Toronto Star

Still devouring us

How ‘Jaws’ created the age of the summer blockbuste­r.

- MANOHLA DARGIS

The shark was right. With apologies to the skinny-dipper chomped in half, the shark was only being a shark and its teeth were so very sharp, her flesh so very tender. And given the harm we’ve inflicted on the planet, didn’t we deserve some punishment?

When the great beast swam out of the unfathomab­le waters and onto screens in the summer of1975, it stirred up anxiety that was doubtless tinged with guilt. “See it before you go swimming,” the trailer warned, tapping into our worries while making the case for movie-going. We had many reasons to hide in the dark.

The wave-making leviathan of summer blockbuste­rs, “Jaws” changed the way Hollywood did business and how people went to movies. It also changed some people’s relationsh­ip to the ocean.

“You wouldn’t go into the water,” my sister recently reminded me, when I asked about a 1970s family trip to Martha’s Vineyard, where much of the film was shot. To be fair, I was a New York kid and could barely dog paddle. My natural habitat was a movie theatre. And it remained so until the coronaviru­s closed cinemas and made me wonder if I’ll ever again sit in the dark with strangers. If the ocean now seems far safer, it’s because today the monster is the virus.

That the mayor in “Jaws” has become a pandemic meme is a testament to the film’s unnerving topicality and our habit of viewing the world through a screen. Played with a perfect mix of huckster smarm and cluelessne­ss by Murray Hamilton, Mayor Vaughn is the blank, smiling face of Amity, the fictional beach paradise that the great white shark turns into a snack bar.

After the remains of a woman wash up, Chief Brody (Roy Scheider) goes into overdrive as the mayor insists that everything’s fine. “It’s a beautiful day,” he tells a reporter before the water turns red again. “The beaches are open and people are having a wonderful time.”

Like a lot of politician­s, Mayor Vaughn survived repeated crises (he’s in the risible “Jaws 2”) and now he has a parody Twitter account, the source of a stream of bleakly funny and queasy commentary: “In Amity,” he tweeted on May 17, “we have germ spotters strategica­lly placed on the beach.”

That’s more reassuring than much of the advice dispensed by authoritie­s who focus on putting out fires while ignoring the larger crisis of climate change and its relationsh­ip to the current pandemic. “We drain the world’s biological basins of the diversity that would ordinarily keep contagions in check,” Ferris Jabr wrote in the New York Times Magazine. “Other animals’ diseases have not so much leapt onto us as flowed into us through channels we supplied.”

Steven Spielberg was 27 when he directed “Jaws” and already under contract at Universal. He had some qualms about turning Peter Benchley’s novel into a film, having made “Duel,” a thriller starring a big-rig stalker. He didn’t want to become “a shark-and-truck director,” as he memorably put it.

What drew him to the project was the book’s final 120 pages, as he explained back then, when the main characters “go on a hunt, a sea hunt for the great white shark.” So, working with Benchley and others, Spielberg pared down the story to focus on the drama of men battling a massive shark.

Subplots were deleted and new scenes added. With a potential actors strike looming, the film was rushed into production. There were lots of bumps and some publicly aired grievances. Spielberg, Benchley said, “has no knowledge of reality but movies,” a criticism that long clung to the filmmaker. Benchley shared screenwrit­ing credit with Carl Gottlieb, who also plays the toadying publisher of the Amity newspaper. Gottlieb amusingly details the making of the movie in his essential account “The Jaws Log.”

Spielberg knew what he had. Midproduct­ion, he said, “We’ve really, I think, made a better movie than ‘Jaws’ is a book.” He was right: The film is as lean and clean as a denuded bone. Like the novel, it opens with the death of the skinny-dipper. Her name, you may recall, though maybe not, is Chrissie. Women don’t factor much here; one becomes dinner, another fusses in a kitchen. A crucial exception is the mother, Mrs. Kintner (Lee Fierro), who confronts Brody the day she buries her child. “You knew there was a shark out there,” she says, after slapping him. “You knew it was dangerous, but you let people go swimming anyway. You knew all those things. But still my boy is dead now.”

After Fierro died in April from complicati­ons of COVID-19, Los Angeles Times columnist Mary McNamara wrote, “We are all Mrs. Kintner now.” These days, though, we are all more like the confused people of Amity who either recklessly rush into the water or stay away at a safe distance, watching in horror.

“Jaws” is about a lot of things, including fear, death, science, accountabi­lity and the necessity — and fragility — of social solidarity. It’s about knowledge and what people do with it. Brody grasps that there’s a danger threatenin­g Amity and its visitors and sets out to save them with help from a scientist (Richard Dreyfuss) and a fisherman (Robert Shaw). Movies love the romance of the whitehatte­d hero but, in real life, we also need to save ourselves.

In the decades since the film freaked us out, Hollywood has grown increasing­ly dependent on blockbuste­rs. Yet even as its movies have grown bigger and shinier, they have become less tethered to real people and our scarily imperiled world.

Critics read “Jaws” different ways: as a take on “Moby Dick” or the Vietnam War, or as a tale about the return of the repressed. Of course it is also about a shark that kills people and is killed in turn, which makes it another story about humankind’s domination of nature.

If the threats onscreen now are often extraterre­strial, it’s partly, I think, because we can’t bear to see what’s happening, what we’re doing, on Earth.

Maybe the shark wasn’t simply hunting us — not all of us, anyway — maybe it was warning us.

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 ?? UNIVERSAL STUDIOS PHOTOS VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Beachgoers run from the water in a scene from the 1975 blockbuste­r ”Jaws.” The film changed the way Hollywood did business.
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS PHOTOS VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Beachgoers run from the water in a scene from the 1975 blockbuste­r ”Jaws.” The film changed the way Hollywood did business.
 ??  ?? Director Steven Spielberg pared down the original “Jaws” novel to focus the film on the drama of men battling a massive shark.
Director Steven Spielberg pared down the original “Jaws” novel to focus the film on the drama of men battling a massive shark.

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