The discovery of what's left of Chrissie Watkins. #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
This is the first of several instances where Chief Brody turns and looks warily out to the ocean. #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
JAWS (1975), directed by Steven Spielberg, shot by Bill Butler, & edited by Verna Fields, who coined the term 'wipe by cut' for this technique: a series of tension-building cuts leading to a false alarm for Chief Brody. #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
Chief Brody begins to move faster as it dawns on him that his oldest son Michael is in danger. #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
I love when Chief Brody's son, after a close call with the shark, is rescued from the water and the camera lingers on his legs, as if to reassure us that both legs are still there! Nice touch. #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
This leads to a second instance of Brody looking warily out to the ocean, as the shark has now made it personal for the Chief. #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
'You knew there was a shark out there. You knew it was dangerous. But you let people go swimming anyway!... You knew all those things. But still my boy is dead now... And there's nothing you can do about it.' ~Mrs. Kintner, after slapping Chief Brody. #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
'You may want to let that breathe for a.... Nothing, nothing.' #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
It took dozens of viewings of JAWS for me to finally make the connection between what Chief Brody sees in a book on sharks, at about the 26-minute mark of the film.... #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
...to what happens at the film's climax 90 minutes later. The same elements are there: an air tank clenched in a shark's jaws facing a man perched in a tower. Brody had filed away this information & now puts it all together as he takes aim on the shark. #RoyScheider#JAWS🦈
On a teacher's last day of work before retirement, an unexpected gift: THE BROWNING VERSION. Adapted by #BOTD Ronald Harwood from Terence Rattigan's 1948 play, this 1994 version stars the late Albert Finney. Here, with Ben Silverstone as Taplow. #RonaldHarwood#TheBrowningVersion
To celebrate the pending 120th anniversary of Alfred Hitchcock's birth, we begin here a longish thread recalling the film where Hitch's young career was very nearly derailed by a boy on a bus with a bomb (and a puppy😁). #Hitchcock#AlfredHitchcock
A loose adaptation of Joseph Conrad's 1907 novel, The Secret Agent, SABOTAGE (1936) co-stars Oscar Homolka, as a terrorist; and features Desmond Tester, as a likable schoolboy who is unwittingly dispatched to deliver a bomb hidden in a package, which must arrive before 1:45 p.m.
Thus begins an eight-minute sequence wherein the camera follows the boy as he makes his way across a section of London, all the while carrying a bomb. As Hitchcock later told Truffaut: 'I made a serious mistake in having the little boy carry the bomb...' #AlfredHitchcock