Did Jaws and Dolly die in Moonraker? How did jaws get his metal teeth? Did Richard Kiel really have metal teeth? Many divers maintain that clothing, fins, and tanks should be painted in dull colors to avoid shark attacks. One group of experimenters, noticing the sharks' preference for a certain shade, dubbed the standard life jacket color "yum-yum yellow. Blood may only be a byproduct of wounded individuals flailing in the water. Hanks Searls wrote the novelization for Jaws 2. In Searls had begun writing his novel based off a screenplay by screenwriters Howard Sackler who had contributed uncredited rewrites to the Jaws screenplay in and Dorothy Tristan, who was married to John D.
Hancock, the first director chosen to film Jaws 2. After Hancock and Tristan were fired from the project, Searls, who was well into his manuscript by that point, had no choice but to continue working off of the abandoned screenplay. The novel therefore is based on that first screenplay by Sackler and Tristan. The opening to the novel and the film are nearly identical.
The water-skier scene in the novel and the film are nearly identical, except the boat is operated by a male in the novel and a female in the film. The "half-eaten killer whale" scene is not in the novel. The period of time between events differs. In the film, 4 years have passed between the death of the first shark and the events in Jaws 2. In the novel, 2 years have passed.
In the film, Len Peterson, a real estate developer, has begun construction on a new beachfront hotel on Amity for the purpose of expanding Amity into a luxurious seaside resort.
In the novel, the character is named Pete Peterson and he is also a real estate developer, but the project being constructed is a new casino that the locals describe as hoping to turn Amity into "the Las Vegas of the East".
In the film, despite the attacks of the first film, Amity has seemingly suffered no real economic downturn and appears to be as vibrant and bustling as it was 4 years ago. In the novel, Amity has suffered through economic hardship, to the point that Peterson's casino is seen as a godsend that will help keep Amity from going bankrupt. There is no such plotline in the novel. The infamous "the shark attacks a helicopter" scene is present in both works.
In the film, a helicopter sent by Brody to rescue the teens is attacked by the shark and sunk. In the novel, the Navy is running a routine exercise by dragging a sonar ball through the water. The shark attacks the sonar ball, snagging the helicopter and sending it into a freefall.
It crashes into the ocean, with the shark attacking and killing the co-pilot it is implied that the pilot died on impact. The "shark photo taken by the diver's camera" is present in both works. In the film, Phil Fogarty develops the film found in the camera while Brody is present.
When the photo comes out, Brody sees the snout and eye of the shark and attempts to use the photo to convince the town selectmen that there is another shark off the shores of Amity. In the novel, local pharmacist Nate Starbuck develops the film and sees the shark in one of the photos, becoming convinced that Brody lied about the first shark dying and that Brody, Mayor Larry Vaughn and the town selectmen are conspiring to cover it up. Starbuck decides to keep the photo and use it to blackmail Brody and Vaughn.
The crew shot the real-life shark footage off the coast of Australia. The open sea helped with realism, but it meant nothing without a realistic-looking shark. Spielberg just needed one that worked. Jaws does not label its finned foe as either gender. However, the Peter Benchley source novel presents the shark as male.
Much like the characters they played, actors Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss did not get along during much of the shooting of Jaws. In fact, Shaw often taunted Dreyfuss in between takes. Eventually, their feud reached a boiling point when Dreyfuss threw a glass of bourbon that Shaw had been drinking out the window.
Begin typing your search term above and press enter to search. Press ESC to cancel. Cover Letter. While Chrissy's fatality ranks among the two most terrifying, the death of young Alex Kintner Jeffrey Voorhees in Jaws is the most heartbreaking. The second fatality in the film comes when the venal Mayor Vaughn Murray Hamilton refuses to close Amity Beach for the 4th of July despite the presence of a great white shark. When hordes of vacationers hit the water and play in the surf, a sudden attack from Bruce leaves the shore in a chaotic state of pandemonium.
As all the parents collect their children and bring them back to safe haven, Mrs. Kintner Lee Fiero is left with the sad realization that her son was the one victimized in a vicious shark attack.
The death itself, while less graphic, is punctuated by John Williams' mortifying Oscar-winning score. The next character to die in Jaws is Ben Gardner, a character eaten off-screen by Bruce in the first half of the movie.
After cutting opening the tiger shark believed to be responsible for the deaths of Chriss and Alex, the contents of its stomach include zero human remains. Certain another shark is responsible, Brody and Hooper take the latter's boat on a nighttime search and find Ben's half-sunken boat nearby.
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