JAWS 2: 4K UHD Blu-ray (Universal, 1978) Universal Home Video
“Just when you
thought it was safe to go back into the (theater)…” It is difficult, if not impossible to imagine
a time when summer blockbusters did not rule the roost in Hollywood. But prior
to Steven Spielberg’s Jaws (1975) the industry had pretty much parceled
out its winners, alongside its losers, in a non-discriminate and evenly timed
spread throughout the year, hoping against hope every picture they made would
turn a handsome profit to keep them afloat. The 1970’s were a time of great
uncertainty for anyone working in the picture biz. The venerable MGM – the
biggest and most powerful studio had fallen prey to Las Vegas financier, Kirk
Kerkorian, who wasted no time pillaging its vast warehouses, bulldozing its
back lots and effectively dismantling its production facilities. 2oth
Century-Fox experienced several seismic shifts in its boardroom, effectively
ousting both Darryl F. and Richard Zanuck from their coveted perches - Fox, no
more the pop n’ son run studio.
Most of the big empires of
yesteryear were taken over by conglomerates whose executive brain trust
possessed neither the wherewithal nor the actual interest to effectively ‘run’
a movie studio (except, maybe into the ground), though very much fascinated by
the prestige that went with the real estate; thus, Gulf + Western acquired
Paramount – ever-threatening to shudder its facilities for good (a fate
narrowly averted by an impassioned plea and string of successful pictures put
into production by newly appointed V.P. Robert Evans). Warner Bros. already allied
with Seven Arts, was now acquired by Kinney – a mortuary company. Some would
argue this latter acquisition rather fitting, given the perilous state of the
movie business then, already collectively put on life support and in very real
danger of expiring before the decade was through. Pundits in Variety –
the showbiz Bible - began to eulogize the end of an era. ‘Movies’, so it was
foretold, would be a fondly recalled pastime in the American experience, like
riding in a horse-drawn buggy or having fresh milk daily delivered to the front
stoop.
Ah, but the industry was about to
experience one of its most miraculous reprieves. In this era before ‘clever’
market research took over (and frankly, utterly gutted the chances for
originality to proliferate in the marketplace) Hollywood in general – and
Universal Studios in particular, judged movies on a picture-by-picture basis.
Franchises were a rarity. Even so, the truly epic grosses on Spielberg’s Jaws
(it made a whopping $470 million on a $9m budget) necessitated a follow-up, if
for no other reason, than to see if ‘the fluke’ could be duplicated, and later,
turned into a hat trick. Alas, Spielberg wanted absolutely no part of it,
adding, “making a sequel to anything is just a cheap carny trick.” Given
Spielberg’s later about-face on the prospect, perhaps he had merely been rash
in recalling the hellacious setbacks befallen him while hand-crafting his
masterpiece (constant studio interference, daily threats to cancel the shoot, a
mechanical shark that would not behave as designed, inclement weather, and
chronic bouts of sea sickness, etc. et al). Besides, Spielberg was still in the
‘creation’ phase of his career, with bigger, brighter and decidedly better
stories yet to tell. Thus, even the word ‘sequel’ seemed hateful and,
decidedly, not in his lexicon. Yet, if a sequel ‘had’ to be made, then
executive producers, David Brown and Richard Zanuck were unwilling to allowing
anyone else to do it. And so, came director, Jeannot Szwarc’s Jaws 2
(1978) like the proverbial ‘fish out of water’, schlepping all the way
back to Amity, U.S.A. (or rather, Martha’s Vineyard and Navarre Beach in
Florida, with a few underwater inserts shot along the coral reefs near Catalina
Island).
Almost immediately Brown and Zanuck
were faced with a series of stalemates that threatened to cancel the sequel for
good. Their original choice of director after Spielberg refused to partake,
John D. Hancock, had been enticed to the project by a thin outline, later
fleshed out by Arthur C. Clarke (of 2001 celebrity); a narrative meant
to explore a mysterious object implanted at the bottom of the sea, providing
artificial intelligence to the great white sharks, and, drawing on the speech
given by Robert Shaw in the original movie, about the sinking of the
Indianapolis and subsequent ordeal of its survivors at sea – a thousand men
whittled to three-hundred by repeated and ravenous shark attacks. Shaw’s monologue may have been one of the
most memorable moments in Jaws, but it seemed poor fodder for a sequel –
at least to Brown and Zanuck, electing to take their audiences back to more
familiar territory. Hence, Jaws 2 would return to the fictional town of
Amity and more familiar faces: Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary and Murray Hamilton
among them. Ironically, it was this paralleling of events first explored in the
original movie that began to weigh on Scheider, who frequently clashed with
third choice of director, Jeannot Szwarc on the set. The screenplay by Carl
Gottlieb and Howard Sackler was not so much of a continuation as a retread.
Nevertheless, this informality proved a comfort to audiences in between those
otherwise nail-biting moments of tension Szwarc managed to create in the style
of Spielberg’s classic.
The best that can be said of
Szwarc’s sequel is that it convincingly apes Spielberg’s finessed nuances in
the original Jaws, capturing his cadence if not entirely his flair, but
providing an overriding arc of visual continuity between both movies. It is, in
fact, quite possible to watch Jaws and Jaws 2 back-to-back and
feel as if never having left the beach. Roy Scheider looks as though he has
only just come from the water, having survived the previous confrontation with
the great white – still, Amity’s amiable sheriff, Martin Brody, still married
to the ever-devoted Ellen (Gary), still hamstrung by Mayor Larry Vaughn’s
(Hamilton) blind ignorance of the overwhelming facts and micromanagement of the
pending tourist season. Mayor Vaughn’s thirst for the all-mighty buck precedes all
common sense until, of course, it is too late.
Jaws 2 has enough of the original elemental jabs of pleasure –
and terror – stolen from its predecessor to overcome and/or mask any major
misgivings in its artistic ennui, the central performances solid and appealing,
backed by some convincing cameos. Yes, the picture relies a tad too heavily on
the infusion of ‘teen culture’ to appeal to the ‘youth market’; Brody’s boys –
Mike (Mark Gruner) and Sean (Marc Gilpin) sufficiently aged, placed in imminent
peril along with a host of other taut young flesh, some surviving the carnage,
others, less fortunate. And yes, the
likes of a Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfus are sorely missed – the latter,
having survived in Jaws but, like Spielberg, unwilling to return,
replaced by the only so-so Collin Wilcox Paxton in a pitilessly brief cameo as
Dr. Lureen Elkins. Given its familiar retread, Jaws 2 is not as lethally
leaden or turgid as critics then and now continue to suggest.
After John D. Hancock’s concept for
Jaws 2 was rejected by Universal President Sidney Sheinberg, the newly
revised screenplay began with a return to Amity, now something of a ghost-town,
the tourist trade killed off by the events established in the first movie.
Developer, Len Peterson (Joseph Mascolo) and Mayor Vaughn are desperate to see
their new joint venture into condo and resort development succeed, partly to
revitalize the local economy, but moreover, because their investments have come
from mob money they are unable to pay back. Depending on the source, Hancock
was either fired for this darker introduction to the picture, his proposed
plans to shoot a sequence where Ellen Brody goes out in a boat to rescue her
children, for ongoing malfunctions with the mechanical shark – resulting in
costly delays – or, for his firing of another actress in a minor role who also
turned out to be the girlfriend of one of Universal’s more prominent
executives. It took eighteen months for
Universal to tire of Hancock. In the interim, Spielberg was rumored to have had
a change of heart regarding ‘sequels.’ In fact, he had ironed out the details
of a screenplay based on Quint’s Indianapolis speech, submitted to Universal for
further consideration. Whether or not Universal ever entertained either this
script or recalling Spielberg is, frankly, moot, since his commitments on Close
Encounters of the Third Kind would have delayed production on Jaws 2
by more than a year – a span Uni could not afford to squander. Instead, they brought back Carl Gottlieb to
revise Hancock’s script, lightening the mood and trimming down the violence to
ensure a PG rating. It was Gottlieb who brought back Brody’s ineffectual Deputy
Sheriff (Jeffrey Kramer), a superb comic foil. Gottlieb also added carefully
placed pithy one-liners, elevating the sarcasm to better compliment the
tension, rather than defuse it. When all was said and done, Gottlieb could be
proud of his efforts on Jaws 2. But it is rumored his stipend for these
rewrites cost Universal more than if they had simply hired him to write the
screenplay from scratch.
The, as yet, rudderless project was
then pitched to Universal to be co-directed by Production Designer Joe Alves
(later to helm Jaws 3-D) and Verna Fields (recently promoted to VP), a
proposal shot down by the Directors Guild of America. With time critical to
meet the release date, Universal offered the captain’s wheel to Jeannot Szwarc,
a director of limited film and TV experience, brought in haste, who elected to
stage the complex water-skiing sequences first, thus giving Gottlieb more time
to massage out the dramatic kinks in the rest of the story. Szwarc was adamant Jaws
2 give audiences what they had come to see – the shark. In the original,
Spielberg delayed this ‘big reveal’ out of necessity – the mechanical shark
designed for Jaws proving its own unwieldy leviathan and never to work
entirely to his satisfaction. Hence, Spielberg used his imagination to convey
its menace, relying heavily on John Williams’ score to heighten its foreboding.
This would not do for a sequel as audience already primed by what they had seen
in the first movie, would be expecting a lot more. Thus, Szwarc busied himself
off the coast of Florida cooking up new ways to show just enough shark to keep
audiences sweaty-palmed in their seats. SFX Mechanical Supervisors, Robert
Mattey and Roy Arbogast set about building three new sharks for Jaws 2,
adding a scar across its rubberized right cheek, presumably a wound incurred by
a boat explosion. The pair was also responsible for designing Cable Junction,
the fictional power station built as a rescue port for the movie’s climactic
showdown on an isolated stretch of island rock. In reality, Cable Junction was
little more than a floating barge covered in fiberglass facsimiles.
As before, shooting Jaws 2
off coastal waters proved a trial by fire. Cast and crew were repeatedly tested
by restlessly shifts in the tides and strong winds, also by jellyfish, real
sharks, waterspouts and several hurricane warnings. Szwarc was to discover to
his chagrin the salt water corroded the metal mechanical workings of his
sharks, causing their complicated hydraulics to repeatedly seize. One evening,
the director was also notified Cable Junction had broken loose from its
moorings and had drifted away, bound for Cuba. Patience was further strained by
Roy Scheider’s absolute contempt for Szwarc. At one point a physical
altercation insued, resulting in David Brown and Verna Field’s intervention to
restore the peace. Scheider had been cajoled by Sidney Sheinberg to partake, promised
to absolve the actor from his prior 3-picture commitment to Universal if he
agreed to do Jaws 2. To further
sweeten the deal, Sheinberg quadrupled Scheider’s base salary, adding a
percentage of the profits to their agreement. Reportedly, Scheider collected a
cool $500,000 for a mere 12 weeks work, plus $35,000 for each additional week
of overruns. Estimates differ, but costly delays and minor mishaps aside, Szwarc
and his crew would continue to patronize local businesses for constant repairs
to the tune of $400,000. By some accounts, over $80,000 per day was spent in
Florida, the picture’s final budget topping out at a then staggering $30
million - three times the cost of the original movie and making Jaws 2
the most expensive movie ever produced by Universal to date. Arguably, the
results were worth it as Jaws 2 grossed somewhere between $187 and 209
million at the box office – a colossal hit and, to date, the highest grossing
sequel of all time.
Our story begins at the bottom of
the waters just off Amity Island. Two non-descript novice scuba divers in
search of the infamous wreck of the Orca prepare to take several photographs
with their underwater camera. Alas, the sudden appearance of a great white
startles both men, each almost immediately devoured as the automatic camera
shutter continues to snap photos of the bloody carnage taking place. We surface
top-side. Chief Martin Brody is hurried by ferry to Amity Island, late for the
ribbon-cutting ceremony to inaugurate Len Peterson’s new seaside resort. Ellen
Brody is doing Len’s publicity. While Mayor Vaughn delivers a speech with his
usual flair for pontification, Martin quietly observes as his wife is somewhat
manhandled by her boss. This does not sit well with Martin, although he is big
enough to realize Ellen can fight her own battles without his intervention. The
couple’s two sons, Mike and Sean are islanders with a passion for sailing, especially
Mike, whose teen entourage of friends would much rather wallow away their
afternoons than get part-time jobs, something Martin expects Mike to do this
year to start saving money for college. Meanwhile the great white strikes a
second time, devouring Terri (Christine Freeman), a water skier being dragged
behind a speed boat driven by her mother, Diane (Jean Coulter). At first Diane
does not realize her daughter has slipped beneath the waves. However, as she circles
back in search of Terri, Diane’s boat is nearly capsized by the shark. In fear
for her life, Diane attempts to douse it in gasoline, spilling more on herself
in the process and, in full panic mode, firing a flare gun to repel the attack.
The flammable liquid ignites and the boat is incinerated in a hellish
explosion, witnessed by two of Mike’s friends, Tina Wilcox (Ann Dusenberry) and
Eddie Marchand (Gary Dubin), who are making out on the beach, and, an old woman
(Susan French), who telephones the incident in to Brody’s office.
The explosion has severely scarred
the great white, though hardly to deter it from pursuing an ambitious campaign
of terror. A day later, Tina and her friends stumble upon the rotting remains
of a killer whale washed ashore near a lighthouse. The mammal has several
prominent bite marks. Suspecting the worse, Brody alerts Mayor Vaughn they may
have another shark problem on their hands, a hypothesis concurred by Dr. Elkins
who has measured the bite radius. Vaughn is, as before, extremely apprehensive
about revealing these findings to the community at large. After all, he has the
welfare of the community – also, his own pocket book – to consider. Besides, he
is quite willing to chalk up the explosion as a ‘boating accident’ and nothing
more, despite the fact Brody has managed to recover Diane’s grotesquely charred
remains from the surf, still clinging to a piece of driftwood from the wreck.
Brody is mildly disgusted by Vaughn’s callousness, electing to act as a lookout
with a pair of binoculars atop the beach’s observation deck. Vaughn is very
nervous, especially since he and Len have brought a bevy of reporters to the
beach that very afternoon to announce ‘Phase Two’ of their upscale condos. Too
bad for everyone, Brody becomes distracted by a school of bluefish fast
approaching the shore. Mistaking them for a great white about to turn afternoon
bathers into a feeding frenzy, Brody begins shouting orders in a panic from his
perch, hurrying to ground level, pistols drawn as both Sean and Michael look
on. The crowd is terrorized more so by Brody’s erratic behavior, the scene
witnessed by the reporters too, who suspect someone in Amity is not telling the
whole truth. Enraged by this display, Vaughn calls an emergency town council
meeting and, with the other members, votes Brody out of his job, appointing his
ineffectual Deputy, Hendricks as the new purveyor of the law.
Martin returns home to find Ellen
comforting as ever. She can see how the events he suffered through a few years
ago are still ever-present in his mind. Nevertheless, Martin is
self-deprecating. He gets properly pissed to drown his sorrows. However, before
this, he permanently grounds Mike. No sailing from now on. This, however, puts
a definite crimp in Mike’s plans to woo Jackie Peters (Donna Wilkes) the new
girl in town. So, while Martin is sleeping off his hangover, Mike steals the
keys to his truck. The getaway is thwarted by Sean, who forces Mike to take him
along. At the docks, one of Mike’s
friends, Marge (Martha Swatek) agrees to take custody of Sean, who just seems
to be getting in Mike’s way. The sailing entourage is rounded out by Jackie,
Eddie, Tina, Timmy (G. Thomas Dunlop), Brooke Peters (Gigi Vorgan), Bob (Billy
Van Zandt) and Doug Fetterman (Keith Gordon). En route to their prearranged
destination, the small ensemble of catamarans pass a team of divers, led by
instructor, Tom Andrews (Barry Coe). But today, their deep-sea expedition will
prove anything but routine. Tom narrowly escapes an encounter with the great
white. Panicking, he rises to the surface too quickly and suffers an embolism
as a result.
Meanwhile Eddie and Tina remain a
‘safe’ distance behind the rest of the group. Eddie is hoping to initiate a
little romance on the side. Regrettably, love is not in the air. Without
warning or provocation their small boat is broadsided by the shark causing
Eddie to be tossed overboard. The great white drags the boat with Tina still
inside it some thirty-feet ahead before setting it adrift. Now, the shark
circles back for Eddie, unable to swim for it before he is dragged under and
devoured. Perhaps to add a bit of verisimilitude to this moment, actor, Gary
Dubin could not swim a stroke. His look of complete fear during this sequence
is genuinely felt, despite being surrounded by skilled divers just below the
water’s surface. Tina is left shell-shocked and very much isolated in the
middle of nowhere. Back on the mainland, Brody suspects Tom’s fear was hastened
by an encounter with a shark. When the pictures from the recovered diver’s
camera are developed they reveal a blurry image of the great white. Still, Len,
Mayor Vaughn and others, sitting on town council fail to acknowledge it as
such. Frustrated, Brody now learns Mike has disobeyed his direct orders. With
Deputy Hendricks’ complicity, Brody and Ellen sail the police coast guard boat
toward open waters, eventually happening upon Eddie’s boat, seemingly deserted.
Mercifully, Brody discovers Tina huddled at the bow and wracked with fear. Her
slurred declarations of “sh…shark!” tells Brody all he needs to know.
Leaving, Tina in Ellen and Hendricks’ care, Martin now makes for the open
waters alone.
Alas, Brody is too late to prevent
the shark from cold-bloodedly attacking the teens. At one point, Mike is
knocked unconscious and thrown into the water; narrowly pulled to safety by his
friends. Marge is not so lucky. In attempting to rescue Sean, she is swallowed
whole by the great white as the others look on. Experiencing a brief lull
between attacks, Jackie leads everyone in a solemn prayer, a sequence directly
inspired by Théodore Géricault’s famous French painting, Le Radeau de la
Méduse (a.k.a. The Wreck of the Medusa 1818–1819). As the
beleaguered troop float towards Cable Junction, they are spotted by a Coast
Guard marine helicopter. The pilot (Jerry M. Baxter) successfully lands the
copter on its pontoons, offering to toss the kids a towline. But then the shark
emerges, as bloodthirsty as ever, sinking its teeth into one of the pontoons
and dragging the entire craft beneath the surface of the ocean, the spinning
blades flung from its centrifuge, projectile remnants decapitating the
catamarans’ sails. The teens are now left to drift, presumably out to sea or
until the shark returns to finish them off.
Mike directs his father to Cable Junction where Brody is reunited with
the rest of his son’s friends, understandably grateful to see him. However,
before Brody can toss them a towline, the great white attacks. In the resulting
chaos, the teens abandon their makeshift rafts to swim for the island. Brody
entices the shark to attack his vessel instead. His towline has snagged a heavy
underwater electrical cable. To put an end to this man-eating leviathan once
and for all, Brody uses himself as bait, goading the shark into its final
approach with the electric cable held in front of him. The great white leaps
out of the water and bites down hard on the cable, electrocuting itself in a
fiery short circuit as everyone look on in horror, then elation. Their ordeal
at an end, Brody collects the survivors into the Coast Guard boat and prepares
to head for home.
In hindsight, Jaws 2 is an
affecting and effective sequel. Director, Jeannot Szwarc really does not get
enough love or respect for his sophistication in telling – or rather, retelling
- this rather straight-forward ‘shark eats man’ horror story. Szwarc’s
last-minute inventiveness salvages the picture from going even more over budget
than it ultimately did, but also, grounding its more fantastic elements and
danger in a solidly handcrafted mélange that not only finds its peaks to scare,
shock and revile, but gradually builds upon an exceptional tautness, whipped
into a veritable – almost western genre-inspired showdown for the movie’s
climax. Despite innumerable setbacks that might have caused another director to
simply move on and finish the damn thing half-heartedly, Szwarc is giving us
the very best he has to offer. His ingenuity is on display in virtually every
shot, finding new and highly intelligent visualizations to cover a lot of the
same narrative territory. It is still a ‘shark eats man’ story. But Szwarc
comes up with some truly efficient moments that work as homage, but more
importantly, for sheer thrills to excite anew this second time around. Jaws
2 is a standalone piece. It doffs its cap to Spielberg’s masterpiece but
does not fall all that short of becoming one in its own right. Critics of the
day did not agree. But hey, what do the critics know anyway?!?
Just when you thought it was safe
to start buying Universal 4K Blu-rays again. Aside: at least for me, Uni 4K
have an uncanny knack of only playing sometimes. They are notorious for locking
up in my Magnetar UDP800, Sony UBP-X800M2 and Panasonic DP-UB9000P1K. Problem
child efforts from Uni remain the original Jaws (which will not play in
any of my players in 4K, so I am stuck with the Blu on that one, the first and
second Monster sets, Dracula and The Wolf Man giving me the most
grief, and the first Hitchcock set, in which Psycho and The Birds
clot up with disturbing regularity. What a waste of money!) I have read
articles to suggest all that needs to be done is to gently ‘clean’ these discs
from the ‘off gas’ effect with a lint free cloth, naturally, not to rub in
concentric circles, but from the inner part of the disc to its outward edge.
This, folks, hasn’t done the trick. And yes, I contacted Uni Home Video
numerous times to provide a little clarity. No such luck. No reply, actually.
So, customer service is not their thing. If anyone has a better solution, I’d
be willing to entertain it. But I digress! Suffice it to suggest, it is
decidedly not my players. It’s the discs, as no other 4K’s coming from rival studios
have such issues with my gear.
Jaws 2 is no
exception. It took me 3 tries to view this disc in its entirety without lock-up
on all of the aforementioned players.
Eventually, the Sony resolved the issue after I lightly ‘cleaned’ the
disc with a lint-free cloth. While Uni did a rather slapdash job on the old
standard Blu-ray release, herein they appear to have gone back to the drawing board.
Jaws 2 exhibits some breathtaking colors, leaning to a warm palette.
Contrast is excellent. Fine details abound. There is some very minor black
crush, but otherwise, this one is smartly turned out and will surely impress. There
are a handful of softer-looking shots, though I suspect these were always a
part of the original cinematography and not a flaw in this mastering effort. Jaws
2 retains its 2.0 DTS mono mix with bass levels during John Williams’
opening theme obscenely distorted at normal listening levels. No new extras
either. There are featurettes on the ‘making of’, John Williams’ score, and,
reflections by Keith Gordon, plus deleted scenes, a stills gallery and a badly
worn trailer. Bottom line: Jaws 2 is an entertaining summer blockbuster.
Uni’s 4K, when it plays, is a solid effort. Judge and buy accordingly.
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
4
VIDEO/AUDIO
4.5
EXTRAS
2
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