himself look stupid with his scar story and then it all changes to total horror just amazing

  • @holdenbauer1255
    @holdenbauer1255 3 года назад +254

    This has to be one of the greatest scenes in cinema history. In one speech he both leaves the audience speechless and leaves everyone(characters and audience) understanding why he is the way he is.

  • @Sir_Stalwart
    @Sir_Stalwart 3 года назад +626

    This scene alone is a masterpiece. The transition from comedic wholesomeness to the ominous tension of a horrible survival story is damn magical. And out of the entire movie, these not even six minutes are the scariest and most bone chilling part of the movie.
    The delivery of this monologue, this story is one of the finest acting performances in history.
    God, I love this movie so much.

    • @richroyer4679
      @richroyer4679 2 года назад +2

      Well said!

    • @robertonline6543
      @robertonline6543 2 года назад +12

      The scary part is that story is actually true minus quint being there.

    • @lethrneck4
      @lethrneck4 2 года назад +5

      i can watch this movie ever week for the rest of my life and always just love it..masterpiece!

    • @bennym5244
      @bennym5244 2 года назад +4

      He wrote it himself.

    • @johnkav
      @johnkav 2 года назад +4

      Well said Rose. I've never seen the equal of this scene.

  • @markpaxton5603
    @markpaxton5603 Год назад +2

    I have two very distinct memories from this movie. I saw it in a movie theater when it came out. I took a date, and we saw the movie after dinner. (Yes, we had fish for dinner.) We had both dressed up for dinner, and I was wearing an expensive (at least for me at the time) sport coat for the evening. I was young, and my wardrobe included little in the way of fancy garb. In one of the initial scary scenes, the guy behind me had a tub full of over-buttered popcorn. He was so startled by one of the earlier scenes he threw the popcorn tub in the air covering me in butter and popcorn, effectively ruining that sport coat. Let that serve as a tribute to the special effects in the movie. My second memory is this particular scene. This scene made such an impression on me that I asked my dad about it the next day. My father had served in the US Navy during WWII in the Pacific. I had not expected to hear the story he told. He served on the USS Ringness, one of the two ships that pulled the survivors from the USS Indianapolis out of the water and participated in the recovery. He was on deck when they pulled Captain McVay out of the water (and was close enough to hear the exchange between the Captain of the Ringness and McVay). He and his shipmates were sent to China (so they could not be called to testify to anything) while the Navy held the McVay trials. For many WWII veterans who returned home, they came home to a hero's welcome. By the time my father was able to return home, the festivities had waned. For many years afterward, the survivors of the USS Indianapolis had reunions (until they couldn't). They were gracious enough to invite the sailors from the two ships to attend these reunions over the years. My dad didn't talk much about his experiences during WWII, so this movie and this scene gave me a "moment" with my father that I will never forget.

  • @warrenhoffman653
    @warrenhoffman653 8 месяцев назад +2

    I never get tired of watching this

  • @Jmzhockey92
    @Jmzhockey92 4 года назад +232

    the way richard dreyfusses laugh went from childish and playful to serious and at full attention when shaw mentions the event. great detail.

    • @JacksonWithrow82
      @JacksonWithrow82 3 года назад +19

      That change in Hooper's demeanor is one of the best mini-moments of the film.

    • @JacksonWithrow82
      @JacksonWithrow82 3 года назад +3

      @John Camilleri 100% on point.

    • @rosej5029
      @rosej5029 3 года назад +8

      Dreyfus' face changing so quick at the words USS Indianapolis alone tells the viewer so much before Quint even describes what happened, that I don't need to or want to hear Quint's speech based on what I've read in comments section.

    • @romancandle416
      @romancandle416 3 года назад +5

      It's the hand on the arm that is most chilling.

  • @shadowman2192
    @shadowman2192 7 лет назад +340

    I love how John Williams score subtly creeps in. Such a powerful scene.

    • @charlieharper886
      @charlieharper886 6 лет назад +23

      I've always felt Steven Spielberg owes a lot to John Williams, and I think Steven himself feels the same way. I really don't think these movies would be the same without those epic scores. He's just as big of a genius as Spielberg himself.

    • @blacbraun
      @blacbraun 5 лет назад +8

      @@charlieharper886 Yes indeed. Movie would not be the same without John Williams music. Nor would Star Wars, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Superman....the list just goes on and on..

    • @skiprichardson2105
      @skiprichardson2105 5 лет назад +6

      Weaves it's way in, just below the surface, like a shark.

    • @roquefortfiles
      @roquefortfiles 4 года назад +4

      John Williams score is like the voices of the men in the water screaming....In the distance.

    • @shadowman2192
      @shadowman2192 2 года назад

      @@skiprichardson2105 Absolutely! Great comment.

  • @sallybrown4947
    @sallybrown4947 5 месяцев назад +3

    For those that care and want to know. The first night where they filmed this, Shaw was blitzed and they had to re-film the next day. The one and only first day scene they kept is at 4:43 to 4:58 .Greatest Movie ever made with some of the greatest actors ever on screen.

  • @kizmo2317
    @kizmo2317 Год назад +2

    Awesome to this very day. Had an Indianapolis survivor in my hometown but, unfortunately, didn't realize until he passed.

  • @dirdib69
    @dirdib69 4 года назад +389

    "I'll never put on a lifejacket again." Absolutely chilling, and both the other guys are completely driven back on their heels. They don't know what terror is, but Quint does.

    • @tomservo5347
      @tomservo5347 4 года назад +29

      I think it's Quint's way of telling Brody that his fear of drowning doesn't compare with the terror he experienced. Quint is overbearing, hard drinking, and loud-probably his way of staying one step ahead of the demons that creep up like they are here.

    • @gogtjgog
      @gogtjgog 3 года назад +11

      @@tomservo5347 shows he prefer to drown than stay a float awaiting a shark to get him. just the wait itself would be just as terrifying

    • @pauledwards7182
      @pauledwards7182 3 года назад +14

      "Anticipation of Death, is worse than Death itself."

    • @shawnthompson2303
      @shawnthompson2303 3 года назад +5

      He'd literally rather drown after his Indianapolis experience. Truly terrifying.

    • @zackcross7190
      @zackcross7190 3 года назад +3

      Chris Calzone That wasn’t a gunshot wound he was looking at, it was a surgery scar from having his appendix removed.