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Saturday, 23 February 2013

Jaws (1975)

Stars: Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, Richard Dreyfuss 
Director: Steven Spielberg 

"Slow ahead." I can go slow ahead, come on down here and chum some of this shit! - Chief Brody

Synopsis: A large great white shark terrorises a small island holiday community. The chief of police enlists the help of a marine biologist and experienced fisherman to catch and kill the shark.

Although maybe a little dated now, and other films have come out with more realistic sharks (Deep Blue Sea), no shark film has brought back the terror of not wanting to swim in the ocean since the original Jaws. Deep Blue Sea also revolved around dangerous great white sharks, but it was set in a remote research facility in the middle of the ocean. Jaws brought the action, and terror, right to the beach. Young children running and playing on the sand, families playing in the water, young boys tossing a football back and forth. Little do these people know that just below the surface of the water, a 20 footer (no, 25 footer) is lurking, waiting for an unsuspecting bather to wade too close. Unfortunately, that bather turns out to be Alex Kitner, and the rubber raft he was floating on washes up on the shore a few moments later, a large section of the raft bitten off.

I first saw Jaws when I was about seven years old. I still enjoy watching it today, and can quote most of the lines from the film. I recently found the clip on Youtube of Chief Brody (Roy Scheider) chumming the water behind Captain Quint's (Robert Shaw) boat the Orca. That scene still brings the hairs up on the back of my neck! Scheiders' reaction makes me wonder if Steven Spielberg told him that the shark would burst out of the water like that - if not, he was a very good actor! His famous comment "You're gonna need a bigger boat..." has gone on through generations, not only relating to this film, but also in most cases of daily life where someone has an insurmountable problem.


I bought the 25th anniversary edition on DVD a few years ago, and was pleased to see quite a lot of interviews with some of the cast members and Steven Spielberg. The shark used in the film was mechanical, covered with foam rubber, painted to look like a great white. A filming technique I really liked was that even though the Orca was never more than a few miles off the coast of Martha's Vineyard, where filming took place, the shots were always filmed with the cameras pointing out to sea, to make us believe they were in the middle of nowhere. The intensity of the drama never really lets up either. Quint's eerie retelling of the sinking of the USS Indianapolis adds additional suspense to the after dinner scene, and just as you think things are about to quiet down, the shark rams the boat, causing a breach in the hull, which in turn starts the problems they experience in trying to get back to shore.

Richard Dreyfuss plays the part of Matt Hooper, the plucky marine biologist who tries to analyse and photographs the shark as it circles the boat. In trying to take photographs of the shark, he asks Chief Brody to go to the end of the gangplank on the front of the Orca - "Will you go to the end of the pulpit please? I need something in the foreground to give it some scale!"
"Foreground, my ass!" replies Chief Brody, as he doesn't want to fall off the cramped deck.

Matt Hooper's attempt to poison the shark with a shark dart from an aluminium divers cage does not end well, the cage in which he is lowered over the side of the boat taking the majority of the brunt of the shark's attack, and luckily, Hooper manages to escape and hide, while the shark continues its attack on the boat.

Adding to all this action and suspense is the brilliant musical score composed by John Williams; a haunting main overture indicating the shark's arrival, and a spectacular chase and action theme overlaying the intense and suspenseful parts of the movie.

In my opinion, definitely a film to watch over again, and if you haven't seen it, I recommend either renting the DVD or checking your local TV listings to see if its showing. Overall rating 7/10.

Jaws should be available from most good DVD retailers.

Thursday, 21 February 2013

A Good Day to Die Hard

Stars: Bruce Willis, Jai Courtney, Sebastian Koch, Sergei Kolesnikov & Yahiya Snigir 

Synopsis: A concerned John McClane travels to Russia to find and help his seemingly wayward son, only to reveal his son is an undercover CIA agent attempting to uncover a nuclear arms deal.

Bruce Willis is getting old, and it is starting to show in this movie. The story was pretty reasonable, and the action, albeit a little far-fetched in places (John McClane driving a Mercedes G-Wagon across the roofs of cars in pursuit of the bad guys) was in my opinion keeping up with the gunfights and explosions we're used to in the past 25 years of Die Hard movies.

The producers seem to have returned to the no holds barred violence, the blood and guts and language that the first film had. As a result, this film has gone back to a 16LV age restriction. Quite a few "Die Hard" one-liners have returned as well, and true Die Hard fans will be pleased to hear that "Yippie ki yay, motherf***er" is back.

Bruce Willis still performs quite well in his lead role, but I feel he was a bit overshadowed by his son, Jack McClane, portrayed by Jai Courtney. Being an undercover CIA agent, he has all the fighting and guns skills one would come to expect from years of training in the United States secret service, although he is no Jason Bourne. Sebastian Koch plays the role of Yuri Komarov, a previous nuclear expert working at Chernobyl, imprisoned by corrupt government official Viktor Chagarin (portrayed by Sergei Kolesnikov) who is demanding the handover of top secret files which can incriminate Chagarin. The alternative is an unfair trial for Komarov, who chooses to testify against Chagarin. Also along for the ride is Yuri Komarov's daughter, Irina, played by Yahiya Snigir who is used as bait to lure Komarov into revealing the location of the hidden files.

It was nice to see a decent action film again. John McClane rebuilds his relationship with his wayward son, much like Indiana and Henry Jones from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. I liked how McClane toyed with his sons pride after the bad guys escaped: "Yeah, lets just put a Bandaid on, go home and let them get away with it." There is a reference to McClane's antics from the first Die Hard; his son jokingly commenting he could have also wiped out a whole building full of terrorists.

All in all, it was an entertaining romp, good to rewatch on a Saturday afternoon with some popcorn. Overall I rate the film 6/10.

A Good Day To Die Hard is now showing in cinemas countrywide

View the trailer here.