Tag: Jaws

  • John Williams’ J

    John Williams’ J

    At last, an article about John Williams’ music for “Jaws” that looks beyond the shark theme. (Follow the link below.)

    Granted, that two-note motive is destined for immortality, memorable in a way few other movie themes are, and will likely outlive anything else the composer ever wrote – even “Star Wars,” if you can get your head around that – but there is so much more to this masterful score.

    The determined “shark cage” fugue, the high-spirited nautical theme, the neo-Baroque tourist music, all serve to elevate “Jaws” and lend it dimension. In other hands, this might have played as a straightforward horror film. Spielberg’s suspense-thriller is transformed in large part through its music into an exhilarating summer entertainment – a genuine good time at the movies.

    Roy and I will discuss this seminal summer blockbuster, to kick off the Fourth of July weekend, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, livestreamed on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT.

    Be forewarned: the article at the link contains spoilers, and so will our show. (Also, it is advisable to avoid all sequels!)

    An appreciation of John Williams’ “Jaws” here:

    https://www.rogerebert.com/features/revisiting-john-williams-score-for-jaws-45-years-later

    A definite high point from the film (you might want to watch the movie first, if you haven’t seen it):

    Alas, Williams couldn’t save “Jaws 2,” but it was not for want of trying:

  • Jaws Next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner

    A clean shave, a clean shirt, and sparkling repartee made for another enjoyable evening with Roy, despite the questionable value of our subject matter, the time-hopping espionage yarn “Dimension 5” (1966) – and the fact that a three-inch spider crawled into sight just as we were about to go live. The spider is now living outdoors, and the episode is now living in our archive, so definitely check it out, even if I can’t recommend the movie (streaming free on YouTube, if you really want to groan).

    Next week, we’ll try to make amends with a conversation about one of the most perfectly constructed blockbusters ever made – further highlighting the ineptitude of “Dimension 5” – Steven Spielberg’s “Jaws” (1975). A seafaring trinity of Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, and Richard Dreyfuss take on Bruce the shark, after he puts the bite on a New England beach community.

    Part suspense thriller and part swashbuckling adventure, what does it all have to do with science fiction? Well, I guess Dreyfuss’ Hooper does get to play around with some high-tech equipment as the team’s marine biologist. But who cares?

    What can be more “Fourth of July” than a trip to the beach? Leave your shark repellent in the comments section, as we be swimmin’ with bow-legged women, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. There’ll be tourists on the menu, when we livestream on Facebook, next Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Fantastic Voyage Jaws Double Feature

    Fantastic Voyage Jaws Double Feature

    What’s more dangerous – going for a skinny dip at night off the coast of Amity, or scuba diving with Donald Pleasence through bodily fluids? I don’t know the answer to that, but I’ll be doing plenty of both on another Classic Ross Amico double-feature.

    Join me at 6:00 EDT for music from some memorable aquatic traumas – including selections from “Beneath the 12-Mile Reef” (Bernard Herrmann), “Creature from the Black Lagoon” (Henry Mancini), “The Swimmer” (Marvin Hamlisch), and “Jaws” (John Williams) – on “Picture Perfect,” on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Then at 7:00 EDT, drop by as Roy Bjellquist and I have a little fun – VERY little – with the miniaturized mayhem of “Fantastic Voyage” (1966). A tiny team races against time to perform up-close emergency surgery on the brain of a defecting Soviet scientist! Feel free to leave a comment or join the discussion on the Facebook live-stream of “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.”

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner/

    Here’s to swimmin’ with bowlegged women!

  • Aquatic Traumas Summer Movie Music

    Aquatic Traumas Summer Movie Music

    Ah, the good old days, when all you had to worry about when going to the beach was being devoured by a great white shark. This week on “Picture Perfect,” in this, the Summer of COVID, maybe the water’s not all it’s cracked up to be. We’ll count our blessings with an hour aquatic traumas, recollected from the safety of home.

    “Beneath the 12-Mile Reef” (1953) stars Robert Wagner, Terry Moore, and Peter Graves in a Romeo and Juliet story about two families of competing fishermen along the Gulf coast of Florida, one working class and of Greek origin, and the other a family of privileged WASPs. Gilbert Roland is the Greek patriarch who runs afoul of an improbably large octopus. Bernard Herrmann wrote the music, which employs no fewer than nine harps (one for each arm, and a spare).

    A young Henry Mancini was one of three composers to work on “Creature from the Black Lagoon” (1954). Mancini, soon to be world famous for “Moon River,” “Baby Elephant Walk,” and “The Pink Panther,” was teamed with veteran film composer Hans J. Salter and Herman Stein. None of the three were credited on screen – typical of what was then considered just another low-budget B-movie.

    What can I say about John Williams’ masterful music for “Jaws” (1975)? It’s right up there with “Psycho” and “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” in terms of most recognized and most frequently parodied. Everyone remembers the primal shark theme, but what is sometimes overlooked is that “Jaws” is also one of the great adventure scores, the music effortlessly navigating the choppy waters of suspense, horror, and seafaring swashbuckler. The composer was recognized with a richly-deserved Academy Award (his second of five).

    The conflict in “The Swimmer” (1968) is not a giant octopus, nor a great white shark, nor a prehistoric gill man, but rather the progressive psychological breakdown of an upper middle class Connecticut man who believes he’s living the American Dream.

    Adapted from a short story by John Cheever, “The Swimmer” stars Burt Lancaster as the man, who acts on a quixotic impulse to travel all the way home, across county, by way of a network of suburban swimming pools. The adventure starts out well enough, with Lancaster and everyone he encounters full of optimism and fun; but the further he moves along his allegorical journey, the more the enterprise, the climate, and the people begin to grow cold.

    “The Swimmer” is a decidedly downbeat tale which could make the viewer as reluctant to dip a toe into a chlorinated in-ground swimming pool as the shark-infested waters of Peter Benchley’s Amity Beach. The score is by Marvin Hamlisch, of all people, and it suits the film brilliantly.

    Better stick to the bath. Dreams of aquatic refreshment are all wet this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Bruce the Shark: Don’t be scared. I only want to make you my chum!

  • Aquatic Horror Movie Soundtracks

    Aquatic Horror Movie Soundtracks

    Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water…

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” it’s an hour of summer bummers, as I play to your fears of what lurks below.

    “Beneath the 12-Mile Reef” (1953) stars Robert Wagner, Terry Moore, and Peter Graves in a Romeo and Juliet story about two families of competing fishermen along the Gulf coast of Florida, one working class and of Greek origin, and the other a family of privileged WASPs. Gilbert Roland is the Greek patriarch who runs afoul of an improbably large octopus. Bernard Herrmann wrote the music, which employs no less than nine harps (one for each arm, and a spare).

    A young Henry Mancini was one of three composers to work on “Creature from the Black Lagoon” (1954). Mancini, soon to be world famous for “Moon River,” “Baby Elephant Walk,” and “The Pink Panther,” was teamed with veteran film composer Hans J. Salter and Herman Stein. None of the three were credited on screen – typical of what was then considered just another low-budget B-movie.

    What can I say about John Williams’ masterful music for “Jaws” (1975)? It’s right up there with “Psycho” and “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” in terms of most recognized and most frequently parodied. Everyone remembers the primal shark theme, but what is sometimes overlooked is that “Jaws” is also one of the great adventure scores, the music effortlessly navigating the choppy waters of suspense, horror, and seafaring swashbuckler. The composer was recognized with a richly-deserved Academy Award (his second of five).

    The conflict in “The Swimmer” (1968) is not a giant octopus, nor a great white shark, nor a prehistoric gill man, but rather the progressive psychological breakdown of an upper middle class Connecticut man who believes he’s living the American Dream.

    Adapted from a short story by John Cheever, “The Swimmer” stars Burt Lancaster as the man, who acts on a quixotic impulse to travel all the way home, across county, by way of a network of suburban swimming pools. The adventure starts out well enough, with Lancaster and everyone he encounters full of optimism and fun; but the further he moves along his allegorical journey, the more the enterprise, the climate, and the people begin to grow cold.

    “The Swimmer” is a decidedly downbeat tale which could make the viewer as reluctant to dip a toe into a chlorinated in-ground swimming pool as the shark-infested waters of Peter Benchley’s Amity Beach. The score is by Marvin Hamlisch, of all people, and it suits the film brilliantly.

    Join me, if you dare, for an hour of aquatic traumas, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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