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Jaws - Defining the Summer Blockbuster

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    The modern summer blockbuster and the mega
    movie event as a whole
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    can be traced back to the summer of 1975
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    and the debut of director
    Steven Spielberg's
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    JAWS
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    In an instant, the Hollywood system of
    film making was altered forever, and the
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    and the idea of a summer Blockbuster film
    was born.
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    The years preceding the hit film were
    filled with decidedly smaller
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    budget cinema, with more films that fell
    auteur theory of filmmaking,
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    defining the landscape like never before
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    The post Jaw's world of Hollywood,
    would soon be defined
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    by big budget special effects
    heavy cinema like Star Wars,
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    which brought in huge crowds for
    especially huge profits.
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    The story of a great white shark
    terrorizing
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    the people of Amity Island in the summer
    and police Chief
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    Martin Brody, played by
    Roy Shider,
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    the man dedicated to stopping it,
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    quickly became the highest film
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    of all time both in North America and
    internationally.
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    It's a moment in history that is
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    still being felt today. While
    Jaw's massive success and influence
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    can be attributed to the idea of
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    right time, right place, right movie.
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    Spielberg's mega hit is not
    a touchstone film
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    simply because of its box office
    reshaping profits.
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    Rather, Jaw's is a high watermark when it
    comes to
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    the so-called popcorn film.
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    In its wake,
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    countless massively budgeted
    movies have attempted
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    to replicate its formula pop culture,
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    influence, and legacy.
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    Although there are dozens of
    like-minded films
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    that have come along in the
    decades since,
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    JAWS remains the paragon of Blockbuster
    film making.
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    Understanding its incomparable
    success and its many elements
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    is to understand what makes or breaks
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    any big budget mainstream movie.
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    A defining quality of Blockbuster cinema
    is high concept effects,
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    focus spectacle that dazzles the audience
    but not necessarily the critics.
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    But Spielberg and screenwriter Peter
    Benchley, who wrote the original novel
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    and Carl Gottlieb understood was,
    characters were the way the audiences
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    were truly hooked into the narrative.
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    Through relatable protagonists, the
    stakes become more personal
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    far scarier and much more memorable.
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    While the concept of a killer shark and
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    the quest to kill it is simple enough,
    the team behind Jaws
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    did not speak down to the audience.
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    Instead, the nuance character work
    throughout the film
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    makes it much more engaging than many of
    the films that would imitate it in the
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    following decades.
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    One of the most crucial pieces to the
    successful puzzle that is Jaws,
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    is that during the adaptation process,
    the characters of Benchley's Novel
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    were made far more likeable for the big
    screen.
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    While the story as a whole is largely
    intact, an affair between
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    an affair between Matts Hooper played by
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    Richard Dreyfuss and Brody's wife Ellen
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    played by Lorraine Gary was eliminated.
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    A great amount of levity within the
    narrative was added and the characters in
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    general were made into people that the
    audience could more easily identify with
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    and root for from the start.
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    That last bit is absolutely essential here
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    as Jaws is far more interested in having
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    an intimate focus on its protagonists
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    than just on the thrills and chills.
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    That in large part is why the film has
    aged so magnificently.
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    While the language of cinema has continued
    to speed up and the special effects
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    featured have looked worse over time,
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    audiences are still captivated because of
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    how Spielberg makes them invest so deeply
    into the story.
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    Brody in particular stands as the
    quintessential workingman hero whose
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    blue-collar life, nuclear family, and
    common decency
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    connect with a mass audience.
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    While most will immediately think of the
    shark attacks and high-seas thrills
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    when they recall Jaws, there are large
    portions of the film
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    that are devoted to much smaller
    character moments
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    far removed from anything shark-related.
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    By tracking Chief Brody through daily life
    in Amity
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    and paying attention to the relationships
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    he has with his wife and sons, audiences
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    better understand the protagonist of the
    film,
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    as well as the quaint life that defines
    the Island town.
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    Moments like a receptionist describing a
    complaint about a group of kid's
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    karateing a neighbor's fence or Brody's
    walk-through town
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    that is constantly interrupted by local
    requests of locals,
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    are given just as much thought as the
    special effects-heavy action set pieces.
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    Throughout the film, these character-
    focused scenes
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    balance and stand in direct juxtaposition
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    to the shark related horrors.
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    Brody's paranoid watching of the Fourth
    of July beachgoers
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    is constantly interrupted by the off-
    kilter locals
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    which inevitably leads to tragedy
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    a long day of shark hunting gives way
    to a night of drinking
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    and storytelling between Brody, Quint,
    and Hooper
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    resulting in the Stellar speech concerning
    the USS Indianapolis,
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    which gives greater context to
    Quinn's mindset.
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    Each of these moments push forward
    character development
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    and create a more robust setting for
    the film.
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    Amity island is both widely relatable
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    and also, distinctly quirky just like as
    many characters.
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    It's a complete integration of character
    details
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    and narrative that cannot be
    unraveled
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    because Spielberg specifically wanted it
    to be part of his film.
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    Hiring Gottlieb to improve Benchley's
    original draft
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    through detailed character work,
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    as well as the help of several other
    writers
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    and the use of improvisations
    from the actors.
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    Too many Blockbusters put generic
    archetypes as their leads
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    and hope that the spectacle around them
    will excuse it.
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    Others throw in a moment of character
    development
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    as an afterthought, pasting it
    into the script
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    once everything else is done
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    in order to avoid accusations of
    cardboard characters.
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    Too bad it's just as noticeable as not
    having it in in the film.
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    Why does Jaws have such big Stakes
    despite having
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    a generally small focus in its story?
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    Because it's legitimately terrifying.
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    It's amazing that this film was rated PG
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    long before the creation of PG-13,
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    and has remained a mainstream
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    feature scene by people of all ages.
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    There are severed limbs
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    in all their stumpy glory,
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    decapitations,
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    images of real-life shark
    attacks
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    and the blood squirting
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    death of a child.
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    it's messed up!
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    Yet Spielberg's magical touch
    renders the whole thing magnetic
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    and insanely watchable.
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    From the very first shot
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    Spielberg creates a language of skin
    crawling vulnerability
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    through the use of shark POV
    as it hunts underwater
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    bolstered by composer John Williams
    indelible - lurking two notes score
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    Think of just how many shots are simply
    focused on the legs of potential victims.
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    Swimming carefree in the ocean,
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    the residents of Amy Island are
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    defenseless oblivious and ready to be
    ripped into at any moment.
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    Nearly every victim is taken from
    the feet up which
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    which preserves the air of mystery
    around the shark
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    while making the idea of fighting back
    laughable.
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    While Jaws shouldn't be classified
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    as a horror movie because of its adventure
    film language and structure
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    it uses the strengths of the strengths
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    of the genre to its advantage whenever
    it has the chance.
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    This creates a lurking Menace
    that forces Brody into action.
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    The real terror Spielberg creates
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    is combined with delicately
    human moments
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    which means that once the bodies
    start piling up
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    the deaths feel far more human,
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    and begin to weigh heavily on Brody in
    particular.
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    Mrs. Kintner slapping Brody in the wake
    of her son's death
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    and his broken-hearted moments with his
    young son
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    at the dinner table that follow, are
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    quietly crushing.
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    They believably fuel his dedication
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    throughout the rest of the film
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    which is tempered by a very human,
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    and correct,
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    fear.
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    "Give us a kiss"
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    "Why?"
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    "I need it"
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    As the film brilliantly transitions
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    into its narrowly focused
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    yet adventurous second half,
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    the fear felt previously informs
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    what could be a much more
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    light-hearted Adventure.
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    The mystery of the shark is slowly
    pulled back
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    through subsequent reveals
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    but it only grows
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    more terrifyingly active
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    as the ocean-bound triumph route
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    of Brody, Hooper and Quint
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    find themselves outmatched
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    against the 25t sea beast
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    we fear for their lives and thrill at
    their triumphs.
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    All three actors deliver Stellar
    performances
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    bouncing off one another in the most
    electric of ways,
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    as Spielberg continues to balance the big
    moments with the small.
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    "You go inside the cage.
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    Cage goes in the water.
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    You go in the water.
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    Shark's in the water.
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    Our shark."
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    "Farewell and adieu
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    to your fair Spanish ladies..."
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    "Farewell and adieu
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    you ladies..."
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    The three may be voluntarily at war
    with a great white
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    but they are in no less danger than
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    the unsuspecting swimmers back
    at Amity.
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    It's easy to see that in the wake
    of Jaws
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    movie studios began to search
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    for the next big summer hit
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    that would put their finances well into
    the black.
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    The summer movie season became the time
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    for big budget adventures that would
    bring in
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    the widest audience possible.
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    And while that would result in
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    in as many possitives
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    like clearing the way for
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    Star Wars,
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    Superman,
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    Indiana Jones and the like as negatives,
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    the slow but sure sidelining of financing
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    for Niche films in favor of surefire
    Blockbusters
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    it's far more
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    interesting to look at jaw's influence
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    on film creation over film financing.
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    Spielberg had no ambition
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    of making a film that changed
    lives with JAWS.
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    although its lasting impact on shark
    related fears
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    is most certainly indicative
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    of its success in scaring audiences.
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    But that doesn't mean that he
    looked to create
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    a quickly forgotten
    piece of cinematic gossamer.
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    Most Blockbuster films are not
    designed to be
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    worldview altering experiences
    for viewers,
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    However,
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    they have no excuse
    for being forgettable junk food.
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    The Transformers franchises of the world
    are not the child of jaws
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    they are result of studios who would
    rather shell out a name brand
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    than a thought-out film.
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    Films like Mad Max, Fury roads, Star Wars,
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    Jurassic Park, the Dark Knight, and more
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    prove that a high concept film can have
    a large budget
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    simple premise and a wide appeal
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    but also be determined to be the absolute
    best that it can be.
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    should Jaws have been as truly
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    stupid as the hundreds of would-be
    Blockbuster films
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    that look to be as successful as
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    Spielberg's Landmark movie.
    then the idea of a
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    summer blockbuster would not have
    been born in 19 75.
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    The films that seek to capture the magic,
    thrills and innovation of Jaws
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    innovation of Jaws are the ones that
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    are the ones that will be remembered
    across the decades to follow
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    that may not always result in the
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    massive box office success that Jaws once
    had, but that's not the true legacy
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    of this Timeless Masterpiece
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    Jaw's true Legacy can be seen in the
    best and brigthest of films that captivate
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    and brightest of films that captivate
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    the entire world.
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    Smile you son of a
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    and as for itself it remains and will
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    continue to remain one of the classic
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    masterpieces of Blockbuster film making.
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    Music playing.
Title:
Jaws - Defining the Summer Blockbuster
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
10:29

English subtitles

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