Quint's story about the USS Indianapolis is 100% true. Actually happened......
@conureron37922 ай бұрын
So spellbinding. Allowed the viewer to imagine the terror they went through.
@Beardo251716 күн бұрын
Only one fact he got wrong. It happened July 29th not June
@johnnehrich96012 ай бұрын
In the era before CGI, movie makers were quite adept at making terrifying movies without ANY super special "monster" effects. Just look at what Hitchcock was able to do. In Jaws, they had terrible problems with the mechanical shark, particularly in trying to make it work in the salt water of the open ocean. Many consider it made the movie a lot better, as we just get hints of the shark until the end scenes - really builds up the suspense.
@Ranadicus2 ай бұрын
The story Quint told about the USS Indianapolis was mostly true. The Indianapolis was a heavy cruiser which had been tasked under the utmost secrecy with delivering enriched uranium to the Island of Tinian where it was used to construct the atomic bomb that would later be detonated over Hiroshima. It was after completing that delivery that the ship was torpedoed and sunk. Unlike the story in the movie, distress calls were not only sent but also received, however due to a combination of laziness and incompetence by radio operators the calls weren't acted upon and the men weren't rescued until nearly 4 days later when an American plane on routine patrol happened to spot the remaining survivors adrift in the ocean.
@RichardM13662 ай бұрын
The death of the shark was changed to the explosive ending. The shark's death was from a lethal wound with the harpoon and the barrels wore it out. Steven Spielberg wanted a great ending. The head was removed and filled with red paint, squid, and kegs of dynamite. If it failed the movie would have to be scrapped. It was one out of a million but the explosion scene went off perfectly. People cheered and it became the first summer blockbuster.
@socalpaul4872 ай бұрын
Quint's monologue about the USS Indianapolis is based on a factual incident. Dreyfus & Shaw didn't get along, so a lot f the tension between them was real.
@darkforestcinema2 ай бұрын
The very first blockbuster film. Still holds up too. Great story telling. -Sage
@PsychicTrout-z4v2 ай бұрын
Millie, many young people like you see a 50 year old movie and think they can't expect much from it. But keep in mind these filmmakers didn't have access to the "tools" (some might call them cheats) todays have at their disposal. Back in the day they had three things, a script, actors and a camera. But now maybe you understand the meaning of the phrase "timeless classic". A hundred years from now people will still be watching, analyzing and appreciating this movie.
@henrytjernlund2 ай бұрын
I think because of his war experience that Quint suffered from latent survivor's dilemma and harbored a secret death wish causing him to take unusually dangerous chances. Great reaction. Thanks.
@stephenriggs81772 ай бұрын
I was 10, when this came out. Scared the heck out of me!
@larryjex6485Ай бұрын
I personally love the movies and practical effects of the '70s. There was a gritty sense of realism that seems to be sadly lacking in many modern movies. '70s movies like 'The Exorcist' , 'Alien', Deliverance', and many others really hit you on a visceral level.
@jcg15762 ай бұрын
Jaws came out in 1975 and was directed by a then relatively unknown movie director, Stephen Spielberg, who was just beginning to make a name for himself. Initially Spielberg thought Jaws might fail at the box office because the mechanical shark, nicknamed Bruce after Spielberg’s lawyer, kept malfunctioning. As result Spielberg wasn’t able to show the shark as often as he, according some, had wanted to. Ultimately the shark not working ended being more of a blessing than and a problem as it help make the movie more thrilling and suspenseful. Not seeing the shark put audiences in a position to use their own minds to visualize in their imaginations much of was happening below the water. Jaws was probably the most or least one of Spielberg’s most ambitious movie making projects because of where he shot 90 to 95 percent of the water scenes which was in the open ocean of the coast of Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts in the United States. Most movies about water based or largely water based movies are shot in specially designed movie sets but Spielberg made the bold choice to shoot Jaws in the open ocean of Martha’s Vineyard. Much of Martha’s Vineyard looks the same now as it did in the movie. Ultimately Jaws went on to become the biggest money making movie of its day ultimately becoming known or at least referred to by many as the original Summer blockbuster and end up making Steven Spielberg a household named in the world of entertainment and movie making. There are some great documentaries about the making of Jaws, Mille Mochi, if you are interested about the. Making of Jaws. Jaws documentaries i would recommend are the original behind the scenes documentary, Jaws - Making A Fake Shark Believable, and Jaws The Shark Is Working - The Legacy and Impact Of Jaws. The story of about the USS Indianapolis is a true story told in what many feel was an Oscar worthy award winning speech given how good the late actor Robert Shaw gave and delivered the Indianapolis or some refer to as the great Quint monologue. Jaws is widely considered to be one the greatest movies ever made despite what may well now be dated special affects but even so many feel the movie stands the test of time because of directing skills of Spielberg, the individual actors and how well they each played their roles, and the over all storytelling using a less I more approach particular where the shark is often indicated as being present even though you don’t see it thus making the few reveals where it is seen more thrilling and suspenseful. Love your KZbin channel and content Millie Mochi.
@lyndoncmp57512 ай бұрын
Bruce was never scheduled to be used for the first half of the film. The beach attack scenes were filmed early on, before they even knew Bruce was going to malfunction. Bruce was only scheduled to be used for the Orca based scenes out at sea in deep water. Bruce could not be used where they filmed the beach attack scenes. It was out at sea where the problems arose with the mechanical shark/s. Sadly the documentaries exaggerated and skewed the situation. The first half of the film was actually filmed more or less on schedule.
@MrYoup112 ай бұрын
Milly, did you know this movie was the first summer blockbuster. The beer can that Quint sqishes wasn't made of Aluminum in those days, it was steel. Here's a 70's kid joke for you, The girl at the beginning didn't have dandruff, they found her Head and Shoulders on the beach.
@Steve-gx9ot2 ай бұрын
The " music" was a huge PLUS
@socalpaul4872 ай бұрын
Most sharks need to be moving all the time to keep enough water moving across their gills for them to breathe. If they could drag the shark into the shallows where it can't move, it could potentially drown.
@shawnbridges87032 ай бұрын
The real lesson learned from this movie is to never give Hooper anything important to hold.
@112sje2 ай бұрын
At least he survived, not like the book !
@matthewcostello35302 ай бұрын
@@112sje but in the book he was banging Mrs Brody
@clarkness772 ай бұрын
To be fair if Gardner's head popped out like that id drop everything too
@williamjones60312 ай бұрын
1. Jaws was the first "Summer Blockbuster". 2. Boy Scouts don't need to do the mile swim to get their merit badge. It's an accomplishment all its own. 3. Lee Fierro/Mrs. Kentner actually slapped Roy Scheider. It took 17 takes. Once was so hard it knocked his glasses off. 4. The jump scare at Ben Gardner's boat was put in on purpose by Spielberg because they were having problems with the shark "Bruce" and his appearance was delayed, and the movie needed something earlier. Works every time.🤣 5. IRL Dreyfuss and Shaw didn't get along, so Spielberg used the animosity to fuel their feud onscreen. 6. The boy that said, "He made me do it' is now the Police Chief of the town where this movie was filmed. 7. Hooper was wrong. The fish that hit the line was "our fish". 8. To me the best scene framing work was the pullback to the vandalized Welcome sign. 9. Moie magic: An animal that large couldn't hit the side of the boat as rapidly as it did UNDER WATER. 10. I suspect Quint's story about the Indy gave him PTSD flashbacks and contributed to his behavior after he told the Indianapolis story. It' personal. 11. I was in the Navy, and we were instructed to go for the eyes when confronting a shark. 12. Aside from the pool used in the Ben Gardner boat scenes, all of the shipboard scenes were filmed entirely at sea, 13. In the book not only does Hooper die, but he was also having an affair with Mrs. Brody. 14. JAWS II is the only other one worth watching. It revolves around the Brody kids and their friends. Including the mayor's son. 15 The third one was so bad that Scheider read the script and said NO.
@quixote69422 ай бұрын
The Indianapolis was a true story.
@JoeRoaddogSmith2 ай бұрын
You know it’s a good movie when the reactor forgets to react
@PsychicTrout-z4v2 ай бұрын
I also noticed...
@stevenmotchan20482 ай бұрын
When this first came out I was scared to close my eyes in the swimming pool to play Marco Polo. People say, "you're cheating" but no I'm just scared of a shark even in a pool.
@renzero92062 ай бұрын
As others have mentioned, the Indianapolis story is based on a true event. The other thing that makes that scene so special is Robert Shaw. Not only was he a great actor, he was also a playwright. Depending on who you believe, Shaw wrote that scene himself. Not only that, he performed it, drunk. Spielberg and the crew were so mesmerized by the performance, Spielberg forgot to yell "cut". They only stopped filming when everyone heard a "clicking sound". The camera had run out of film. One of cinema's legends.
@waxer420Ай бұрын
John Milius wrote the speech, Shaw edited down a bit and acted the hell out of it .
@renzero9206Ай бұрын
@@waxer420 Oh I agree, that's one story. Another has Gottlieb (one of the producers on the film) saying Shaw wrote the whole speech pretty much. Another says writer Howard Sackler wrote the initial draft. Zemekis and Gale are also said to have had a go at it. That's why I say it depends on who you believe 🙂
@Sir_AlexxTv2 ай бұрын
The Indianapolis story is true, sadly.
@freedom_3232 ай бұрын
Keep in mind, audiences NEVER had seen any movie like this before... it scared the shit out of people, big time... btw, your hair looks awesome :)
@quixote69422 ай бұрын
An 80's movie about an Alien that's CLASSIC is John Carpenter's "The Thing"... Worth a watch. The Thing about these older Movies is, there's no GCI... Everything is Practical and the effects had to be made by hand. The footage of the Shark was a combination of archived footage of a real shark and a Life Sized Mechanical Shark.
@freedom_3232 ай бұрын
As a Teen when this movie came out, I can attest to its impact on our collective Psyche. We were a nation of beach going sun bathing fanatics every summer, afterward, not so much. I personally never felt comfortable in water I couldn't see through after this movie, even much, much later, swimming in Deep water of the Chesapeake Bay ( where Bull sharks were known to hunt) gave me the willy's... and I never would be 'the furthest out' swimmer at the beach ever again 😁
@shibitoobscura33482 ай бұрын
31:17 Sharks are indeed fishes and not mammals, but they are ovoviparus (the eggs hatch inside the mother's belly)
@bostonvair23 күн бұрын
Indeed... different shark species bear young in different ways..some sharks,.like the great white bear live young (viviparous),.some lay eggs (oviparous) and some carry the eggs inside their bodies where they hatch and then leave their mother's body (ovoviviparous).
@twoheart78132 ай бұрын
Another drama/thriller involving the ocean and the cold war is The Bedford Incident. They did a great job with the problematic mechanical shark. The USS Indianapolis story is true. As always I enjoyed your reaction.
@PsychicTrout-z4v2 ай бұрын
If I can summarize your summary in one word it would be "speechless". Unusual for you...
@basspatterns187Ай бұрын
to this i can never get over the town meeting lady’s comment in back ground “24 hours is like 3 weeks” 😂 it gets funnier every time
@matthewcostello35302 ай бұрын
one of the kids with the fake fin is now sherrif on that island
@clarkness772 ай бұрын
Still crazy they violently kill a child. Took some serious balls
@philCTO2 ай бұрын
Love love love your reactions but the flowers and the way you show the film makes it hard to see
@brucer20242 ай бұрын
This movie coined the phrase "BLOCKBUSTER"
@geody30012 ай бұрын
"I'll never put on a life jacket again." That's my favorite line.
@Stogie21122 ай бұрын
"Anyway, we delivered the Bomb."
@gallendugall891326 күн бұрын
You know the thing about a like button, it's got lifeless eyes, black eyes, like a doll's eyes. When you push it doesn't even seem to be living. Until the like registers then everyone is happy.
@matthewcostello35302 ай бұрын
on that island the off season population is abt 22,000 on season more than 200,000
@matthewcostello35302 ай бұрын
Chrissy just passed away a few weeks ago
@glennwisniewski95362 ай бұрын
Millie, I'm about to watch your reaction. But I anticipate you won't be swimming in the ocean any time soon. LOL.
@norwegianblue20172 ай бұрын
"The great white shark is ovoviviparous, which means that the shark grows in an egg, which is then hatched inside the mother. Shortly thereafter, the shark pup is born. While in the womb, great white shark embryos feast on unfertilized eggs, a practice known as oophagy."
@jimmyb.62722 ай бұрын
I just watched your reaction and I just wanted to say thank you for not chopping up Quint’s story about the USS Indianapolis, as I have seen other reaction channels cut the scene so badly and even leave it out completely. I appreciate what you did very much. Thanks again.
@hkaayaakuu2 ай бұрын
That zoom was everything. So cool
@burnout_20172 ай бұрын
Excellent reaction Millie. You handled the pop-up dead head pretty well, most people experience a good jump scare but you did good. Im all for you pushing your boundries and branching out. Its exhilirating leaving ones comfort zone, keeps the heart young.
@shawnzzzАй бұрын
Nice reaction to a great movie. Your face during this entire movie says it all for you. You were very much involved in it especially during the tense scenes. Thanks for watching this ALL-TIME classic movie.
@darrenwatkins78962 ай бұрын
Everyone who reacts to this always think the shark took the dog Pippin, Steven Spielberg didn’t want to make it obvious, but when Brody was running across the bridge to the pond area, the guy and Pippin were actually on the bridge. The dog was fine. Probably one of the first ‘easter egg’ scenes. Would love to see your reaction to Jaws 2. Roy Scheider is back as Chief Brody. ❤
@commanderstraker67322 ай бұрын
I was 12 years old when this movie came out and my Mother refused to let me see it initially ! My older brother too me to the cinema. Seeing up on the big screen has just an impact on you. The key scenes in the movie had everyone jumping up !. It was the first of the summer blockbuster’s and movies that followed like Star Wars and Close Encounters of the Third Kind had to live up to it. Steven Spielberg refused to do the Jaws sequels as they were rubbish in my opinion. The best part of the movie for me now is Quints retelling of the USS Indianapolis mission to deliver the atomic bomb. Hope you enjoyed the movie !
@raybernal68292 ай бұрын
Great fun ... This is based on a novel by Peter Benchley (he's in the movie as the reporter on the beach) and he helped with the screenplay (with Carl Gottlieb who played the newspaper publisher). Speilberg and Benchley had disagreements on the direction the movie was going especially the final parts to the point that Benchley was asked to leave the set. There are many differences between the book and the movie including the mayor's motives for his unwillingness to close the beaches(he was indebted to the mob).
@UncleQue2 ай бұрын
The line that always infuriated me is when the Mayor says “we have in fact caught and killed a large predator that supposedly injured some bathers”. First of all it was more than just a predator. It was a huge shark. These “bathers” were not just “injured”, they were eaten! Nothing “supposedly” about it.
@Steve-gx9ot2 ай бұрын
Hitchcock asked Steven Soieberg when they met and said " are you THE KID who made That "FISH MOVIE"??? LMFAO . HITCHC OK CK MASTER. I suggest you watch Psycho 1960 and THE BIRDS
@clarkness772 ай бұрын
It's been said hitch loved jaws
@Rocker19642 ай бұрын
I was 12 years old when I seen this in theatres which sparked a great interest in Shark Diving.I finally got to go two years ago at the aquarium in Springfield, Missouri with my son..))) I would love to go again)))
@charlesbarnes69122 ай бұрын
Is there any way for you to make your watch along screen easier to see????
@Jagaroth_2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it, Millie. The underwater scene with the head with the empty eye socket was the moment that gave me the willies when I first saw it.🙈 It's been a while since I last saw one of your film reactions - fantastic as always. I've said it before, and I'll say it again, that I like your style. Yes, the film is sometimes difficult to see when the colours blend in with the background, but on the whole it's fine. It's not like you can just show the whole film, eh? The inset film staying in one place on the screen helps too. Also your demeanour is one of the very best. Knowing when to stay silent and take in what's going on, instead of feeling the need to talk nonsense over large sections or giggle hysterically for no apparent reason as many others do. Your style is always engaging and makes a refreshing change to the average reaction video out there.👍 A suggestion for another thriller/horror film I'd recommend 'The Dead Zone' from 1983, starring the wonderful Christopher Walken. It's more psychological thriller than anything, although like Jaws, it does have a few horrific moments along the way.
@johnduval63772 ай бұрын
I can't watch what I can't see
@scottdarden30912 ай бұрын
There are always sharks in the water. I catch more sharks than anything every time I go surf fishing.😊
@johnnehrich96012 ай бұрын
Read the book and saw the movie when they first came out. Have not been in the ocean since - not that I've been near a beach much, but still . . . At the time, people of course knew about sharks but the book created a whole new level of terror, even if in reality over the top.
@tonyharmon85122 ай бұрын
I used to catch little 2-3 foot long sharks in the surf breaks by hand. If you stand calmly they will swim around your legs and between them as well. I used to stand with my arms in the water as well so I didn't make a splash when I made a grab for one. I would grab them by the tail with my right hand and hold their thrashing body away from mine with my left so they couldn't get a bite of me. After terrorizing the girls with what was swimming around their legs I would let the go with a little toss so they weren't right next to me when I relinquished control. Of course I was only 15 to 16 when I did this. I did get a little smarter as the years accrued.
@UncleCharlie111x22 ай бұрын
I saw this at 10 years old in 1975 it totally derailed me! It was PG lol
@TheUnfulfilledOne2 ай бұрын
Great Reaction.
@roguerunner75532 ай бұрын
Your flowers are covering up the screen so we can't see the movie!
@UncleQue2 ай бұрын
Millie this may have been answered but while this wont explain the rationale as to why Quint destroyed the radio but this story was greatly influenced by the book Moby Dick which was about a man named Ahab, the captain of a whaling vessel, being obsessed with killing a white whale that had crippled him years earlier. In the end this obsession not only got Ahab killed but his ship destroyed which led to the entire crew dying. Quint being scarred emotionally from the events he tells of during WWII is similar. He wants to get this shark. Wants no outside interference.
@richardjohn6582 ай бұрын
the video graphic is to transparent we can't see it very well . but i love your reactions
@BruceEllis-gd9tx2 ай бұрын
Some shark species lay eggs, while others, like the Great White, give birth to live young. Interestingly, the news reporter on the beach in the movie 'Jaws' is portrayed by Peter Benchley, who authored the novel.
@TheDekablack2 ай бұрын
この娘は偉いな~。ちゃんと名作を履修しておられる。
@charlesmaurer62142 ай бұрын
A true story of the Indy was told in the film. The carrier carried the bomb that ended WWII and was sunk on the return trip. One of several WWII stories that is stranger than fiction. The one I enjoyed best of that period (Fat Electrician presentation though I have read about it in other materials) is the story of the USS William D. Porter AKA the Willy D. Started a navy tradition as well of being all republicans with the line "Don't shoot we are all republicans" every time the Willy D joined a station. The unluckiest ship with the luckiest crew in the navy. Won't say more as I don't want to spoil the story if your into history other than to say an Iowa Class Battleship loaded and aimed all her guns at the Willy D. as it gave orders to the Willy D. to return to port and that is not the end, just the first big highlight.
@chickmcgee10002 ай бұрын
I miss the days of typewriters.
@quixote69422 ай бұрын
The Mayor Browbeats a counselman to "just get in the Water".... The Mayor couldn't because he wore a suit to the beach. In the Next scene, he also mentions that "My kids were on that Beach, too"... Why didn't he ask his kids to get in the water? GREAT Reaction!
@lyndoncmp57512 ай бұрын
The council man was complicit in the cover up. He's sitting at the desk in the town hall meeting and he gets out of the mayor's car on the little ferry. He's as guilty as the mayor, as is the newspaper editor and coroner.
@freedom_3232 ай бұрын
for some 'comic relief' check out Saturday Night Live - "land shark" skits 😊
@rickc6612 ай бұрын
heck the entire first 3 seasons of ' Sat. nt live' are tops. some of the best of TV. I'll add just for fun - 'Lonesome Dove'. near 6 hrs but great. ' Smileys People' on PBS. also a near word for word version of a great novel.
@Someinsanegenuis2 ай бұрын
Jaws is not really a horror movie, but a thriller
@lyndoncmp57512 ай бұрын
Yep and it was NEVER called a horror film in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. It was always called a thriller, suspense thriller or even action adventure thriller.
@quicktastic2 ай бұрын
Like many of the movies of this era that had many (very bad) sequels, the original movie is quite good. The way too many bad sequels can give first time viewers the impression that the original was bad as well.
@DaddyDoggAbbott2 ай бұрын
If you only get technical, this is about a bullshark that was in the new jersey river _ But I guess is everything's 4:09
@UncleCharlie111x22 ай бұрын
Thing about a puppet shark is at least the puppet is real!
@lyndoncmp57512 ай бұрын
As is the sea and boat. No studio.
@matthewcostello35302 ай бұрын
I can't believe you cut the scene with the leg
@phila3884Ай бұрын
Gonna watch now. Everyone thinks it's supposed to be "horror" movie, but as you saw, it's not really, is it? I actually think it's more an adventure movie, with some danger thrown in.
@JJgibson1Ай бұрын
Check out the movie Deep Blue Sea(1999).
@thunderstruck54842 ай бұрын
The book is excellent also
@robertjewell97272 ай бұрын
For a scary thriller I recommend PSYCHO (1960).
@hkaayaakuu2 ай бұрын
I love playing with my moms (typewriter) one of those😂
@starlord34962 ай бұрын
Let's go ❤ I was thinking the other day when will next post 😂
@bigsteve62002 ай бұрын
The story of the USS Indianapolis. Is told in the film Mission of the Shark's.
@lauriebarrett67892 ай бұрын
Jaws 2 is good.
@hkaayaakuu2 ай бұрын
Funny story, i immediately knew the score/music of jaws beacuse of family guy😂
@freedom_3232 ай бұрын
yeah, yeah, yeah, DO Alien!
@michaelwilber7742 ай бұрын
Omg i love your bass, is that a real hofner? You play lefthanded like me. Omg. I bet you are a Beatles fan too :) great reaction
@michaelescareno70482 ай бұрын
Glad you left in the story about the U.S.S. Indianapolis.
@rickc6612 ай бұрын
pretty great classic - the 1970's was a great time for films - from ' Butch Cassidy... in '69 to "Aliens' in '79. several legit great flicks. Cuckoo's nest , godfather, the Sting. etc. this flick is basically a retelling of the old novel / film ' Moby Dick'. oh, the actor wrote maybe half of the ' Indianapolis' story himself, he wrote a couple moves. and I'm sure it'll be mentioned , fundamentally a true story.
@mannyromero4511Ай бұрын
😬 Alien?....if you like getting the shit startled/scared out of you a lot, yea. I was a 20 old police rookie when it came out I saw it with my dad, a retired Naval aviator. It had us both jumping and swearing!!
@blacktronlego2 ай бұрын
Thankfully although there are sharks in UK waters, none of them are the sort dangerous to humans. I did not know there was a 'Jaws' Lego set, but I do remember the 'Pirates' theme had sharks, but not very big ones.
@lyndoncmp57512 ай бұрын
The occasional great white probably visits. I see no reason why not. Blues, makos, porbeagles, basking and thresher sharks are all here.
@conureron37922 ай бұрын
Definitely do Alien! Maybe save it for Halloween, it is a horror sci-fi.
@mikefoster60182 ай бұрын
Most shark species give birth to live young, but many lay eggs instead. The ones that lay eggs tend to be bottom dwelling, as I understand it.
@PhillipWilliams-tq5om2 ай бұрын
Ok I occasionally watch your music videos. I was pleasantly surprised with the movie reaction. Ok 1st the video was nearly impossible to see. Since I know jaws like the back of my hand I watched it anyway. 2nd you need to dress alot more sexy and I think you could be a big time movie reactor. Hope to see you react to alien
@dunringill17472 ай бұрын
Legendary John Williams did the soundtrack to this iconic movie. Yes, watch 'Alien', but that means you have to watch 'Aliens' as well. 'Alien' is a horror sci fi thriller, 'Aliens' is more of an action adventure sci fi thriller. The USS Indianapolis is in our history books as the largest mass animal attack on man. Quint's story is exaggerated on the number of deaths all being shark related. He is an interesting character driven by PTSD. No doubt shark hunting is his way of handling the memory with payback. Jaws could have been his greatest victory and he was obsessed with killing it. Chief Brody's constant need to call on the radio for help was frustrating Quint. Quint had already survived the Indianapolis without a radio, so he felt confident enough to smash that one. The money was only part of his motivation. Quint was obsessed (like Captain Ahab to Moby Dick). He wasn't going to let any help come in and steal away his latest shark conquest. Besides that, if word gets around that a prolific shark hunter had to call for help - his shark hunting business would probably be over.
@rickc6612 ай бұрын
and there is a new ' ALIen ' flick out NOW. no laptop. no 55 in. 'widescreen'. see the movie. ( I have no connection. )
@openfor452 ай бұрын
JAWS is a thriller of a Boat Ride! GLAD you watched this. Suggest adding Poltergeist - 1982 film to your future watch list!!
@hkaayaakuu2 ай бұрын
I also watched alien, aliens and blade runner this week as well for the 1st time
@thunderstruck54842 ай бұрын
Saw many times at the theater all timer! Thanks
@StMichael72 ай бұрын
I was really worried about you because we didn’t hear from you since you said you were sick. I’m glad you’re feeling better. Don’t forget about the other Rocky movies by the way. Yo!! I box because i can’t sing and dance!!
@ZebZanko2 ай бұрын
Ready for a swim in the ocean?😁Wow Millie, you look extra cute for this reaction. Must be the white sweater!
@seanmc71282 ай бұрын
Oh nooo! I don't want millie to be scared! 😢
@smokinggun84182 ай бұрын
I'd like to watch some of the movie pls. Can't find it here. Too blured.
@alanmackie61802 ай бұрын
So does Quint or his estate, still get the $10,000?
@johnrob32152 ай бұрын
No.
@adamkhan77362 ай бұрын
I wonder if Hooper got his name in the National Geographic 🤔
@hkaayaakuu2 ай бұрын
I just fi ished watching it today. Amity island in east coast new york, maybe ive heardof it. The opening was great