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- Why ‘Jaws’ Would Never Be Made Today - YouTube
“Jaws,” the first blockbuster, was made 50 years ago Would it be greenlit today? Probably not Alissa Wilkinson, the New York Times film critic, breaks down
- Jaws did what no movie could do today — it made the entire world . . .
Scientists believe “Jaws” caused an entire generation to develop an irrational fear of sharks They dubbed it “the Jaws Effect ” And the fin-phobia extended far away from New
- Why ‘Jaws’ Would Never Be Made Today - The New York Times
new video loaded: Why ‘Jaws’ Would Never Be Made Today Would “Jaws,” the first blockbuster, be greenlit today? Probably not Alissa Wilkinson, a New York Times film critic, breaks down why
- Does Jaws Still Matter? | National Review
'Jaws' endures as more than a film about a town and its citizens who are terrorized by a great white shark Director Steven Spielberg ignited pop-culture reflexes and touched on themes of family
- Jaws changed movies forever and still has lessons for Hollywood - AP News
Spielberg would never again be under financial pressure on a picture, but the tortured “Jaws” production put him under a microscope Compared to more swaggering blockbusters today, “Jaws” would be considered a modest, mid-budget movie That’s partially why you have to almost remind yourself that the movie has only three main
- Why “Jaws” Still Has Bite - The New Yorker
Heat waves are among the deadliest weather-related events Every year, they kill many more people than hurricanes or tornadoes or floods, and they send a lot of people to the hospital for things
- Why no big movie studios would attempt to make JAWS today
JAWS would not get made today because this next level expertise has been chased away from big adventure movies To suggest a movie about a killer shark but have a scientist who doesn’t have the body of an action hero and refuse to have physics-defying special effects is now unthinkable
- Jaws changed movies forever, but Hollywood could still learn from it
NEW YORK (AP) — Fifty years after “Jaws” sunk its teeth into us, we’re still admiring the bite mark Steven Spielberg’s 1975 film, his second feature, left such a imprint on culture and Hollywood that barely any trip to the movies, let alone to the beach, has been the same since
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