@@KalonReeves Not how I understood it. Shaw attempted to do the monologue drunk shirt and didn't like how it turned out, so he asked Spielberg if he could give it another shot sober. So Drufess probably heard it before, but was blown away by how it was delivered. Which, I feel, is understandable. Shaw had the look and tone of a haunted man, occasionally smiling or chuckling in an attempt to downplay how messed up the incident left him. His eyes glazed and he rarely blinked as he spoke.
Remarkably, Quint’s speech about the sinking of the USS Indianapolis is a historical fact. It really happened! His vivid description of the tragedy that resulted is one of the most epic monologues in cinematic history, and is the key to his character and his obsession with killing sharks. He smashed the radio not only because he wanted to secure the bounty and reward for killing the Great White, which is strictly a secondary consideration for him, but rather because he wanted revenge - or perhaps personal redemption - for his horrific experience, which he can only achieve by killing the man-eating shark himself.
I just felt like he smashed the radio at a time when they needed help. They were clearly going to sink. he didn't think of other people lives while seeking his revenge. those men were trying make it back home to their kids. that part I didn't like.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy Since you mention being interested in maritime disasters, I recommend the retelling of the USS Indianapolis going down on the YT channel Sharks Happen - amazing level of detail, and not just the part where the sharks turn up.
According to "Memories of Jaws", that story was largely unknown until it turned up in Jaws. Incredible. Of all the stories to come out of WWII, that one got lost. I saw a thing on Discovery years ago about it. Harrowing. Those poor boys.
Had fun watching your reaction Seen it in the theaters as 9yr old in 1975. And like you, I still sit on the beach while my grandkids go swimming. It’s a brilliant film. Thx
20:00 Brody's kid was telling his mom he wanted coffee flavored ice cream instead of the usual chocolate, vanilla or strawberry. We were pretty limited with flavors back in the 70s... not like the vast selection we have now, anyways.
Pro tip, the first kid killed, Alex Kitner. The woman who played his ma,40 years later goes into a northeast beach restaurant. Seas a menu item...the Alex Kitner sandwich special. She tells the manager, i played his ma in the movie. The manager goes to the back, brings out the owner. Its the guy who played Alex Kitner!😮😮😮
thanks for sharing, I appreciate that. I was wondering do you prefer watching movies in an indoor theater or outdoor? I never watched a movie outside, so I was curious. ok thank you.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy oh wow! The last time I went to a drive in was in the early '80s and we didn't have a car. We sat on a little patch of grass/weeds around the speaker pole. Star Trek The Wrath Of Kahn. When I was a kid, my parents would make a bed in the back of the station wagon and tell us to act like we were sleeping so they didn't have to pay for our tickets. I think things are probably much different now with Bluetooth technology but back in the day, the theater was better. And they had AC. Not all cars had AC when I was growing up. At the time, I think snacks were better at the drive in. The theaters weren't serving hot dogs and nachos then, just popcorn and candy and soda. BTW- in Grease: Stranded At The Drive In, I was not allowed to go up front and play on the swings. I was supposed to be asleep.
Fun facts: The shark, named Bruce by the producers, was mechanical, and broke down alot, and rusted during filming. Because it didn't work for alot of the movie, the producers substituted things to show you where the shark was..like the pier, and especially the yellow barrels. They expected the movie to bomb at the box office due to so many filming problems. They were shocked it didn't. I watched alot of documenteries about it. And BTW: every JAWS fan alive hated the mayor. Lol Great reaction!
This movie, due to its extreme popularity, was the start of Hollywood’s attempt to have yearly “Summer Blockbusters”! It brought success to Spielberg and Williams. Shaw was at the end of his life. Very talented actor and writer. The story of the Indianapolis was true. Shaw rewrote it n it’s still a chilling classic!
thanks for the info. Robert Shaw went out with a Bang! so, this started the "summer blockbusters." I'm wondering was this Steven Spielberg and John Williams project that put them on the map...? yeah, this movie is Classis!
Hey man, just to explain what was going on with Quint losing his mind. He’s meant to be an allegory for Captain Ahab. He is ABSOLUTELY on a vendetta. Ever since the Indianapolis, he dedicated his life to killing sharks. The big White, Bruce or “Jaws”, is his white whale.
I was 10 years old when my older sister took me to go see JAWS, IN 75. I REFUSED to take a bath, swim in a swim in pool or go fishing for years. The Irony is that a I became obsessed with sharks!!! FYI: THE story that Quint told bout the USS IDIANAPOLIS, was based on real historical events in 1945.
Let me tell you what earned your thumbs up today. When you said "This guy has got to be tough, he don't even have cheese on those crackers" I choked on my drink. Good job
I live on Long Island which is a stones throw from Martha's Vineyard where the movie was filmed... -- And oh yes.. we've got some big sharks out here... Granted, not 25 feet.. That would be extremely rare.. But within the last 10 years, there's been two 20 footers seen off the coast.
"There can't be things like that in the ocean". You bet there are. Saw a bunch of them cage diving with Rodney Fox off the North Neptune islands, South Australia, way back in 1991. Beautiful critters. You can reach out of the cage, through the gap left for photography, and touch them as they go past. Just wait for the mouth to go by. Feels like the head of a rubber mallet. And as they swim, they are dead quiet.
Saw this in the theater when I was 10 and it _broke_ me -- when we got home I was seeing sharks swimming under the carpet. I had nightmares for weeks. Then the Carol Burnett Show did the "Jowls" parody, after which I would only take showers -- the thought of sitting in more than in inch of water left me nauseous with fear. Took me years before I'd get in anything bigger than a wading pool. Summer towns like Amity make all their money for the year on 3 weekends -- Memorial Day, 4th of July, and Labor Day. Closing the beach on the 4th means you lose over a third of your annual income as all those people go somewhere else. Like Quint said, they'd all be on welfare over the winter, and some of them would lose their homes or businesses. So, yeah, they were reluctant to close the beach. Sorry those kids got et, but we gotta eat to, you know? Also, something from the book that didn't make it into the move was that Amity was heavily mobbed up, which was another reason everyone wanted to keep the beach open; Fat Tony wants his money, and he'll take it out of your hide if you don't have any business.
I think we're gonna need a bigger boat is an iconic line from the movie, as is the quick camera pan to the sheriff when hes sitting on the beach when the boy is killed early in the movie
Also, the scene when they are examining Ben Gardner’s beat-up fishing boat, and Hooper pulls a shark tooth the size of a shot glass out of the hole in the hull -- just as Ben Gardner’s mutilated head suddenly appears -- is one of the greatest jump-scares of all time!
"It's only an Island when you look at it from the Ocean" .. brilliant writing on this film. Quinn's war story was powerful. I watch Jaws once a year... does that make me a Jaws Fandom cultist? 😆 🤣 😂 Thx for reaction. 😊
Good reaction. A few things, if you get interested, to look up: 1. Frank Mundus, a real life shark fisherman who used the barrel method to kill white sharks, when that was acceptable; 2. The Jersey Beach/Matewan Creek 1916, where one or more sharks killed some folks; 3. Ramree Island - in WW2, the Japanese had their own version of the Indianapolis, only it was saltwater crocodiles tearing them up; 4. The Jaws Log by Carl Gottlieb (who co-wrote the screenplay and played Meadows in the movie), and Edith Blake's "On Location" - this is a master class on guerrilla film-making.
Hehe, the boy was not addicted to coffee". He was saying that he wanted coffee flavored. Back then there was an ice creme called coffee flavored. Its now what we call mocha flavored ice creme.
Hey E! Thank you for your reaction to this great movie. I remember, in 2017, I was in Alexandria, Egypt for a month. I went to the beaches there, and they were amazing. I made a comment about sharks to one of the locals. She told me that people worry more about mermaids. Apparently, there was several sightings/experiences by people regarding mermaids, and they are not nice ones like in the Disney movie, lol. I never saw one, but there was a huge reward for anyone that can show actual proof of a mermaid. Thank you again for the reaction!
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy You'd love it, I'm sure. When I was swimming, the water was so clear, there was a school of fish swimming alongside me. My father's family is from Egypt.
In 1975, I saw this movie 13 times in the theater. I bought the soundtrack, and it was my book-reading soundtrack for a very long time. Yes, I was a strange girl.
sounds like you simply just really enjoyed that Jaws Experience. I think if the movie made you want to go in ocean to touch sharks would have been strange. thanks for sharing.
Im an 82 baby so I didn’t see this in theaters. I saw it first when I was like 10. Took it out of my uncles drawer and it changed even going in a pool forever lol
Another movie with a even younger Richard Dreyfus, American Graffiti with a YOUNG Harrison Ford, Ron Howard, Suzanne Summers and Wolfman Jack - plus some hot cars
Quint wanted the $10k for himself. He didn't want any help, and he didn't want want to share the credit. He resented Hooper because Hooper was a rich college grad. He underestimated Hooper's devotion to the science of shark behavior.
Having grown up on the Texas coast, I thought it wouldn't be scary. I was wrong. I was 18 when i saw it, and it took me weeks to go swimming in the bay after seeing it. I didn't even want to sit on the edge of the water.
Great reaction! You mentioned an interest in maritime events, so I thought I'd mention. In 1917, there was a boat that exploded in Halifax, Canada. The SS Mont-Blanc. Just in case you didn't know about it!
yeah, I know of the tragic Halifax incident. the cargo ship was full of explosives and a fire took place on board and the crew abandoned ship, ship drifted to Halifax and nearly blew up the whole city. many people had glass in their eyes from exploding windows after impact. is that the one?
You cracked me up on the naked with a stranger. It was the 70’s, it was a very different time. Peace and love were primary to many….. especially the love part.
I’ve watched dozens of Jaws reactions. This was the best one. No argument. Your sense of humor is awesome. Why are the best sense of humors in the world usually black dudes? 🙂💯
When it comes to Brody’s, “Old reliable” (As you called it😁), you should check out the outtakes, which should be available on UA-cam. (That revolver wasn’t as reliable as one would hope.) Good thing it wasn’t being relied upon, in a real, life & death situation. For myself, JAWS is tied with RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK for all time top Spielberg flicks! I was about 10 when Mom took me to see this classic flick… As someone who used to love the water, I haven’t been swimming in it, since! (Just turned 60!) Glad you enjoyed it! Be happy & well! 😃
Why? Because the mayor was trying to keep the beach open. It has to do with the towns survival; he was reelected because he did what the Town Council wanted. He kept the town alive (well, minus a few people and a dog, but details, details...).
@mousetreehouse6833 oh totally understand that. My beef with the Mayor was he was too much of a coward to put his foot down and keep the beach closed even after the death of a child. But with that being said if the beach was closed there wouldn't be much of a movie
😂 I hit subscribe the moment you said “This guy has to be tough. He doesn’t even have cheese on his crackers.” 😂😂😂😂. Subscriber FOR LIFE!!! Do you have a Patreon?!?! 😂😂😂
When you were on the beach and lost control. That was a rip current. They can often make you drift out to sea and even make people drown. If you ever get stuck in one...swim sideways to the beach, when the pressure to drag you out lets up, you will be out of the rip current and able to swim into the beach. If you still can't get out of the rip, immediately shout to the lifeguards for help so they can get something out to you so they can pull you in before you drown. Try not to panic though. That is how you make the problem escalate. Just some words of advice for anytime you are at a beach. Even if it isn't you, this information can save someone's life.
Boy, and I glad I dropped in here! My favourite movie of all time (saw it in the cinema when I was 11. Scared the bejeezus out of me. Seen it thousands of times since. Never gets old.) And that you recognise the genius of John Williams is the cherry on top even before we get rolling! 1:57 It was the 70s. We were all naked with strangers. What a time to be alive. Yeah, if you have a fear of the water, this is absolutely not going to help. It's kept me out of any body of water without a concrete bottom for 50 years and I'm fine with that. I don't go in the ocean, no sharks in my living room. Everybody happy. 4:15 Bro. She was in pieces. Be glad you didn't see it in the cinema. We got to see a whole lot more of pieces of Chrissie Watkins that went away when they chopped it up for home consumption. (Sorry.) 7:55 I am *so* glad I came by your channel. 10:29 Believe it or not, he was 27 here. 13:12 That exchange was unscripted. Jay Mello just started copying Mr Scheider, and Mr Scheider rightly kept it going. It's adorable. 13:21 He knocked. 14:25 No, that was not a butter knife, (I assure you a butter knife wouldn't go through a shark's skin. A chainsaw might be a better idea.) and that white stuff is digestive fluid. Aren't you glad you asked? 15:08 You're very generous; I like that in a person. 17:22 I'm using that one. 17:59 Aside from all his other genius, Spielberg invented the water box, the first underwater camera ever just for these shots. There was nothing like those POV shots back then, and even now you're like, "Hey, how did *I* get in the water? 19:44 Yeah, he was in *great* shape. All during the shoot, he annoyed the crap out of everybody by always exercising and keeping in shape while they were all drinking and trying to sleep late. He was a former boxer. 20:08 And mark another reactor who doesn't understand "coffee ice cream". 21:13 I have to say, I'm very much enjoying your technical work on this. It's a very pleasant balance of large/small screen. You're not sticking your face in the middle of the action like a lot of them. Dang, that's annoying. It's a very nice looking video you have here. 21:30 No son, that's called a "limerick", and they've been around for eight hundred years. 22:18 Knowing Quint, it's hard tack. 22:43 Bless me, Father, for I have just wet my pants. A thousand times, I still expect him to swallow that cigarette, followed by the greatest line in movie history (FU, Rhett Butler) and it's an ad lib. People quote it and they don't even know why. 24:28 How bout that score, huh? 24:34 I'm keeping that one, too. 26:25 Good on ya for noticing Brody's appendix scar. 26:47 Dude, don't get me rolling on the #Titanic. We'll be here all day. I'll talk all day and late into the night on that subject. BTW, the Indianapolis story was largely unknown until this movie came out and people were justifiably horrified to find out it was real. I saw a thing on Discovery years ago. Harrowing. 29:54 Aiming for the head will do no good. A shark's entire body is made of cartilage and chain mail, and has a brain the size of a walnut. To kill it, you'd have to somehow penetrate all that, hit the brain, and wait 24 hours, as sharks take roughly 24 hours to die. And FFS, remember they die *from* *the* *tail* *forward*. You can haul him in at noon and he'll still bite your a** at dinnertime. We should all be built that way. 31:35 Bruce: I love these things, but the packaging! 32:00 That won't help either. Sharks detect rather than "see". They have nerve endings that run all along their bodies to sort out who is what. 33:41 You're the first reactor I've seen to notice this. When I was a kid, my Pop was a beekeeper. It was like growing up in a horror movie. Well, he saw me Raid one of his beloved pets and he leaned in the doorway and said "Now a thousand are gonna come to his funeral." Swim, Brody. Swim. I thoroughly enjoyed your treatment of my favourite film, and everything-the tech, the commentary, everything was comp[etely entertaining. A very nice job, young man! Subbed!
I saw this the Weekend it Premiered on the Big Screen! I was 1 year out of College getting ready to go into the USAF. I haven't been in the Ocean since!
This movie is the reason I never go in the water when I visit Martha’s Vineyard where this movie was filmed. I go there a lot and I feel exactly like chief Brody does.😎
For me, the scariest bit is when the shark kills the chaperone in the pond, at exactly 19:20 when you can just barely see the shark before it grabs the guy. BRRRR total thalassophobia moment right there. Some cool trivia: in the real event that the novel and film were based off of, the shark doing all of the killing was a bull shark, which isn't surprising as bull sharks are extremely aggressive. Great whites meanwhile are usually very uninterested in eating people, but it's far more iconic a species for a film.
im .. old. when this came out in the cinemas i think i was about 12. over 2 weeks my buddies and i saw this 13x. i havent been in the ocean, a pond, or a lake since.
Quint knows that the radio is a party line and he doesn’t want to share his bounty or have somebody else come in and steal it, which is why he shooed Brody’s wife away on it and eventually smashed it.😎
@@yvonnesanders4308 really? It it wasn’t about the trophy, then why did he say “I’ll catch him for 3, but I’ll kill him for 10”. He wants that sharks jaws boiling in water…for 10 grand. Tell me again about his pride?🤔😎
the ocean swept me away from shore.. i panicked until i remembered to swim parallel to the shore. i got out of it and didnt go back until i was in thailand... no horrible current was there that day. however, my man pointed out jellyfish and i freaked out and tried to run out of the water. the slowest run EVER!
@Hey E fun reaction one of the top 25 to 50 films of all time. The mechanical shark did not work for 75% of the film, which is why the director went into each character and the story was well done. Plus in all grat horror what you DONT see is always more scary
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy He did a made for tV film called the Duel which is a thriller horror when he was a unknown. An worked with Tobe Hooper (Texas Chainsaw Massacre and a few other horrors) to make Poltergeist
All 3 of the stars....their movies are fantastic! The beard guy did Close Encounters, among others, Roy did Blue Thunder, Quint did a Bond movie, the Deep, and Force ten from Navarrone. Before this, Spielberg didn't have much movie credits. He did Sugarland Express, and helped on American Graffiti, and Death Car, i think. Hooper did close encounters, American graffiti, Close Encounters, Let it Ride, and the Hillarious, What about Bob? Then he did this and Close Encounters, and his fame was set!!!!
Now imagine seeing this in the theater at 11 years old. Don’t like the water to this day! I’ll go to the beach and lay out, but don’t go near that damn water. Scared tf outta me .
I was 10 yrs old when I saw this in the theater the year it came out.... We used to go to Long Island NY almost every weekend ... JAWS came out and we never went to LI again and I never went in the ocean past my ankles again. Summer businesses closed bc the beaches were empty. For about a month after the movie came out, I remember seeing headlines from local papers of local marinas, and they would be piles of dead sharks sharks, fishermen going out killing every shark they could find. Benchley and Spielberg both said if they had known the reaction Benchley would have never written the book and Spielberg would have never made the movie.... This movie had a devastating effect on the shark population world wide.
thank you for sharing. shame. they put gilt on the creators for just doing their job very well. they made such a realistic phenomenon that people didn't know how to act (killing shark) probably not even all great whites. as far going in the water, this movie will keep me on shore the rest of my life. Maybe a Cruise (maybe).
I love this movie! I just subscribed to your channel because of this reaction. Another really good ocean movie is The Abyss. Not about sharks. Also, if you haven't seen it, 2 Guns is a great action movie.
26:18 Your comment about being surprised here. It made me think for a moment about the generational reaction to situations. It dawn on me that back then, I think we were used to the idea that you could be killed by anything at any time. I’m a generation behind these guys but still similar. Being naturally curious, the danger didn’t seem too much more than normal. It was something that had to be done. Just think about the danger we lived in. We didn’t have to wear seatbelts, we didn’t wear helmets biking, skating, 3 wheeling or much anything’s. We didn’t have warning labels on every single thing we touch. We had wars where there was no technology to help people behind enemy lines. Because of all these things we grew up knowing, it took a little more than this to actually scare us enough to stop. We’re the walk it off generation, I’ve got the scars to prove it, shoulda had stitches.
25:34 that shot wasnt supposed to kill the shark. It was to attach a barrell to the Shark. The barrell allows them to track the Shark and also keeps the Shark close to the surface wearing him out and making him vulnerable. Of course the Shark was so powerful, he could even drag 3 barrells down with him
In the book, Hooper is killed by the shark while in the cage. He gets so fascinated by it, as it swims past he reaches out to touch it, and it snaps around and takes his arm off. Like this ending much more.
There is a good example of foreshadowing in this movie that everyone seems to miss: when Chief Brody is looking through books about sharks, researching the subject, while thumbing through the books, he comes across a photo of a giant shark with a compressed air tank from a diver in its mouth. Of course, this comes full circle at the end of the movie when Brody destroys the shark by shooting the compressed air tank in its jaws. I am always surprised that no one ever points that out; it seems like such an obvious oversight to me…
oh, that part happened at the 1/3 of the movie, and chief Brody kill shark was at the very end of the movie. but I did remember him seeing that in the book. Brody is separate to me because he shoots that tank in such a bad ass way, I couldn't connect that great moment to something else.
I always get a kick out of reactors who think the kid wants a cup of coffee. He wants coffee flavored ice cream. It was big in New England back in the 70’s. We even sold coffee syrup that was squeezed into a glass of milk called ‘Eclipse Coffee Syrup’.😎😃
In the novel it explains why Mayor Vaughn is actually so adamant about having the beaches stay open. Yes, all the towns money was made in the 2.5 months of summer and they'd all have to go on welfare half the year to survive if the beaches were shut down for a week. But it explains that his wife had been very very ill, and he had to borrow money from the NYC mafia to pay for her treatment. To repay it, he sold the mob rental properties on the island for cheap, so they could bring in basically clean cash from them. NO open beaches, NO renters, NO money = cement shoes for Larry. They even killed Brody's kids' cat in the book to warn him off.
7:20 - the people at the meeting are all the owners of the local businesses. If they close the beaches every one of them will lose out the money that comes from 4th of July tourists.
I get that, for me it was more of a priority to be alive so they can run their business. and did anyone care... a teen girl just got k1lled. that's where I was coming from.
Quint is a great character and shaw gives a great performance. That Indianapolis monolog is top notch.
Drufess' reaction. His face was real. No one had heard shaw deliver that monologue until then.
@@KalonReeves Not how I understood it. Shaw attempted to do the monologue drunk shirt and didn't like how it turned out, so he asked Spielberg if he could give it another shot sober. So Drufess probably heard it before, but was blown away by how it was delivered. Which, I feel, is understandable. Shaw had the look and tone of a haunted man, occasionally smiling or chuckling in an attempt to downplay how messed up the incident left him. His eyes glazed and he rarely blinked as he spoke.
Hahahaha! " This guy has to be tough, he doesn't even have cheese on those crackers." You are killing me😂
That was hysterical!!
Remarkably, Quint’s speech about the sinking of the USS Indianapolis is a historical fact. It really happened! His vivid description of the tragedy that resulted is one of the most epic monologues in cinematic history, and is the key to his character and his obsession with killing sharks. He smashed the radio not only because he wanted to secure the bounty and reward for killing the Great White, which is strictly a secondary consideration for him, but rather because he wanted revenge - or perhaps personal redemption - for his horrific experience, which he can only achieve by killing the man-eating shark himself.
I just felt like he smashed the radio at a time when they needed help. They were clearly going to sink. he didn't think of other people lives while seeking his revenge. those men were trying make it back home to their kids. that part I didn't like.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy Since you mention being interested in maritime disasters, I recommend the retelling of the USS Indianapolis going down on the YT channel Sharks Happen - amazing level of detail, and not just the part where the sharks turn up.
thank you.@@RaefonB
According to "Memories of Jaws", that story was largely unknown until it turned up in Jaws. Incredible. Of all the stories to come out of WWII, that one got lost. I saw a thing on Discovery years ago about it. Harrowing. Those poor boys.
Had fun watching your reaction
Seen it in the theaters as 9yr old in 1975.
And like you, I still sit on the beach while my grandkids go swimming.
It’s a brilliant film. Thx
You crossing yourself when you first saw the shark was the best reaction ever.
20:00 Brody's kid was telling his mom he wanted coffee flavored ice cream instead of the usual chocolate, vanilla or strawberry. We were pretty limited with flavors back in the 70s... not like the vast selection we have now, anyways.
thanks.
In my opinion, this is the best movie ever made.
So good, that bout half the world would not go swimming for months!!! TO this day, if I can't see the sand, I will Not go swimming in the ocean!
You’re not alone.
@karimhicks8376
Jaws saved so many people from drowning. 😜
A masterpiece
It's definitely in the top 5 horror films of all time and it is a horror film but it's so much more.
Everyone involved in this movie thought is was going to flop until it was released. Turned out to be one of the greatest movies of all time.
I wouldn't say that it was heavily advertised and the producers were confident they had a great film
I saw this at the drive-in when I was 7. My all-time favorite movie to this day! The Indianapolis monologue kills every time!
The head in the boat gets everyone. I saw this for the first time in junior high and I think I attached myself to the ceiling 😂
Ben Gardner getting the jump on everyone even after 49yr
@@katesimmons9297 He was…”a head” of his time!
Jaws is the classic for moviegoers!
some theaters run it at 4th of july
Pro tip, the first kid killed, Alex Kitner. The woman who played his ma,40 years later goes into a northeast beach restaurant. Seas a menu item...the Alex Kitner sandwich special. She tells the manager, i played his ma in the movie. The manager goes to the back, brings out the owner. Its the guy who played Alex Kitner!😮😮😮
cool story!
I was 14 when I first saw this movie in a theater in Virginia Beach with the worst sunburn of my life. I never go deeper than my knees.
thanks for sharing, I appreciate that. I was wondering do you prefer watching movies in an indoor theater or outdoor? I never watched a movie outside, so I was curious. ok thank you.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy oh wow! The last time I went to a drive in was in the early '80s and we didn't have a car. We sat on a little patch of grass/weeds around the speaker pole. Star Trek The Wrath Of Kahn. When I was a kid, my parents would make a bed in the back of the station wagon and tell us to act like we were sleeping so they didn't have to pay for our tickets. I think things are probably much different now with Bluetooth technology but back in the day, the theater was better. And they had AC. Not all cars had AC when I was growing up. At the time, I think snacks were better at the drive in. The theaters weren't serving hot dogs and nachos then, just popcorn and candy and soda. BTW- in Grease: Stranded At The Drive In, I was not allowed to go up front and play on the swings. I was supposed to be asleep.
oh, lol that sounds like a great family experience!! thank you so much for making this comment.😄@@jennytoughazadi9243
Beer cans were still made of tin back in the 70's. That's what make the scene funny when Hooper squeezes the Styrofoam cup.
Fun facts: The shark, named Bruce by the producers, was mechanical, and broke down alot, and rusted during filming. Because it didn't work for alot of the movie, the producers substituted things to show you where the shark was..like the pier, and especially the yellow barrels. They expected the movie to bomb at the box office due to so many filming problems. They were shocked it didn't. I watched alot of documenteries about it. And BTW: every JAWS fan alive hated the mayor. Lol Great reaction!
thanks.
The most horrifying thing in this movie is the polyester sport coats that the mayor wears.
lmao!! haha.
Went to the drive-in when this came out and, to this day it's still my favorite movie ever.
I saw it at a drive-in 6 years ago, a lot of fun.
This movie, due to its extreme popularity, was the start of Hollywood’s attempt to have yearly “Summer Blockbusters”!
It brought success to Spielberg and Williams.
Shaw was at the end of his life. Very talented actor and writer.
The story of the Indianapolis was true. Shaw rewrote it n it’s still a chilling classic!
thanks for the info. Robert Shaw went out with a Bang! so, this started the "summer blockbusters."
I'm wondering was this Steven Spielberg and John Williams project that put them on the map...? yeah, this movie is Classis!
Hey man, just to explain what was going on with Quint losing his mind.
He’s meant to be an allegory for Captain Ahab.
He is ABSOLUTELY on a vendetta. Ever since the Indianapolis, he dedicated his life to killing sharks. The big White, Bruce or “Jaws”, is his white whale.
I was 10 years old when my older sister took me to go see JAWS, IN 75. I REFUSED to take a bath, swim in a swim in pool or go fishing for years. The Irony is that a I became obsessed with sharks!!! FYI: THE story that Quint told bout the USS IDIANAPOLIS, was based on real historical events in 1945.
thanks.
Let me tell you what earned your thumbs up today. When you said "This guy has got to be tough, he don't even have cheese on those crackers" I choked on my drink. Good job
I live on Long Island which is a stones throw from Martha's Vineyard where the movie was filmed... -- And oh yes.. we've got some big sharks out here... Granted, not 25 feet.. That would be extremely rare.. But within the last 10 years, there's been two 20 footers seen off the coast.
"There can't be things like that in the ocean".
You bet there are. Saw a bunch of them cage diving with Rodney Fox off the North Neptune islands, South Australia, way back in 1991. Beautiful critters. You can reach out of the cage, through the gap left for photography, and touch them as they go past. Just wait for the mouth to go by. Feels like the head of a rubber mallet. And as they swim, they are dead quiet.
Thanks for the info. Quiet swimmers is Frightening.
I saw this when I was 5 in the theatre with my friends older sister. Yes, it scarred me for life. I’m 51 now
understand. you were 5, I'm glad you made it.
Saw this in the theater when I was 10 and it _broke_ me -- when we got home I was seeing sharks swimming under the carpet. I had nightmares for weeks. Then the Carol Burnett Show did the "Jowls" parody, after which I would only take showers -- the thought of sitting in more than in inch of water left me nauseous with fear.
Took me years before I'd get in anything bigger than a wading pool.
Summer towns like Amity make all their money for the year on 3 weekends -- Memorial Day, 4th of July, and Labor Day. Closing the beach on the 4th means you lose over a third of your annual income as all those people go somewhere else. Like Quint said, they'd all be on welfare over the winter, and some of them would lose their homes or businesses. So, yeah, they were reluctant to close the beach. Sorry those kids got et, but we gotta eat to, you know?
Also, something from the book that didn't make it into the move was that Amity was heavily mobbed up, which was another reason everyone wanted to keep the beach open; Fat Tony wants his money, and he'll take it out of your hide if you don't have any business.
The news reporter on the beach is Peter Benchley, the author of the original book that the movie is based on.
thanks.
I think we're gonna need a bigger boat is an iconic line from the movie, as is the quick camera pan to the sheriff when hes sitting on the beach when the boy is killed early in the movie
thanks.
Also, the scene when they are examining Ben Gardner’s beat-up fishing boat, and Hooper pulls a shark tooth the size of a shot glass out of the hole in the hull -- just as Ben Gardner’s mutilated head suddenly appears -- is one of the greatest jump-scares of all time!
Agreed, I was not ready.
Thank you for this reaction vid - I enjoyed it very much and glad to see people enjoying this movie 50 years later.
Glad you enjoyed it
"It's only an Island when you look at it from the Ocean" .. brilliant writing on this film.
Quinn's war story was powerful.
I watch Jaws once a year... does that make me a Jaws Fandom cultist? 😆 🤣 😂
Thx for reaction. 😊
you're welcome!! thanks.
Good reaction. A few things, if you get interested, to look up: 1. Frank Mundus, a real life shark fisherman who used the barrel method to kill white sharks, when that was acceptable; 2. The Jersey Beach/Matewan Creek 1916, where one or more sharks killed some folks; 3. Ramree Island - in WW2, the Japanese had their own version of the Indianapolis, only it was saltwater crocodiles tearing them up; 4. The Jaws Log by Carl Gottlieb (who co-wrote the screenplay and played Meadows in the movie), and Edith Blake's "On Location" - this is a master class on guerrilla film-making.
You are the second UA-camr I’ve seen who knows about the USS Indianapolis. I’m glad.
thanks.
Hehe, the boy was not addicted to coffee". He was saying that he wanted coffee flavored. Back then there was an ice creme called coffee flavored. Its now what we call mocha flavored ice creme.
ok thanks
No one gets that. When I was a kid it was my favorite flavor.
@@HeidiDenoble Oh, man me too.
My grandma always took her morning pills with coffee flavored yogurt. I used to love it.. it's hard to find anymore
I've seen this movie for years and always thought it was odd lol thanks for clearing it up
Hey E! Thank you for your reaction to this great movie. I remember, in 2017, I was in Alexandria, Egypt for a month. I went to the beaches there, and they were amazing. I made a comment about sharks to one of the locals. She told me that people worry more about mermaids. Apparently, there was several sightings/experiences by people regarding mermaids, and they are not nice ones like in the Disney movie, lol. I never saw one, but there was a huge reward for anyone that can show actual proof of a mermaid. Thank you again for the reaction!
hey!! thank you for your comment. Egypt is a place I would visit. thanks for sharing.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy You'd love it, I'm sure. When I was swimming, the water was so clear, there was a school of fish swimming alongside me. My father's family is from Egypt.
Nice!@@ThatArabGirl10
In 1975, I saw this movie 13 times in the theater. I bought the soundtrack, and it was my book-reading soundtrack for a very long time. Yes, I was a strange girl.
sounds like you simply just really enjoyed that Jaws Experience. I think if the movie made you want to go in ocean to touch sharks would have been strange. thanks for sharing.
Im an 82 baby so I didn’t see this in theaters. I saw it first when I was like 10. Took it out of my uncles drawer and it changed even going in a pool forever lol
I get it, this movie puts fear in the heart.
Another movie with a even younger Richard Dreyfus, American Graffiti with a YOUNG Harrison Ford, Ron Howard, Suzanne Summers and Wolfman Jack - plus some hot cars
Quint wanted the $10k for himself. He didn't want any help, and he didn't want want to share the credit. He resented Hooper because Hooper was a rich college grad. He underestimated Hooper's devotion to the science of shark behavior.
It was never about the money. That was personal with Quint. He had a hatred and fear of sharks as demonstrated by his Indianapolis speech.
@@yvonnesanders4308it was definitely mostly a vendetta against sharks but the money was also a part of it imo
It was the first blockbuster.
Fantastic.
Everyone loved the mayor so much, he was re-elected for Jaws 2. Some people were afraid of going in pools for decades.
Re-elected...those people are crazy.
Richard Dreyfus never looked all that young. But despite that, he actually aged very well. I believe he was 28 at the time filming here.
Having grown up on the Texas coast, I thought it wouldn't be scary. I was wrong. I was 18 when i saw it, and it took me weeks to go swimming in the bay after seeing it. I didn't even want to sit on the edge of the water.
lol, yeah I get it.
Your channel is gonna be huge. You’re an amazing reactor! Really enjoyed your reaction to this masterpiece! Blessings!
😂 [referring to holiday roast] “That came outta his kitchen?! It looks like the heart of a whale!”🤭 And facts right there.
Coffee flavored ice-cream 😮
"...well I take all that back about his intelligence..." 😄👍
Most excellent, sir.
Nice reaction to a great film 👏 I love the Mayor’s 70’s jacket ⚓️
Great reaction! You mentioned an interest in maritime events, so I thought I'd mention. In 1917, there was a boat that exploded in Halifax, Canada. The SS Mont-Blanc. Just in case you didn't know about it!
yeah, I know of the tragic Halifax incident. the cargo ship was full of explosives and a fire took place on board and the crew abandoned ship, ship drifted to Halifax and nearly blew up the whole city. many people had glass in their eyes from exploding windows after impact. is that the one?
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy yes thats the one!
You cracked me up on the naked with a stranger. It was the 70’s, it was a very different time. Peace and love were primary to many….. especially the love part.
I’ve watched dozens of Jaws reactions. This was the best one. No argument. Your sense of humor is awesome. Why are the best sense of humors in the world usually black dudes? 🙂💯
shooting the fin is to keep the shark at the surface and tire him out the barrels are full of air and heavy for the shark to drag
Fun reaction, sir. I love the ocean (and swim in it whenever) but I can understand your fear of it.
One off the remarkable things that made this movie was the score. That music line when the shark was around was perfect.
When it comes to Brody’s, “Old reliable” (As you called it😁), you should check out the outtakes, which should be available on UA-cam.
(That revolver wasn’t as reliable as one would hope.)
Good thing it wasn’t being relied upon, in a real, life & death situation.
For myself, JAWS is tied with RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK for all time top Spielberg flicks!
I was about 10 when Mom took me to see this classic flick…
As someone who used to love the water, I haven’t been swimming in it, since! (Just turned 60!)
Glad you enjoyed it!
Be happy & well!
😃
"I' am afraid of the water and this ain't helping" ha ha. That was great. I subscribed! Can't wait to see more.
Awesome! Thank you!
Oooh…a fish movie 😂
oh its more than that!
Not sure if someone has mentioned this, but Quint's story about the indianapolis sinking was a true story.
Just wanted to Thank u again. I know it takes a lot to do these vids for us. Appreciated...Take care, Peace
I appreciate your comment. thanks.
Fav movie ever
What's fucked up is the mayor here is STILL the mayor in Jaws 2
WHat!
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy and in Jaws 2 the mayor screws over Brody AGAIN
Why? Because the mayor was trying to keep the beach open.
It has to do with the towns survival; he was reelected because he did what the Town Council wanted.
He kept the town alive (well, minus a few people and a dog, but details, details...).
@mousetreehouse6833 oh totally understand that. My beef with the Mayor was he was too much of a coward to put his foot down and keep the beach closed even after the death of a child. But with that being said if the beach was closed there wouldn't be much of a movie
😂 I hit subscribe the moment you said “This guy has to be tough. He doesn’t even have cheese on his crackers.” 😂😂😂😂. Subscriber FOR LIFE!!! Do you have a Patreon?!?! 😂😂😂
thanks for supporting!!
When you were on the beach and lost control.
That was a rip current. They can often make you drift out to sea and even make people drown.
If you ever get stuck in one...swim sideways to the beach, when the pressure to drag you out lets up, you will be out of the rip current and able to swim into the beach.
If you still can't get out of the rip, immediately shout to the lifeguards for help so they can get something out to you so they can pull you in before you drown.
Try not to panic though. That is how you make the problem escalate.
Just some words of advice for anytime you are at a beach. Even if it isn't you, this information can save someone's life.
thanks, I appreciate this.
For trying to bring the time down as much as you did, you did a very fine edit job.
thanks.
Boy, and I glad I dropped in here! My favourite movie of all time (saw it in the cinema when I was 11. Scared the bejeezus out of me. Seen it thousands of times since. Never gets old.) And that you recognise the genius of John Williams is the cherry on top even before we get rolling! 1:57 It was the 70s. We were all naked with strangers. What a time to be alive. Yeah, if you have a fear of the water, this is absolutely not going to help. It's kept me out of any body of water without a concrete bottom for 50 years and I'm fine with that. I don't go in the ocean, no sharks in my living room. Everybody happy. 4:15 Bro. She was in pieces. Be glad you didn't see it in the cinema. We got to see a whole lot more of pieces of Chrissie Watkins that went away when they chopped it up for home consumption. (Sorry.) 7:55 I am *so* glad I came by your channel. 10:29 Believe it or not, he was 27 here. 13:12 That exchange was unscripted. Jay Mello just started copying Mr Scheider, and Mr Scheider rightly kept it going. It's adorable. 13:21 He knocked. 14:25 No, that was not a butter knife, (I assure you a butter knife wouldn't go through a shark's skin. A chainsaw might be a better idea.) and that white stuff is digestive fluid. Aren't you glad you asked? 15:08 You're very generous; I like that in a person. 17:22 I'm using that one. 17:59 Aside from all his other genius, Spielberg invented the water box, the first underwater camera ever just for these shots. There was nothing like those POV shots back then, and even now you're like, "Hey, how did *I* get in the water? 19:44 Yeah, he was in *great* shape. All during the shoot, he annoyed the crap out of everybody by always exercising and keeping in shape while they were all drinking and trying to sleep late. He was a former boxer. 20:08 And mark another reactor who doesn't understand "coffee ice cream". 21:13 I have to say, I'm very much enjoying your technical work on this. It's a very pleasant balance of large/small screen. You're not sticking your face in the middle of the action like a lot of them. Dang, that's annoying. It's a very nice looking video you have here. 21:30 No son, that's called a "limerick", and they've been around for eight hundred years. 22:18 Knowing Quint, it's hard tack. 22:43 Bless me, Father, for I have just wet my pants. A thousand times, I still expect him to swallow that cigarette, followed by the greatest line in movie history (FU, Rhett Butler) and it's an ad lib. People quote it and they don't even know why. 24:28 How bout that score, huh? 24:34 I'm keeping that one, too. 26:25 Good on ya for noticing Brody's appendix scar. 26:47 Dude, don't get me rolling on the #Titanic. We'll be here all day. I'll talk all day and late into the night on that subject. BTW, the Indianapolis story was largely unknown until this movie came out and people were justifiably horrified to find out it was real. I saw a thing on Discovery years ago. Harrowing. 29:54 Aiming for the head will do no good. A shark's entire body is made of cartilage and chain mail, and has a brain the size of a walnut. To kill it, you'd have to somehow penetrate all that, hit the brain, and wait 24 hours, as sharks take roughly 24 hours to die. And FFS, remember they die *from* *the* *tail* *forward*. You can haul him in at noon and he'll still bite your a** at dinnertime. We should all be built that way. 31:35 Bruce: I love these things, but the packaging! 32:00 That won't help either. Sharks detect rather than "see". They have nerve endings that run all along their bodies to sort out who is what. 33:41 You're the first reactor I've seen to notice this. When I was a kid, my Pop was a beekeeper. It was like growing up in a horror movie. Well, he saw me Raid one of his beloved pets and he leaned in the doorway and said "Now a thousand are gonna come to his funeral." Swim, Brody. Swim. I thoroughly enjoyed your treatment of my favourite film, and everything-the tech, the commentary, everything was comp[etely entertaining. A very nice job, young man! Subbed!
I'm happy you enjoyed it!! and thank you for sharing.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy You're very kind. I'll be back!
I saw this the Weekend it Premiered on the Big Screen! I was 1 year out of College getting ready to go into the USAF. I haven't been in the Ocean since!
Thalassophobia: an intense and persistent fear of deep water. That's the word you're looking for.
thank you.
I loved your reaction to this film. Keep it up!
Thank you! Will do!
This movie is the reason I never go in the water when I visit Martha’s Vineyard where this movie was filmed. I go there a lot and I feel exactly like chief Brody does.😎
cool.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy cool? 😂😎
I seen this at the theatre as a kid. To this day, I will not go in water because of this.
For me, the scariest bit is when the shark kills the chaperone in the pond, at exactly 19:20 when you can just barely see the shark before it grabs the guy. BRRRR total thalassophobia moment right there.
Some cool trivia: in the real event that the novel and film were based off of, the shark doing all of the killing was a bull shark, which isn't surprising as bull sharks are extremely aggressive. Great whites meanwhile are usually very uninterested in eating people, but it's far more iconic a species for a film.
that part is spooky.
im .. old. when this came out in the cinemas i think i was about 12. over 2 weeks my buddies and i saw this 13x. i havent been in the ocean, a pond, or a lake since.
lol
Dang, got a telehealth appointment during the premiere. Great job as usual!
thanks
Quint knows that the radio is a party line and he doesn’t want to share his bounty or have somebody else come in and steal it, which is why he shooed Brody’s wife away on it and eventually smashed it.😎
No not about the money. His motivation wasn't the money. It's pride with him. He doesn't want to admit he needs help even if it means risking his life
@@yvonnesanders4308 really? It it wasn’t about the trophy, then why did he say “I’ll catch him for 3, but I’ll kill him for 10”. He wants that sharks jaws boiling in water…for 10 grand. Tell me again about his pride?🤔😎
It's Roy Sçhrider. He passed away in the late 80s.
Coucou !
Thanks for your review
I love that movie, i've seen it so much when i was young. It was very often rerun every summers in France.
My pleasure!
the ocean swept me away from shore.. i panicked until i remembered to swim parallel to the shore. i got out of it and didnt go back until i was in thailand... no horrible current was there that day. however, my man pointed out jellyfish and i freaked out and tried to run out of the water. the slowest run EVER!
glad you made it out ok.
E i love your reactions man never a dull moment with you! you crack me up! 😂🤣
Glad to hear you enjoyed them.
He meant "coffee ice cream". My son loved coffee ice cream too.
@Hey E fun reaction one of the top 25 to 50 films of all time. The mechanical shark did not work for 75% of the film, which is why the director went into each character and the story was well done. Plus in all grat horror what you DONT see is always more scary
still completed with the shark (the main character) not working %75! and this movie became a major hit is amazing in itself.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy This is why so many horror fans wish Spielberg would of done one more horror film
oh, was Jaws his only horror@@michaelcoffey1991
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy He did a made for tV film called the Duel which is a thriller horror when he was a unknown. An worked with Tobe Hooper (Texas Chainsaw Massacre and a few other horrors) to make Poltergeist
20:04 - the kid didnt ask for coffee. He was talking about coffee flavored ice cream which was popular in New England
All 3 of the stars....their movies are fantastic! The beard guy did Close Encounters, among others, Roy did Blue Thunder, Quint did a Bond movie, the Deep, and Force ten from Navarrone. Before this, Spielberg didn't have much movie credits. He did Sugarland Express, and helped on American Graffiti, and Death Car, i think. Hooper did close encounters, American graffiti, Close Encounters, Let it Ride, and the Hillarious, What about Bob? Then he did this and Close Encounters, and his fame was set!!!!
thanks for letting me know this.
Really enjoyed your reaction. 😅
Thank you!! 😁
Now imagine seeing this in the theater at 11 years old. Don’t like the water to this day! I’ll go to the beach and lay out, but don’t go near that damn water. Scared tf outta me .
I was 10 yrs old when I saw this in the theater the year it came out....
We used to go to Long Island NY almost every weekend ... JAWS came out and we never went to LI again and I never went in the ocean past my ankles again.
Summer businesses closed bc the beaches were empty.
For about a month after the movie came out, I remember seeing headlines from local papers of local marinas, and they would be piles of dead sharks sharks, fishermen going out killing every shark they could find.
Benchley and Spielberg both said if they had known the reaction Benchley would have never written the book and Spielberg would have never made the movie.... This movie had a devastating effect on the shark population world wide.
thank you for sharing. shame. they put gilt on the creators for just doing their job very well. they made such a realistic phenomenon that people didn't know how to act (killing shark) probably not even all great whites.
as far going in the water, this movie will keep me on shore the rest of my life. Maybe a Cruise (maybe).
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy a cruise?? do a reaction of THE POSIEDON ADVENTURE ... the original, not the remake
This guys gotta be tough … he’s got no cheese on his cracker😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 … new sub just for that
I'm glad you enjoyed.
I saw this movie in 1975 i was 10 and i was never the same when it came to swimming in the ocean
thanks for sharing. It does make you think twice about entering the water.
"You're gonna need a bigger boat" - a true classic line.
it is.
Improvised
oh wow, he just came up with that is impressive!@@yvonnesanders4308
The reporter on the beach is Peter Benchley who wrote the book.
thanks
Great review
I love this movie! I just subscribed to your channel because of this reaction. Another really good ocean movie is The Abyss. Not about sharks. Also, if you haven't seen it, 2 Guns is a great action movie.
welcome!! I appreciate the support. "The Abyss" sounds interesting, I don't know what 2 Guns is about.
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy 2 Guns is an action movie with Denzel Washington and Mark Wahlberg. It's really good. You have great reactions!
26:18 Your comment about being surprised here. It made me think for a moment about the generational reaction to situations. It dawn on me that back then, I think we were used to the idea that you could be killed by anything at any time. I’m a generation behind these guys but still similar. Being naturally curious, the danger didn’t seem too much more than normal. It was something that had to be done. Just think about the danger we lived in. We didn’t have to wear seatbelts, we didn’t wear helmets biking, skating, 3 wheeling or much anything’s. We didn’t have warning labels on every single thing we touch. We had wars where there was no technology to help people behind enemy lines. Because of all these things we grew up knowing, it took a little more than this to actually scare us enough to stop. We’re the walk it off generation, I’ve got the scars to prove it, shoulda had stitches.
25:34 that shot wasnt supposed to kill the shark. It was to attach a barrell to the Shark. The barrell allows them to track the Shark and also keeps the Shark close to the surface wearing him out and making him vulnerable. Of course the Shark was so powerful, he could even drag 3 barrells down with him
I never understood why Chief Brody never said the mayor told me to do it and why the mayor let him take all the heat and hate for his decisions.
In the book, Hooper is killed by the shark while in the cage. He gets so fascinated by it, as it swims past he reaches out to touch it, and it snaps around and takes his arm off. Like this ending much more.
thanks for the info. that sounds like a hooper thing to do.
There is a good example of foreshadowing in this movie that everyone seems to miss: when Chief Brody is looking through books about sharks, researching the subject, while thumbing through the books, he comes across a photo of a giant shark with a compressed air tank from a diver in its mouth. Of course, this comes full circle at the end of the movie when Brody destroys the shark by shooting the compressed air tank in its jaws. I am always surprised that no one ever points that out; it seems like such an obvious oversight to me…
oh, that part happened at the 1/3 of the movie, and chief Brody kill shark was at the very end of the movie. but I did remember him seeing that in the book. Brody is separate to me because he shoots that tank in such a bad ass way, I couldn't connect that great moment to something else.
I always get a kick out of reactors who think the kid wants a cup of coffee. He wants coffee flavored ice cream. It was big in New England back in the 70’s. We even sold coffee syrup that was squeezed into a glass of milk called ‘Eclipse Coffee Syrup’.😎😃
thanks
@@randomlyreactandreviewfirstEzy thanks?🤔😎
In the novel it explains why Mayor Vaughn is actually so adamant about having the beaches stay open. Yes, all the towns money was made in the 2.5 months of summer and they'd all have to go on welfare half the year to survive if the beaches were shut down for a week. But it explains that his wife had been very very ill, and he had to borrow money from the NYC mafia to pay for her treatment. To repay it, he sold the mob rental properties on the island for cheap, so they could bring in basically clean cash from them. NO open beaches, NO renters, NO money = cement shoes for Larry. They even killed Brody's kids' cat in the book to warn him off.
thanks.
In the theater everyone stood up and cheered and clapped when he hit the tank at the end of the
yeah, that was a great part.
The best film ever made.
7:20 - the people at the meeting are all the owners of the local businesses. If they close the beaches every one of them will lose out the money that comes from 4th of July tourists.
I get that, for me it was more of a priority to be alive so they can run their business. and did anyone care... a teen girl just got k1lled. that's where I was coming from.