Tiburón: la historia de un clásico
Viaje creativo tras "Tiburón" de Spielberg en 1975, basada en la novela de Benchley. Usa metraje de archivo para narrar la producción, la escritura de Benchley y la posterior obsesión por lo... Leer todoViaje creativo tras "Tiburón" de Spielberg en 1975, basada en la novela de Benchley. Usa metraje de archivo para narrar la producción, la escritura de Benchley y la posterior obsesión por los tiburones.Viaje creativo tras "Tiburón" de Spielberg en 1975, basada en la novela de Benchley. Usa metraje de archivo para narrar la producción, la escritura de Benchley y la posterior obsesión por los tiburones.
- Self - Filmmaker
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- Self - President and COO, MCA Inc. & Universal Pictures
- (material de archivo)
- Self - Author
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Opiniones destacadas
1. It shines much more of a light on Benchley and his family and how the book happened.
2. It is clearer the role shark whizzes Ron and Valerie Taylor played and their value to Spielberg.
3. The role played by, and the impact its creation had on, the Martha's Vineyard community - I had no idea how many locals took part including starring in the film.
4. A more detailed and thoughtful look at its legacy, including Robert Shaw's son's play.
The only elements I wasn't sure of were the John Williams section - fine, but nothing new and what Emily Blunt, bless her, was doing there - assume this was done in between filming Spielberg's new film in which she stars. Crucially though, the main interest is Spielberg's candour. Obviously he's a great director etc etc, but he rarely really opens up - he tends to make a lot of considered observations about all the great guys in Hollywood. Here he does and indeed from watching him talk and the mental anguish it gave him, it was a miracle the thing got made, particularly given the grief he was given by Universal executives and THAT one actor, whoever they are - you need to watch the film!
Overall then I can't say it's a ground breaking documentary, but it is interesting and has some good new stuff in it and after all it is one of the greatest films ever made and therefore richly deserving of the accolade.
The Definitive Inside Story gives great detail on the behind the scenes events. I grew up in Florida and was a surfer at the time Jaws came out. Up to that point when we were out surfing sharks never really came to mind but after Jaws they certainly did. One day while out surfing, 3 or 4 sharks were spotted between us and the beach, they were about 80-100 feet away and just kept on swimming.
Anyway, I digress. See this doc for a lot of good info on the film.
I also appreciate that Emily Blunt likes Jaws, but I have no idea why she was such a prominent interviewee here. Everyone else is someone who was involved with the movie, related to someone (usually deceased) who was involved with the movie, some kind of shark expert, or a filmmaker who (usually) talks about being inspired by Jaws directly. And they're generally genre filmmakers, even if including them feels like a bit of a stretch. But what Emily Blunt can bring to this, not even serving as someone who can remember the film coming out, since she was born eight years after 1975... I don't know. Insane.
That's the thing most worth harping on about. Everything else here is serviceable. It packages behind-the-scenes info (a lot of it well-known) into an easy-to-watch documentary. They could've spent a bit more time on the film's second half, though. And maybe a lot less time with EMILY BLUNT WHY ARE YOU HERE EMILY AAAAGGGHHHHH.
Couple of comments: this is directed by Lauren Bouzereau ("Faye"). He gets the full cooperation of Spielberg and others involved in the making of Jaws. Most notably, a number of the Martha's Vineyard locals that were in the movie reflect on it (including several of the then-kid actors). Most insightful for me is the part that deal with the building of the 3 sharks used in the film, and how all of that operated (or better: "didn't operate 80% of the time", per Spielberg). All of it is super enjoyable and the documentary flies by in no time. As an aide, I grew up in Belgium and I had just turned 15 when I saw Jaws with my parents at a (sold out) movie theater in Brussels. I still remember it like it was yesterday. A collective movie viewing experience unlike any other in my entire life. Unforgettable.
"Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story" started streaming a few days ago. I caught it on Hulu just last night. This documentary is currently rated 100% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes. Whether you lived through the summer of 1975 and saw it then, or you saw it at some point later, I'd readily suggest you check out this documentary, and draw your own conclusion.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaReleased on Blu-ray as part of the 4K UHD/Blu-ray 50th Anniversary Edition
- ErroresAt the 32 second mark of the movie, Spielberg says, "I was in New York at the time and I went with two friends of mine, Janet Maslin and Albert Brooks." Then a picture of a woman is flashed on the screen, presumably Maslin, but is in fact a picture of Spielberg's now ex-wife, Amy Irving (m. 1985-1989).
CORRECTION: The picture shown onscreen is indeed famous film critic Janet Maslin, who did have curly hair in the 1970s, much like Irving did.
- Citas
Self - Filmmaker: I held filmmakers and directors off as people that existed in another world. And I remember feeling like Spielberg was a guy who was kind of from my side of the world. And that was the beginning of me feeling like, "Maybe I could do something like this, too."
- ConexionesFeatures 20,000 leguas de viaje submarino (1954)
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 28min(88 min)
- Color