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Jaws 2 (1978) is the first sequel to Jaws. It is set four years after the events of the original film. Its famous tagline is: ''"Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water..."

Production


The producers had the idea for a sequel within weeks of the original movie being released. Howard Sackler, who had contributed to the script of the original movie but chose not to seek arbitration, was charged with writing the first draft.

Since Steven Spielberg "wanted to move on to fresher climes", theatre director John Hancock was chosen by producer Dick Zanuck to helm the picture. Dorothy Tristan, Hancock's wife, was invited to rewrite Sackler's script. Universal Studios President Sid Sheinberg suggested that his wife Lorraine Gary "should go out on a boat and help to rescue the kids". Dick Zanuck got wind of this and replied "Over my dead body". With that Hancock was stuck in the middle of a war of the gargantuan movie moguls.

When the next draft of the JAWS 2 screenplay was turned in with Gary not going out to sea, Sackler effectively put the first nail into his own coffin. During rehearsals Sackler fired an actress with a small part who it turns out was the girlfriend of another Universal exec sealing his fate. Hancock's vision for the film was dark. On a Saturday evening in June 1977, after a meeting with the producers and Universal executives, the director was fired. He and his wife were unexpectedly whisked away to Rome and production was shut down for a few weeks. He had been involved in the film for eighteen months.

Echoing the production of the first film, Carl Gottlieb was enlisted to further revise the script, adding humour and reducing some of the violence.

At this point, Spielberg considered returning to direct the sequel. Over the Bicentennial weekend Spielberg hammered out a screenplay based on Quint's "Indianapolis Story" speech. Because of his contract for Close Encounters of the Third Kind, however, he would not be able to film for a further year, a gap too long for the producers. Production Designer Joe Alves (who would direct Jaws 3-D) and Verna Fields (who had been promoted to vice-president at Universal after her acclaimed editing on the original film) proposed that they co-directed it, but the request was declined by the DGA who, in the wake of events on the set of The Outlaw Josey Wales had instituted a ban on any cast or crew members taking over during production of a film. The reigns were eventually handed to Jeannot Szwarc, best known for the TV movie Bug and Night Gallery.

Roy Scheider reluctantly returned to reprise his role as Martin Brody. Universal agreed to count the film as the remaining two of his contractual obligations. The atmosphere was tense on the set, and he often argued with Szwarc.

Martha's Vineyard was again used as the location for the town scenes. The majority of filming, however, was at Navarre Beach in Florida, because of the warm weather. Cable Junction Island was a floating set that was towed out from the Shalimar Yacht Basin when needed and could be seen from the Garniers Bayou Bridge tied up at night with its faux beacon still blinking. The interior shots of the teen hang-out where they play pinball were filmed in the original location of the Hog's Breath Saloon on Okaloosa Island. This restaurant has recently relocated to Destin, Florida as its original building was susceptible to hurricane damage. The original building was still vacant and derelict in January 2005. The production company had to seek dredge and fill permits from the State of Florida's Department of Environmental Regulation to sink the sled that controlled Bruce the shark on the sea bottom.

Plot


Sheriff Martin Brody (Scheider) attempts to convince the local politicians that a recent rash of diver and skier disappearances are the victims of another great white shark attack on the small beach resort of Amity. After he causes a panic on a public beach by mistaking a school of blue fish for a shark, he is fired from his job. A group of teenagers, including Brody's sons and the son of the reluctant mayor (Hamilton), are attacked during a sailing regatta. It even attacks and sinks a rescue helicopter. Brody again encounters the shark face-to-face, electrocuting it with a power cable he makes the beast bite into.

Critical reaction


Although the film was initially met with mixed reviews, many revisionist critics have since experienced a newfound appreciation for the film following its successful release on DVD. Many people agree that John Williams' score is more complex than the original. The film was the highest-grossing sequel in history in 1978 and an all-time top 25 box office champ for more than two decades. Jaws 2 instituted the now common practice of sequels as a film franchise.

The film's tagline has become one of the most famous in film history: "Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water..." It has been parodied in numerous films; the most notable being the one for the feature film adaptation of the television series, Flipper, "This summer it's finally safe to go back in the water."

The famous tagline appeared in the song The Last Straw (from the Clutching at Straws album) by progressive rock band Marillion.

Reference


  • Loynd, Ray (1978) The Jaws 2 Log. London: W.H. Allen. ISBN 0426188683

External links


1978 films | Horror films | Universal films | Sequel films | American films | English-language films | Jaws

ジョーズ2 | Jaws 2 | Челюсти 2 (фильм) | Hajen 2

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Jaws 2".

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