Tag: 1970s Cinema

  • Jaws at 50 Still Bites at Princeton Garden Theatre

    Jaws at 50 Still Bites at Princeton Garden Theatre

    While I couldn’t be there for the Princeton Garden Theatre’s “Jaws Fest” celebrations on Friday, in honor of the 50th anniversary of the film’s release, I was able to catch the movie itself yesterday afternoon – and of course there’s no way I could pass up this banner.

    Author Peter Benchley and his wife, Wendy (who served three terms on the former Princeton Borough Council), attended the film’s Princeton opening at the Garden Theatre in June 1975.

    The Garden continues to show “Jaws” every summer, and I manage to catch it in one form or another just about every year. Last year I got shut out of the theater when I learned too late that Wendy Benchley would be speaking before the film. Still, I have seen it a lot.

    When I last caught it at the Garden two years ago, I was dazzled by just how well it still works. Yesterday, it mostly made me miss the ‘70s, when movies could still surprise and awe, while keeping one foot in “reality.” The shark may be omnipresent (if little seen), but the interplay between Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary, the kids, Richard Dreyfuss, Robert Shaw, Murray Hamilton, and even the locals is unbeatable.

    Memorable characters, great performances that conceal their craft (Shaw gets a couple of monologues, selling himself as shark-exterminator and recollecting the horrors of the U.S.S. Indianapolis, but otherwise most of it unfolds naturalistically), breathtaking directorial invention and technical brilliance (again, only occasionally do they draw attention to themselves), plenty of foreshadowing and thematic parallels, irony even, but the whole thing is never less than relatably human, which is a quality it seems the big Hollywood movies have really lost.

    Of course John Williams’ score rachets up the tension with its inexorable rhythms and jangling dissonances, but he always has a good sense of when to lighten things up and even lift the spirits. “Jaws” begins as a horror movie, then leans into the suspense, and then finally explodes into a frequently euphoric, rip-roaring adventure.

    The local color, the bureaucratic cover-up, the inevitable panic, the yahoos who gather to take out the shark, all of it rings true. Even in a world in which police reports are no longer filled out on typewriters, everyone has cell phones, and for many books are no longer a primary source of information, “Jaws” loses none of its bite. In another 50 years, it will be as evergreen as “Casablanca.”

    “Jaws” is usually a one-night affair in Princeton – and the theater is packed – but this year showings will continue at the Garden through Thursday afternoon, diluting the crowd, perhaps, but providing more chances to catch it on the big screen. For showtimes, follow the link.

    https://www.princetongardentheatre.org/films/jaws

    If you can’t make it, there’s always next summer.

    In the meantime, do check out the Garden’s schedule of repertory films. September and October are especially strong. With offerings such as “Rashomon, “The Ghost and Mrs. Muir,” “Bicycle Thieves,” “High and Low,” “The Asphalt Jungle,” “Metropolis, “The Golem,” and the Spanish language “Dracula” (shot at night on the same sets used for the Lugosi version), I intend to be there a lot.

    https://www.princetongardentheatre.org/specials/

    Oh yeah, and they show new films too. It’s probably the only theater in which I would have watched the new “Superman,” as I can’t stand the hassle, the soullessness, the inanity, the sonic overkill, and now the seating reservations of the big chains.

    If you’re in the area, and you miss being able to watch quality movies in a decent theater, I recommend dropping by and even looking into a membership. It’s obvious that the owners and the employees really care about the entire experience of taking in a good film.

  • Jaws Still Bites A Look at Spielberg’s Classic

    Jaws Still Bites A Look at Spielberg’s Classic

    As the proto-summer blockbuster, “Jaws” (1975) gets everything right. Part horror movie, part suspense-thriller, part swashbuckling adventure, it’s also chock-full of subversive social commentary. Steven Spielberg’s breakout hit delivers most of its real bite beneath the dazzle of Great White teeth. Replace the shark with COVID-19 and see if you don’t find the same foibles exhibited all over again nearly 50 years later.

    Of course, it’s the comradery on the boat that secures the film’s place in our hearts. Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, and Richard Dreyfuss are all first-rate, as is John Williams’ music, in this, one of the must-see films of the 1970s. Would that someone could make a movie like this again, in any genre.

    Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water. “Jaws” puts the bite on our ass, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Your comments are on the menu. We’ll count you among our friends, even as we make you our chum, when we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Where Did All the Inspirational Movies Go?

    Where Did All the Inspirational Movies Go?

    Where are all the inspirational movies? Now, more than at any time in recent memory, there should be a wave of optimistic films to lift us up, out of all the dread, gloom, and rancor.

    Over the course of his unparalleled career, John Williams almost always managed to convey the exhilaration of being alive, even in the darkest thrillers. Everyone remembers his theme for the great white, but it’s the swashbuckling third act that made “Jaws” a monstrous hit.

    Not that everything has to be a march, necessarily, but how about a few interludes of light and beauty? Must these be totally absent from the movies these days? Is the best in life really reflected in the hip, the dark, the badass, and the ironic? Must the pace always be relentless?

    The 1970s was far from the most hopeful decade. In the wake of Vietnam, Watergate, and all the political and social unrest of the 1960s, who could have predicted that a young generation of filmmakers would embrace imagination, wit, and adventure? After a hot afternoon of sweating it out on a gas line, the American public was hungry for affirmation and escape. They could still find it in a darkened theater, and these movies became enormous moneymakers.

    But then, as usual, the Man got a hold of it and squeezed hard. A corporate mindset took root and bled everything of its fun and turned the world into a bleak thrill-ride.

    There was plenty of grit in American movies of the 1970s, to be sure. But at some point, you’ve got to look away from all the crime and conspiracy, the dystopias and divorces, the horrors, real and supernatural, and celebrate the simple pleasures of biking to a friend’s house, sitting in a park with the sun on your face, or standing on a lawn in your bare feet.

    Who knows, maybe it’s just not practical to expect any kind of soul, patience, or reflection anymore, with all the smartphones and computers. And the tighter deadlines for composers, and the ability to manipulate films virtually until the day they are released.

    Does anyone watch the birds or the snow or the clouds, or even dream? Or breathe? Or is that considered boring? All I’m asking for is a little poetry, or even a smile.

    Even when the movies weren’t the best, John Williams put his stamp on the music, so that you felt you were actually watching something ennobling. He’s one of few who still knows how to convey that life is worth living.

    Happy birthday, Maestro. Now at work on a violin concerto for Anne-Sophie Mutter, John Williams turns 89.

    The Reivers (1969):

    The Fury (1978):

    Jaws 2, for crying out loud (1978):

    The Rise of Skywalker (2019):

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