The line “You’re gonna need a bigger boat” was ad-libbed by Roy Scheider, although he didn’t necessarily come up with the line. Apparently during filming, whenever something went wrong, someone would pipe up “you’re going to need a bigger boat.” Scheider added the line in that scene. In test screenings, the reactions to the shark were so loud, the line wasn’t heard, so they added more footage between the shark jump-scare and the “bigger boat” line, to capitalize on the comment. Works!
During test screenings the reaction was so loud, and stayed loud, because that was the first jump scare of the movie. Spielberg hadn't yet gone back to reshoot the scene beneath the boat, to include a jumpscare of Ben Gardner's head popping into the hole. Now they may have added a second or two after what became the second jump scare of the movie, but the main reason they had a problem in the first place was that it was originally the first jump scare. So extending the scene wasn't as necessary as the test screenings suggested.
In the Military this is called "Pucker Factor" (PF) and is a scale that seeks to measure fear by the force of contraction exerted on the sphincter muscles surrounding the anus during a given situation of danger.
Especially when you consider that what he was seeing was a camera right in front of his face, there wasn't even the mechanical shark in his reaction shot just a camera doing the close up.
Just how he was able to snap up with such an immediate, intense force. It's almost like he was pulled by wires. It did so much to sell it for me from his perspective. It's truly a seminal moment in movie history, and with that line, esp. The birth of blockbuster films, along w/ Star Wars right after.
This scene works so well because for one hour, the audience has been conditioned to believe that the familiar musical motif always precedes the shark. We hear that Theme before every attack, but then there is no music in the scene where the two kids are swimming with a fake fin, so our brains equate the music with shark and no music with no shark. Then this scene comes along and with no music to give warning, BOOM! The genius of Steven Spielberg and John Williams!
The way Brody backs into the closed space with Quint , you can feel how terrified he is, feeling very small and vulnerable being on the water with this beast all around them, even underneath them. Anyway, Quint delivered the bomb and Brody has finally seen a shark.
I saw this when it first came out on the big screen. After all the hints given as to how big the shark was, this is the first time you actually see it. The jump scare still works after all this time. Spielberg is a genius.
I remember 75, in this move are two scenes when every audience nearly jumps out of the seats, first one when Ben Gardeners head pops out and then in this scene. Fun fact: Great whites are really that huge.
The story behind the Ben Gardner's head scene really shows the genius of Spielberg. It wasn't part of the origional shoot on Martha's Vinyard. While watching the first rough cut of the film, he realized he had missed the perfect moment for a huge jump scare. The bit with the head was actually filmed in the editor - Verna Fields- swimming pool in CA. Spielberg spent $3,000 of his own money to build a replica of the side of Ben Gardner's boat out of balsa wood. A double for Richard Dreyfuss was used in the scene.
Worse when you have a fully packed theater with a few hundred people all jumping and screaming like that . Alien was just as bad with the reactions. 😂🤣😁
This movie actually resulted in tourism going down at beaches and some people actually afraid to go into lakes or rivers for a while too. Hell I think I heard stories of a few people who were actually afraid to get into pools and even bathtubs too.
This moment proves that Spielberg is a genius. Our first real look at the shark, and not a string of music. Only truly great filmmakers (and composers) know when NOT to use music.
My Friend, that is called "Pucker Factor" (PF) in the Military and is a scale that seeks to measure fear by the force of contraction exerted on the sphincter muscles surrounding the anus during a given situation of danger. I sincerely hope this is helpful.
It's true that the mechanical shark (they called it Bruce) was constantly breaking down. Spielberg had wanted to use it a lot more than he could, so they had to shoot around it. Spielberg himself said later that it was for the best, as the ominous hints of the shark's presence were far more frightening than the actual shark itself.
The brilliance is in the timing of the jump scare; they get you laughing at Brody's line, "Chum some of this shit!" and then out comes the shark, and you're like, "Ha, ha, haaAAAAAAHHH!!!"
Yes, its a difference to watch this in a dark cinema or in your living room at daylight on a TV. And in 75 this kind of script, theme and directing was absolutely new. Must remember the time then, not like today.
What makes the scene so compelling is that of the three men on the boat, Brody is the least able to deal with a shark that big. Quint is a crusty fisherman of 30 years vintage who has killed plenty of sharks. Hooper is a marine biologist who has seen who knows how many, and loves the animals. Brody isn't even comfortable with being out on the water, much less come face to face with a 25 foot predator.
Face in face with his deepest and scariest fears he had all his life...youre imagine all kind of horror under the surface and then you realise that all your fears are real.
i like that there is kinda a real great white that is pretty much the biggest in ocean and has a tracking device, and even a few documentarys. divers even go in with it and he doesnt really bother anyone. its just a really big huge fat shark that floats along.
I love that in this movie, in the sky. 2 shooting stars are captured on film 3:06 Addie changes her voice. Sounds like Foghorn Leghorn. Jaws was rated the number 1 horror movie of all time. I see why. Made millions of people not swim in the ocean. 7:57 Dasha was praise dancing. Da in Russian means yes
I saw this at the cinema when it first came out. Place was packed. To say we all went crazy when the shark popped up then would be a vast understatement.
Why not, maybe it saved some lifes. A few days ago a woman bathing in the open ocean 500 km south of Gran Canaria, jumped from her boat to swim a bit. She was killed by a shark. The Ocean IS dangerous and man eating animals are still real in it. And sharks are big and in some cases really huge. Open water is a hunting area of the wild. And humans are prey.
I was 12 years old when this movie came out, and I lived in an old sea port not far from where this was filmed. I had just gotten my first job that summer as an apprentice mate on a fishing charter boat. I can’t even begin to describe how terrifying this film was for me.😂 Part of my duties was making up chum buckets. Basically it’s everything left over after the days catch has been cleaned. It sits out in the open overnight in the summer heat, the next day the sun beats down on it,… it’s a stench you’ll never forget. 🤢
I was in the 8th grade when this came out and saw it in the theatres. I had the same reaction as everyone in this video except my entire bucket of popcorn went airborne and I didn't even realize it until I looked at my aunt, who was sitting next to me, and couldn't stop laughing as she was brushing popcorn off of her dress. LMAO 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I had a 4 foot deep, 20 foot diameter, above ground pool as a kid in the 90s and got scared by myself in it because of this movie, so it worked 20 years later too
The looks on Robert Shaw's face just make it extra good. I mean he's supposed to have seen some shit but he's looking at that thing like "Ok, this is going to get heavy". Just amazing acting.
@@prillman I think he means Shaw (Quint). Not even Quint saw this shark before and now he think "OK, it will be more work than i had expected, that damn fish is biger than i thought". Spielberg wantet a bigger than life shark so a 25 ft shark is bigger than normal adult great whites, most have 15-19 ft. So a shark that size is a new experience, for Hooper and Quint.
@@tiffanyeyoung1800 Whites can get that big, but usually not in those waters. The ones off the West Coat get way bigger than elsewhere because there’s so many seals with high fat content. Meanwhile the ones off South Africa fucking jump. If you see footage of airborne Great Whites, chances are pretty good it’s in those waters.
On the financial side, this is the most important film ever made! It invented the "summer blockbuster." On the emotional side, it affected more Americans, than any other before it...and maybe after. I grew up in Los Angeles and during that summer the beaches were void of swimmers. That was great for us surfers!! Just a perfect movie.
50 years later........people STILL reacting exactly the same to a foam rubber shark. That is how well the shark was made and how well it was shot, and how well the actors portrayed their characters. BTW, Roy Scheider improvised the line "You're going to need a bigger boat."
Its because these sharks exist, attacks exist, eaten humans exist. Thats not a 100 ft spider or a "Tremor", no Godzilla or Bugs from Klendathu. They are real. And humans are small against this animals. Thats why this movie still works.
@@drhkleinert8241 -My point is that the people who are reacting to this movie grew up on CGI in movies. This movie was not done with CGI. If it were made today there would be no foam rubber shark. It would be computer generated. That is what these people are used to. However, they actually had to "build" the shark, 3 of them actually for different camera angles and specific actions. Then it had to be operated to look realistic, in the ocean, insult water. This is What I grew up on and admired.
I once said “you’re gonna need a bigger boat” to the guy who worked the boat at the JAWS ride at Universal Studios in Florida when I was a kid. The look in his eyes said “ Shut up kid”.
Remembering: I watched this when it was first released... yep, all of the packed cinema reacted as did these folks! Brilliant then... brilliant now! ... and of course THAT music! One of the most successful and... yes I'm going to say it... Iconic movies of its kind and of the 1970s in general!
I would have loved their reactions in the movie theater. Bet they ALL be screaming together like my wife did when we saw it when it first came out... 😁😁😁😁
My parents were dating and went to see this in the theater. Mom said they sat front row center and she jumped straight up at this scene. She also said the difference between the two of them at the end of the movie was impressive. Her legs were shaking and she needed a few minutes before she could stand up. Dad thought it was funny.
The fact that even to this day people that watch the movie for the first time are STILL reacting strongly to that scene is proof that its a masterpiece
You didn't bring a gun, or a rocket launcher? If I was going to blind guess that quote I would have thought Ashleigh Burton or OctoKrool, not Popcorn in Bed.
That mechanical Great White nicknamed "Bruce" was popped up to say "hello" Shark was nicknamed Bruce after Spielberg's personal lawyer, Bruce Ramer. Production crew had problems with the shark malfunctioning during filming. So, Spielberg sparely using the shark except for that scene and Shaw's Quint's death scene.
For a director who doesn’t make horror movies Spielberg really nailed this movie, which inspired a lot of directors to do the same thing, Kindom of the spiders used the same suspense pov that Spielberg did which was AWESOME!
In June 1973, off the coast of Acapulco, we had been seeing about 10 - 12 sharks per day. They would circle and then come up behind the boat, a 36' trimaran with 4 POB, people on board. Then along came hurricane Bernice. 36 hours of bobbing like a cork in 75 knot winds. Sails useless, water over the spark plugs ... steering broken ...
Fun fact: There is a movie production that is named "A bigger boat" and used a pic as symbol looks like the scene when Brody and Hooper find Ben Gardeners boat at night with fog around... And in the book Benchley describes the thinking of Brody when he see this big shark the first time and imagine that this monster attacks Chrissie Watkins, Alex Kintner and Ben Gardner... In fact all three man on the ship see this shark the first time. And, more goosebumbs...: When Hooper dives at Ben Gardners boat at night just imagine that this giant predator is still not far away...
God, I remember when I saw a showing of this in the theater, a friend of mine had never seen the movie, and when that sucker popped out of the water her ass levitated off her seat for a moment I swear..
During this movie’s release in 1975, a fan of Robert Shaw started watching JAWS in a theater, then walked out after the first 10 minutes and complained to the manager, “I just saw a young woman murdered on film!” That’s the unexpected affect the first 10 minutes of had on any viewers. She’s in an on camera interview in the most recent JAWS documentary talking about that experience.
Please do Arachnophobia and the scene towards the end in which the entire house is filled with spiders and the family gets stuck in the bathroom and they’re still coming. Visceral reactions.
Was too young to see it in theaters but watched later on cable and was the scariest movie I'd ever seen. Didn't want to swim in a pool much less the ocean. 🦈
I went to the movies with my cousin when this came out in 75. I was 8. he was 18. I sat kind of towards the front to give him and his girlfriend some privacy. After this scene, I got up, went to the back, and sat with them.
This movie was originally rated PG (before PG-13 was brought forth). I watched this in a theater by myself when I was 10 years old. For a couple of years, I couldn't swim in the deep end of a swimming pool (irrational I know, but what did I know at 10?). To this day, I've never experienced a more terrifying movie than this one.
The thing about this scene is that Spielberg later admitted that the earlier scene with the dead man's head popping up in front of Hopper (Richard Dreyfuss) was one jump scare too many for Jaws. After that, this scene with Brody (Roy Scheider) scared most people a good deal less. Among these reactors, I think you can especially see the difference in scares in Mary Cherry's.
Roy Scheider reaction to the shark is so genuine, because apparently they did not tell him exactly when the shark (nick named "Bruce") would be coming up
I was 10 when I saw this in theatre on the Gulf Coast. Trying to avoid spoilers, but the night scene when Hooper was checking out the boat and.....happened. The whole packed theatre lost it! It was awesome!
I was 15 when this movie came out and I was surprised my parents let me go to the show and watch it. It scared the crap out of me. So much that I haven't been in the ocean or even to the beach since then. 😂
Movie fans see characters shot and killed, stabbed, etc. but there is something fundamentally about Being Eaten Alive. In one of the JURASSIC films, there's a group of mecenaries funning thru tall grasses, and the velociraptors swing in behind them, grabbing them one by one. Those men are SCREAMING like no bullet wound ever produced. There's just something DIFFERENT about being eaten alive.
I grew up in East Hampton. I'm a local, my family has been there since the 1700s. My Dad was Chief of Police. He was asked how he would handle a shark attack by the author. I saw Jaws at an old theater with a balcony and 2 story screen. That f*cking movie ruined my summers.
Although this was a great scary scene another scene was equally scary. My Mother and sister went to the original and in the scene where they dived on a fishing boat to inspect a hole in the hull and a head floated out. Everyone screamed and my Mother fell off her seat!
I saw it in the theater when it came out. Everyone, EVERYONE in the theater screamed! It was great.
Much popcorn got tossed when that scene happened.
Me too. It was in Nashville Tn. The theater was packed and people screamed and I jumped. That was along time ago.
You lucky Bast@rd!
Same here at theater when it first came out..the Ben Gardner one was the loudest!
The line “You’re gonna need a bigger boat” was ad-libbed by Roy Scheider, although he didn’t necessarily come up with the line. Apparently during filming, whenever something went wrong, someone would pipe up “you’re going to need a bigger boat.” Scheider added the line in that scene. In test screenings, the reactions to the shark were so loud, the line wasn’t heard, so they added more footage between the shark jump-scare and the “bigger boat” line, to capitalize on the comment. Works!
One of the greatest lines in film history that wasnt in the script.
I love that in this movie, in the sky. 2 shooting stars are captured on film.
During test screenings the reaction was so loud, and stayed loud, because that was the first jump scare of the movie. Spielberg hadn't yet gone back to reshoot the scene beneath the boat, to include a jumpscare of Ben Gardner's head popping into the hole. Now they may have added a second or two after what became the second jump scare of the movie, but the main reason they had a problem in the first place was that it was originally the first jump scare. So extending the scene wasn't as necessary as the test screenings suggested.
@@davidward9737 Spielberg added shooting stars to a few different movies that he made.
What does "ad-lib" mean?
Roys acting is what sold it. The look of fear and shock on his face just grabs you and sucks you in. Its primal!
In the Military this is called "Pucker Factor" (PF) and is a scale that seeks to measure fear by the force of contraction exerted on the sphincter muscles surrounding the anus during a given situation of danger.
Especially when you consider that what he was seeing was a camera right in front of his face, there wasn't even the mechanical shark in his reaction shot just a camera doing the close up.
Just how he was able to snap up with such an immediate, intense force. It's almost like he was pulled by wires. It did so much to sell it for me from his perspective. It's truly a seminal moment in movie history, and with that line, esp. The birth of blockbuster films, along w/ Star Wars right after.
He NAILED IT!
The typical reaction of everyone who see an adult great white in real life...
Brody straightened up like a yard rake being stepped on. 😄
I like that !
@@shihanuke3683 It was the first thing that came into my mind when I first seen it for some reason.😂
So did my johnson
What would Mr. Johnson say?
"So did my me?"
This scene works so well because for one hour, the audience has been conditioned to believe that the familiar musical motif always precedes the shark. We hear that Theme before every attack, but then there is no music in the scene where the two kids are swimming with a fake fin, so our brains equate the music with shark and no music with no shark. Then this scene comes along and with no music to give warning, BOOM! The genius of Steven Spielberg and John Williams!
Damn, I’ve never actually realized that !
It also works because my Johnson is absolutely throbbing right now
I'll give the sheriff credit, he didn't lose his cigarette even after that.😂
A smoker never drops his cigarette, just like a drunk never drops his drink haha
Right?! Even when confronted with the water, the stress, that absolute monster of a shark, that cig stayed in his mouth! What an absolute legend!
@@ThiagoMorgothlol like Ray Stantz in Ghostbusters the first time he saw Slimer😂
Brody jumping back when the shark popped up, no sound, still holding on his cigarette is the single best reaction in cinema.
Kat was waving her arms so much so almost took flight!!!
😂😂😂
She would need a bigger raft
The way Brody backs into the closed space with Quint , you can feel how terrified he is, feeling very small and vulnerable being on the water with this beast all around them, even underneath them. Anyway, Quint delivered the bomb and Brody has finally seen a shark.
One f my favorite movies of all time. Three great performances by three legendary actors. Roy Scheider's reaction was PERFECT.
I saw this when it first came out on the big screen. After all the hints given as to how big the shark was, this is the first time you actually see it. The jump scare still works after all this time. Spielberg is a genius.
I remember 75, in this move are two scenes when every audience nearly jumps out of the seats, first one when Ben Gardeners head pops out and then in this scene.
Fun fact: Great whites are really that huge.
The story behind the Ben Gardner's head scene really shows the genius of Spielberg.
It wasn't part of the origional shoot on Martha's Vinyard. While watching the first rough cut of the film, he realized he had missed the perfect moment for a huge jump scare. The bit with the head was actually filmed in the editor - Verna Fields- swimming pool in CA.
Spielberg spent $3,000 of his own money to build a replica of the side of Ben Gardner's boat out of balsa wood. A double for Richard Dreyfuss was used in the scene.
Just by looking at this set of reactions, I am already gaining a clear perspective as to how the audience was horrified by this scene in 1975.
Absolutely, just like that
Worse when you have a fully packed theater with a few hundred people all jumping and screaming like that . Alien was just as bad with the reactions. 😂🤣😁
@@donp1964 I hear that! I was at the very first showing that Friday night it came out. Never heard so many people scream in unison
This movie actually resulted in tourism going down at beaches and some people actually afraid to go into lakes or rivers for a while too. Hell I think I heard stories of a few people who were actually afraid to get into pools and even bathtubs too.
@@TheOffkilter Don’t forget the toilets!
This moment proves that Spielberg is a genius. Our first real look at the shark, and not a string of music. Only truly great filmmakers (and composers) know when NOT to use music.
I love how quick Brody snaps to attention. Its all not fun and games any more.
Great acting by Roy.
My Friend, that is called "Pucker Factor" (PF) in the Military and is a scale that seeks to measure fear by the force of contraction exerted on the sphincter muscles surrounding the anus during a given situation of danger.
I sincerely hope this is helpful.
@@snafubar5491 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Jaws scared EVERYBODY. People were afraid to water their grass.
The menace that is the gopher shark. Horrifying.
I was seeing the freaking shark in my bath tub
Land shark...
Candy gram...
I refused to use the local pool!
@@anathardayaldar You're that clever shark I've heard so much about.
7:06 Wins!!! She’s watching Jaws on a little inflatable thingy! Way to go girl! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
She's great. She watched 'The Blair Witch' out in the woods, on her own, at night.
Yeah Kat will take it to the next level. She rules.
Nuts
Should have got someone to start pulling it down after that seen!!
@@terencejay8845Now, that’s a reactor that’s working for every “Like”. There’s no phoning it in for her, that’s for sure.
"You're gonna need a bigger boat". Everyone's favorite line ❤
At 4:50, "They should all be in life vests." hahaha
It's true that the mechanical shark (they called it Bruce) was constantly breaking down. Spielberg had wanted to use it a lot more than he could, so they had to shoot around it. Spielberg himself said later that it was for the best, as the ominous hints of the shark's presence were far more frightening than the actual shark itself.
I loved that the Great White in Finding Nemo was named Bruce.
The brilliance is in the timing of the jump scare; they get you laughing at Brody's line, "Chum some of this shit!" and then out comes the shark, and you're like, "Ha, ha, haaAAAAAAHHH!!!"
I love how this scene continues to scare audiences decades after the films’ initial release 😃
I was in the theater for this. I still remember the audience screams.
@anathardayaldar
Same here. I remember popcorn flying too!🤣
Yes, its a difference to watch this in a dark cinema or in your living room at daylight on a TV.
And in 75 this kind of script, theme and directing was absolutely new. Must remember the time then, not like today.
This clip might have the most "That's what she said" jokes ever.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
What makes the scene so compelling is that of the three men on the boat, Brody is the least able to deal with a shark that big. Quint is a crusty fisherman of 30 years vintage who has killed plenty of sharks. Hooper is a marine biologist who has seen who knows how many, and loves the animals. Brody isn't even comfortable with being out on the water, much less come face to face with a 25 foot predator.
Face in face with his deepest and scariest fears he had all his life...youre imagine all kind of horror under the surface and then you realise that all your fears are real.
I'll never understand how people get eaten by sharks. How do they not hear the music?
🤣🤣🤣
i like that there is kinda a real great white that is pretty much the biggest in ocean and has a tracking device, and even a few documentarys. divers even go in with it and he doesnt really bother anyone. its just a really big huge fat shark that floats along.
This is why this movie is such a gold classic ! The shark ended up hunting them xx
I love that in this movie, in the sky. 2 shooting stars are captured on film 3:06 Addie changes her voice. Sounds like Foghorn Leghorn. Jaws was rated the number 1 horror movie of all time. I see why. Made millions of people not swim in the ocean. 7:57 Dasha was praise dancing. Da in Russian means yes
Actually only the first shooting star was real. The second was added in later.
Foghorn Leghorn 😂
Nearly 50 years later, this scene still freaks everyone out!
I saw this at the cinema when it first came out. Place was packed. To say we all went crazy when the shark popped up then would be a vast understatement.
This movie made so many people scared to swim in the sea when it came out.
Still am. This movie f'd me up for life
Why not, maybe it saved some lifes. A few days ago a woman bathing in the open ocean 500 km south of Gran Canaria, jumped from her boat to swim a bit. She was killed by a shark.
The Ocean IS dangerous and man eating animals are still real in it. And sharks are big and in some cases really huge.
Open water is a hunting area of the wild. And humans are prey.
@@drhkleinert8241 In the US there were 18,854 total gun deaths, excluding suicides, in 2023.
There were 14 shark deaths.
Do you get my point?
@EL_Duderino68 That's because thankfully they don't live on land
I was 12 years old when this movie came out, and I lived in an old sea port not far from where this was filmed. I had just gotten my first job that summer as an apprentice mate on a fishing charter boat. I can’t even begin to describe how terrifying this film was for me.😂
Part of my duties was making up chum buckets. Basically it’s everything left over after the days catch has been cleaned. It sits out in the open overnight in the summer heat, the next day the sun beats down on it,… it’s a stench you’ll never forget. 🤢
Chum even looks smelly and disgusting
I was in the 8th grade when this came out and saw it in the theatres. I had the same reaction as everyone in this video except my entire bucket of popcorn went airborne and I didn't even realize it until I looked at my aunt, who was sitting next to me, and couldn't stop laughing as she was brushing popcorn off of her dress. LMAO 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
As a kid in the 70’s, I was afraid to swim in my pool alone because of that damn shark
I was seeing the shark in my bath
@@johnnyskinwalker4095 same here
@@RowdyYates007YNWA ah ha I thought I was the only one. That movie really freaked out a whole generation!
I had a 4 foot deep, 20 foot diameter, above ground pool as a kid in the 90s and got scared by myself in it because of this movie, so it worked 20 years later too
Blasted shark ruined summer for sooooo many people! 😂😂😂😂😂
Popcorn in Bed is right. An RPG would be an effective way to kill the shark.
The looks on Robert Shaw's face just make it extra good. I mean he's supposed to have seen some shit but he's looking at that thing like "Ok, this is going to get heavy". Just amazing acting.
That's Roy Scheider, not Robert Shaw. Shaw is the one Scheider says the line to.
@@prillman I think he means Shaw (Quint). Not even Quint saw this shark before and now he think "OK, it will be more work than i had expected, that damn fish is biger than i thought".
Spielberg wantet a bigger than life shark so a 25 ft shark is bigger than normal adult great whites, most have 15-19 ft.
So a shark that size is a new experience, for Hooper and Quint.
@@drhkleinert8241 I've heard that they do get that big
@@tiffanyeyoung1800 Whites can get that big, but usually not in those waters. The ones off the West Coat get way bigger than elsewhere because there’s so many seals with high fat content. Meanwhile the ones off South Africa fucking jump. If you see footage of airborne Great Whites, chances are pretty good it’s in those waters.
Katwatcheshorrormovies is a mad woman watching this movie while in the water. I could never.
I feel privileged to have been a teen in the 80s, an awesome decade.
Im still surprised homie didn't swallow that cig after seeing that shark.
To this day whenever I’m in over my head I use this line lol 😂
Hahaha.....
Never heard that tone in Addie's voice before..... 😂
She went full muppet.
@@faolon9343 😄
Imagine seeing this in the theatres as it happened,,,,
I was there, Gandalf... I was there 3000 years ago.....
I did! And havent swam in the ocean since 😂
On the financial side, this is the most important film ever made! It invented the "summer blockbuster." On the emotional side, it affected more Americans, than any other before it...and maybe after. I grew up in Los Angeles and during that summer the beaches were void of swimmers. That was great for us surfers!! Just a perfect movie.
Video should be called "Here's a bunch of people who'll never go swimming again"
Top tier reactions similar to when I saw it in 1974 at the theater... Jaws has the best jump scares ever... 😊
1974?
The musical score;absolute genius.John Williams brought the unseen shark right into your head.
50 years later........people STILL reacting exactly the same to a foam rubber shark. That is how well the shark was made and how well it was shot, and how well the actors portrayed their characters. BTW, Roy Scheider improvised the line "You're going to need a bigger boat."
Its because these sharks exist, attacks exist, eaten humans exist.
Thats not a 100 ft spider or a "Tremor", no Godzilla or Bugs from Klendathu.
They are real. And humans are small against this animals. Thats why this movie still works.
@@drhkleinert8241 -My point is that the people who are reacting to this movie grew up on CGI in movies. This movie was not done with CGI. If it were made today there would be no foam rubber shark. It would be computer generated. That is what these people are used to. However, they actually had to "build" the shark, 3 of them actually for different camera angles and specific actions. Then it had to be operated to look realistic, in the ocean, insult water. This is What I grew up on and admired.
The shark was created by the same man who created the giant squid for the movie 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea
I once said “you’re gonna need a bigger boat” to the guy who worked the boat at the JAWS ride at Universal Studios in Florida when I was a kid. The look in his eyes said “ Shut up kid”.
Remembering: I watched this when it was first released... yep, all of the packed cinema reacted as did these folks! Brilliant then... brilliant now!
... and of course THAT music!
One of the most successful and... yes I'm going to say it... Iconic movies of its kind and of the 1970s in general!
When Jaws came out in the cinemas there was a noticeable exodus from the beaches that Summer. Scared the $hit out of everyone.
Yes, even beaches where no sharks lives.
1:45: Magy’s and Laura’s reaction was the best! 😱😱🦈
"Watching their faces light up with fear is priceless"
LOL. Dude, you need to be a Bond villain with that accent.
Those first girls are hilarious
Those first girls were annoyingly cringy
@@Wesley-Thero03especially the one in green. I can’t standdddd her 😂
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One person’s “hilarious” is another person’s “obnoxious”…
@@Wesley-Thero03 their accent...
I would have loved their reactions in the movie theater. Bet they ALL be screaming together like my wife did when we saw it when it first came out... 😁😁😁😁
Easily a top five movie of all time
My parents were dating and went to see this in the theater. Mom said they sat front row center and she jumped straight up at this scene.
She also said the difference between the two of them at the end of the movie was impressive. Her legs were shaking and she needed a few minutes before she could stand up. Dad thought it was funny.
I appreciate Kat appreciating Quint's suggestive humor.
“Oh my gosh it’s huge!” Lol
The fact that even to this day people that watch the movie for the first time are STILL reacting strongly to that scene is proof that its a masterpiece
You didn't bring a gun, or a rocket launcher? If I was going to blind guess that quote I would have thought Ashleigh Burton or OctoKrool, not Popcorn in Bed.
Classic scene. Well done on this one. =)
Imagine my reaction at 10yo, warching this in the big screen in 1975..... i didnt enter even to a swimming pool in YEARS.
I remember my first time reaction after seeing that scene, was pretty much like this XD
I recently saw a post for a book, "A Man's Guide To Women". My first thought was, "You're going to need a bigger book."
That mechanical Great White nicknamed "Bruce" was popped up to say "hello" Shark was nicknamed Bruce after Spielberg's personal lawyer, Bruce Ramer. Production crew had problems with the shark malfunctioning during filming. So, Spielberg sparely using the shark except for that scene and Shaw's Quint's death scene.
For a director who doesn’t make horror movies Spielberg really nailed this movie, which inspired a lot of directors to do the same thing, Kindom of the spiders used the same suspense pov that Spielberg did which was AWESOME!
Seeing it in the theater on the big screen and the loud speakers was awesome I think I was 12 or 13 when it came out...the whole theater jumped.
In June 1973, off the coast of Acapulco, we had been seeing about 10 - 12 sharks per day. They would circle and then come up behind the boat, a 36' trimaran with 4 POB, people on board.
Then along came hurricane Bernice. 36 hours of bobbing like a cork in 75 knot winds. Sails useless, water over the spark plugs ... steering broken ...
Jaw one of those film you must see on the big screen
Fortunately, I did. I was 16 when it came out. 😊
Saw it like 3 times, maybe 4, one time was IMAX.
If Jaws head popping up didn't get them, Ben Gardner's head popping up will. 😄
Fun fact: There is a movie production that is named "A bigger boat" and used a pic as symbol looks like the scene when Brody and Hooper find Ben Gardeners boat at night with fog around...
And in the book Benchley describes the thinking of Brody when he see this big shark the first time and imagine that this monster attacks Chrissie Watkins, Alex Kintner and Ben Gardner...
In fact all three man on the ship see this shark the first time.
And, more goosebumbs...: When Hooper dives at Ben Gardners boat at night just imagine that this giant predator is still not far away...
Saw JAWS opening night in 1975, was 11 years old, and the reaction by the entire audience was identical but times 10, on multiple occasions😂
The Bens Head Scene made everybody jump scare, in every audience
I take it quint’s death is next?
God, I remember when I saw a showing of this in the theater, a friend of mine had never seen the movie, and when that sucker popped out of the water her ass levitated off her seat for a moment I swear..
Same in every audience here in germany then
The look on Brody’s face is awesome. The look of “were fucked”
Funny situation...he throws bait and is bored about and the predator is there, all the time under the surface...
My all time favorite movie, saw it when it came out and I was 4 years old. Glad others are watching this.
During this movie’s release in 1975, a fan of Robert Shaw started watching JAWS in a theater, then walked out after the first 10 minutes and complained to the manager, “I just saw a young woman murdered on film!” That’s the unexpected affect the first 10 minutes of had on any viewers. She’s in an on camera interview in the most recent JAWS documentary talking about that experience.
6:48 For god's sake, what would possess someone to watch Jaws while floating in a goddamned innertube?! 😂
Ty! Jaws is always epic!
Please do Arachnophobia and the scene towards the end in which the entire house is filled with spiders and the family gets stuck in the bathroom and they’re still coming. Visceral reactions.
Or the shower scene, that'll definately creep out a lot of people
Was too young to see it in theaters but watched later on cable and was the scariest movie I'd ever seen. Didn't want to swim in a pool much less the ocean. 🦈
I went to the movies with my cousin when this came out in 75. I was 8. he was 18. I sat kind of towards the front to give him and his girlfriend some privacy. After this scene, I got up, went to the back, and sat with them.
Roy's famous reaction shot was actually filmed first. The shark surfacing behind him was shot weeks later.
This movie was originally rated PG (before PG-13 was brought forth). I watched this in a theater by myself when I was 10 years old. For a couple of years, I couldn't swim in the deep end of a swimming pool (irrational I know, but what did I know at 10?). To this day, I've never experienced a more terrifying movie than this one.
6:20 That's what she said.
l love that line and Jaws popping up like that it always gets me 😊😊😊😊😊😊😂😂😂😂😂😂❤❤❤❤❤
The thing about this scene is that Spielberg later admitted that the earlier scene with the dead man's head popping up in front of Hopper (Richard Dreyfuss) was one jump scare too many for Jaws. After that, this scene with Brody (Roy Scheider) scared most people a good deal less.
Among these reactors, I think you can especially see the difference in scares in Mary Cherry's.
When I saw this as a kid opening day this scene had the entire theater out of their seats!!
Roy Scheider reaction to the shark is so genuine, because apparently they did not tell him exactly when the shark (nick named "Bruce") would be coming up
I was 10 when I saw this in theatre on the Gulf Coast. Trying to avoid spoilers, but the night scene when Hooper was checking out the boat and.....happened. The whole packed theatre lost it! It was awesome!
I was 15 when this movie came out and I was surprised my parents let me go to the show and watch it. It scared the crap out of me. So much that I haven't been in the ocean or even to the beach since then. 😂
Dasha's reaction is the best for this scene... "OYOYOYOYOYOYOY!!!"
You can't fully appreciate this scene except on the big screen.
I always wondered if Kate thought that there was something in the water behind her (a very brave reaction).
The girls from Popcorn in bed are afraid of their own shadow lol
As much trouble as they had filming this. That damn shark LOOKED REAL!
Movie fans see characters shot and killed, stabbed, etc. but there is something fundamentally about Being Eaten Alive. In one of the JURASSIC films, there's a group of mecenaries funning thru tall grasses, and the velociraptors swing in behind them, grabbing them one by one. Those men are SCREAMING like no bullet wound ever produced. There's just something DIFFERENT about being eaten alive.
I grew up in East Hampton. I'm a local, my family has been there since the 1700s. My Dad was Chief of Police. He was asked how he would handle a shark attack by the author. I saw Jaws at an old theater with a balcony and 2 story screen. That f*cking movie ruined my summers.
I watched this at night alone. Laughed 😂😂😂
Although this was a great scary scene another scene was equally scary. My Mother
and sister went to the original
and in the scene where they dived on a fishing boat to inspect a hole in the hull and a head floated out. Everyone screamed and my Mother fell off her seat!
Some of them are going to need a bigger throat because they don't scream enough.🤣