What Bites Beneath: Reflections on the Opening Scene of Jaws at 50
Steven Spielberg’s film adaptation of the Peter Benchley novel, Jaws is celebrating 50 years. The movie changed the way people looked at movies (and how they looked at the ocean), even how people talked about movies, with this film often credited as being the first “blockbuster,” due to the fact that filmgoers back in 1975, waited in long lines that would wrap around city blocks, in order to get their chance to see the thriller. Once inside, audiences were about to experience something they’d never seen (or heard) before. Within the first seconds and mere minutes into the film, Spielberg and composer John Williams created a significant cultural shift.
At first, the camera takes on the P.O.V. of something swimming underwater in the open ocean, making its way through the tufts of plants and other vegetation. There is a sense that this “something” is scanning and searching. Williams’ ominous orchestral score creates the sonic version of something wicked this way comes. Quickly, the scene cuts from ocean to land, water to fire, in the form of a bonfire on the beach, attended by a group of young people, smoking, drinking, and listening to music. A young man strikes up a conversation with a young woman named Chrissie (played by Susan Backlinie, who delivers an incredible, and unforgettable, performance). She impulsively wants to go skinny-dipping, and she, in silhouette, dives into the Atlantic, while the young man, too drunk to undress, passes out along the shore. She swims along the surface, and at one point, she spins onto her back, and much like a synchronized swimmer, raises one of her legs and points it up perpendicularly to the surface; her leg takes on a shape similar to a shark fin, as she gracefully descends below the surface (a smart nod to foreshadowing).
This is where the film begins to embrace some of the classic elements of the horror genre, which usually entails a young woman, now in a vulnerable state of undress, becoming the victim of the villain. (The iconic “shower scene” in Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 film, Psycho is one of the best examples of this formula.) There are two reasons the opening scene of Jaws became an instant (horror) classic:
Fear of the Unknown
The viewer is never shown what is underneath the surface, wreaking havoc, only Chrissie’s terrified, bloodcurdling reaction to it. She is pulled underwater for a brief second, then things quickly escalate as she’s pushed, then thrashed around like a rag doll. The underwater cause (and Spielberg) moves Chrissie directly to the forefront of the frame, as she almost pleads to the audience itself for help, only to suddenly disappear below the surface.
Life After Death
When Chrissie first dives into the ocean, there is a large buoy positioned off in the distance. The scene eventually changes from calm to unexpected chaos once Chrissie’s attack happens. Then, seemingly just as quickly as it started, Spielberg concludes the scene with a return to peace and tranquility, by once again showing the large buoy out in the open ocean, its bell ringing intermittently in the distance, like nothing horrific even happened.
And this is just the beginning, as Jaws continues on with so many other now-iconic scenes, and, of course, one of the most famous lines in film history: “You’re gonna need a bigger boat.” After 50 years, Jaws’ chilling opening scene still works for what is shown, yet more so, for what isn’t.
Double Trouble: Reflections on Brian De Palma’s Dressed to Kill
Brian De Palma’s Dressed to Kill is his (graphic) homage to Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 classic, Psycho: Here’s a list of the some of the referential elements:
De Palma’s film incorporates not one, but two shower scenes;
Its female lead, Kate Miller (Angie Dickinson is to Janet Leigh’s Marion Crane; both characters essentially good women “gone bad”) is the “Hitchcock blond”;
Instead of a shower curtain, an elevator door is the temporary barrier that separates victim from killer, safety from harm, life from death;
Nancy Allen (is to Vera Miles) and Keith Gordon (is to John Gavin) step in as crime solvers;
Allen with a “tall blond” behind her and flickering lightning is to Miles with Anthony Perkins and a swinging lightbulb;
A psychiatrist (David Margulies to Simon Oakland) summarizes personality conflict, arousal and the human psyche.
Sunglasses At Night: Liz (Nancy Allen) and the “tall blond.”
Filmways Pictures. Cinematographer: Ralf D. Bode.
Also take note of duality as a running theme: Spoilers ahead: Besides De Palma’s signature split-screen technique, his script includes a scene where Michael Caine’s Dr. Elliott is on the phone in his office, taking the time to spell out his last name: “E; double l; i; o; double t,” plus there are a number of scenes involving mirrors: Elliot becoming startled when he catches his reflection in a mirror, with another occurrence shown in the trailer below; when Allen’s character, a call girl named Liz, seduces Elliott during a therapy session, he glances down to a mirror on his desk, and smirks devilishly. The audience also learns near the end of the film that there are two “tall blonds,” one with good intentions, the other, as already previously noted.
Although De Palma is certainly influenced by the Master of Suspense, he still manages to add his own visual stamps and a dreamy score by Pino Donaggio to create an enduring film that feels anything but a carbon copy.
Watch “Hitchcock,” and Watch Hitch Watch
The classic film, Psycho recently turned 60. Here’s a review of the 2012 film, Hitchcock:
“Why do they keep looking for new ones, when they still have the original?” Just one of the questions uttered by the true Master of Suspense, Alfred Hitchcock (Anthony Hopkins) in the film, Hitchcock, directed by Sacha Gervasi. Based on Stephen Rebello’s book, Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho, the film traces the period after North By Northwest. The old adage of “You’re only as good as your last picture” starts to peck at the director, due, in part, to skepticism that Hitch could keep his streak going, especially at age 60.
Looking for his next project, Hitch and his trusted advisors, his wife and professional collaborator, Alma Reville (Helen Mirren) and assistant, Peggy Robertson (Toni Collette) search high and low for something that will stop those bent on looking for a new Master. Hitch discovers Robert Bloch’s book, Psycho, based on the life of the Wisconsin serial killer, Ed Gein. Not only having an appetite for sneaking drink and paté de foie gras, Hitch’s appetite for something unexpected needs satiating, and thus this question is posed to Alma: “What if someone really good made a horror picture?” Against all good sense, according to just about everyone around him—press; studio heads; even an initially reluctant Alma—he persists with the professional and monetary risk that is Psycho. The actress Janet Leigh (Scarlett Johansson) is cast to play the “bird,” Marion “Crane”; the actor Anthony Perkins (James D’Arcy) Norman Bates; the actress Vera Miles (Jessica Biel) Marion Crane’s sister, Lila.
Anthony Hopkins is credible and holds Hitch’s deep, garbled, slow-paced delivery, even saying quite convincingly the classic deadpan salutation, “Good evening,” made famous by Hitch as he welcomed viewers to his television series, “Alfred Hitchcock Presents.” Yet when Hitch, on set, directs Leigh in the scene from Psycho, where Marion is nervously driving her car, Hopkins’ vocal delivery slips, intentionally perhaps? One can’t help but hear the voice of Hannibal Lecter, Hopkins’ definitive role in The Silence of the Lambs.
Sound Familiar?
Hopkins - Hannibal - Hitchcock.
Orion Pictures. Cinematographer: Tak Fujimoto.
In Lambs, just as Lecter taunts Agent Starling during their first meeting, mocking in a southern drawl her “pure West Virginia” upbringing, speculating about her father being a “coal miner” and “how quickly the boys found you…sticky fumblings in the backseats of cars…,” Hitch taunts Leigh, calling Marion, “Daddy’s perfect little angel” and making reference to Marion’s “…sticky little lunchtime trysts with that oh-so-handsome failure Mr. Samuel Loomis.” Thankfully, the filmed highway on the screen behind the stunt car skips, causing Hopkins, now vocally back as Hitch, to stop the filming. Hitch then storms behind the blank screen, which casts his iconic silhouette, a self-referential silo added into most of his films.
Always in the Shadows
The iconic Hitchcock silhouette, as seen here in 1976’s Family Plot.
Universal Pictures. Cinematographer: Leonard J. South.
There’s also another predominant reference throughout Hitchcock. The Director of Photography, Jeff Cronenweth manages to frame shots that present several visual references to birds, creating a sense of foreshadowing to what would become Hitch’s next picture after Psycho, the aptly coined, The Birds.
Note:
Paintings on Hitch and Alma’s bathroom and bedroom walls.
The lampshade in the house library.
A silhouette of a bird over Hitch’s shoulder as he peers out through a set of blinds at Alma and her friend, Whit.
Bird sculptures on a liquor cabinet in Hitch’s studio office.
Birds flying low over the ocean as Alma and Whit talk on the beach.
A reference to birds in this John J. McLaughlin–penned screenplay: Vera Miles was contracted to do one more film for the notoriously involved, “he’s-always-watching” Hitch. As Biel’s Miles is changing in her dressing room, she says: “One more picture and I am free as a bird.”
Oh, Flock!
After Psycho came The Birds.
Universal Pictures. Cinematographer: Robert Burks.
The relationship between Miles and Hitch is also briefly explored. Hitch all but ignores Miles on set, and we later discover why; his focus is on Leigh, yet another fantasy blond, a style with which the director was famously enamored. Miles goes so far as to offer some cautionary advice to Leigh, after Leigh endures Dr. Lecter’s, I mean, Hitch’s relentless taunting. Hitchcock definitely highlights Hitch’s obsession with his work, and perhaps through speculation and creative license, the viewer is able to see just how consumed—voluntarily or involuntarily—he could be with his subject matter, no matter how dark and sinister. Disappointment by women play out often as well, providing a glimpse into Hitch’s sensitivity to feeling abandoned, so much so, extreme control at any cost was exuded.
On a related note, the film, rightly so, focuses equally on wife/mother figure, Alma, spotlighting how important professional collaboration and personal support are to the birth of a creative project, and in the case of Psycho, how the absence of this union could have easily resulted in something “stillborn.” Together, Master and Mistress of Suspense became the proud parents of, arguably, the best thriller in film history.