Why does brody say no whistles




















Fierro had trouble credibly faking a slap, so she used force. Seventeen takes later, Scheider was genuinely hurting. Though it looks impressively lifelike, the prop shark was a headache to operate, often failing , which helps explain why Spielberg used it so sparingly.

That was apparently cuddly enough for a reference in Finding Nemo , which features a great white named Bruce. But the tanks are mentioned well before, when the sea-averse Brody accidentally knocks them over on the ship.

Hooper chastises him, warning him that they could explode. Brody is throwing chum into the water and smoking a cigarette when the hungry shark unexpectedly leaps in front of the camera. Everyone else seemed to enjoy it, however, since Scheider repeats some version of it two more times.

The shooting star that appears behind Brody as he loads his gun during a night scene on the boat looks magical for a reason: That was nature intervening on the set.

A Jaws crew in Australia captured footage of a real-life great white thrashing an empty cage, however, and Spielberg wanted to use it.

So the ending was rewritten. The close-up shot of Hooper's air tanks that Brody accidentally spills onto the deck reflects a 6-lamp light-tree used in the location set-up. As Quint fires the harpoon gun into the shark, a shot looking down at the water shows the shadow of the camera man standing on the bowsprit and the matte-box shape of the camera on his shoulder. Great White Sharks cannot move backwards once their gills are under water, as seen towards the end of the film. When Hooper finds the shark tooth in the hull of Ben Gardner's boat, the point is sticking up, with the root end of the tooth embedded in the wood.

If the shark had lost the tooth while biting into the hull, Hooper should have found the point stuck in the wood, with the root end exposed. When Brody is left on the boat by himself the psi scuba tank floats beside him. A full scuba tank would sink. Only an empty tank would float because it does not include the weight of the compressed air inside. For the tank to explode however, it would have to be full and pressurized. As Brody walks through Amity, the trees are bare, despite its being July.

Quint claims that the USS Indianapolis wasn't reported missing for a week, implying that they were at sea that long. Actually, the survivors were spotted by a PV-1 Ventura after three and a half days. The first rescue efforts began only hours later. Like Quint said, "Black eyes. Like a doll's eyes. When he comes at ya, he doesn't even seem to be livin' In the movie Quint says the Indianapolis was sunk on June 29, In reality it was sunk on July The Louisiana license plate which came out of the first shark reads "Sportsmen's Paradise", while the correct motto is "Sportsman's Paradise".

When Brody and Hooper are out on Hooper's "High Tech" boat, there is a radar antenna rotating on the bow of the boat.

A radar antenna should be at the highest point possible on a boat. In the position shown on Hooper's boat, there would be no radar coverage behind the boat as it would be blocked by the cabin and bridge of the boat. Chief Brody's badge is on the wrong side of his shirt. A badge is always worn over the heart - the left side. His is on the right breast pocket. Quint was in the Navy, but yet he wears an Army issued field jacket with his name on it.

Author Peter Benchley, playing the news reporter on opening day, describes the beautiful "white sands" of Amity island, while standing on its very conventional looking tan beach sand. As the town celebrates the Fourth of July, there are no leaves on the trees. During Quint's description of the Indianapolis sinking, he says the ship was on her way from the island of Tinian to Leyte but in fact, the Indianapolis first sailed from Tinian to Guam and was sailing from Guam to Leyte when she was torpedoed and sunk.

All fish lack vocal cords, including all species of sharks. Therefore, the great white shark should not be able to roar. The plate shows the phrase "Sportsmen's Paradise". The actual spelling on the authentic Louisiana license plates was "Sportsman's Paradise". A pressurized scuba tank does not explode when shot by a high powered rifle.

One could only burst open violently can't "explode" when the internal pressure exceeds the burst limit of the tank which is not what was portrayed at the end of the movie. One could only burst open violently explode when the internal pressure exceeds the burst limit of the tank which is not what was portrayed at the end of the movie. Quint says that he was "bit" by a thresher shark. Thresher sharks have never been known to attack humans and, in fact, are unlikely to even approach them.

Quint is supposed to have a hole where he pulled out a tooth to show Brody and Hooper. But when he smiles during his story about the USS Indianapolis, saying "no distress signal had been sent", a studio light can be seen reflected off the blackened tooth he is supposed to be missing.

The Farallon Shark Dart Repeater, into which Hooper pours "20cc of strychnine nitrate" before he enters the shark cage, was not designed to accept, nor be a receptacle for, poison. It was designed solely to cause massive internal damage by triggering a CO2 charge once the steel dart penetrates the shark's skin.

When Quint is telling his story about the U. Indianapolis, he states that 1, men went into the water and came out when historical evidence shows nearer went in and came out, of whom survived. When the shark attacks the man in the estuary, the man is barefoot. However, when the severed leg sinks to the bottom, there is a shoe on the foot. The little boy with a white T-shirt sitting on the beach is first seen at 15min57sec.

He seen again at 59min 29sec, but the shot at 1hr 1min 5secs looks to have been lifted from the very first scene. The wind is blowing his hair all around but the cards are not disturbed. It seems unlikely that quint would be wearing such heavy clothes, including his heavy coat during July in Long Island. An editing error occurs during Hooper's examination of the first victim in the medical examiner's office.

He lifts up her arm and states, "This is what happens Perhaps the arm lift was kept in for graphic gruesomeness but the dialogue should have been fixed to match the rest of the scene. Some think that when Quint first encounters the shark, he incorrectly refers to the Great White shark as an orca, saying that he's "gotta get a good shot at that orca's head".

During the barrel scene, the shark pulls three barrels underwater. MythBusters discovered that the shark would have had to exert pounds of pressure, which it would be incapable of doing. When Quint stabs the machete into the Orca's gunwale, the wood has already been marked up with gashes from the machete, probably from previous takes. However, it is conceivable that this was not the first time Quint has done this, and the marks in the wood were not a mistake.

When Hooper is examining Chrissie's body he attributes it to an attacking squalus. Squalus is genus of dog sharks. He should know this, being a shark expert.

However, at this point, Hooper does not know what kind of shark attacked her and so he is listing all of the species it could be. He also indicates Longimanus and Isurus glaucus, which are whitetip and mako sharks, respectively.

More than that, though, "squalus" is the Latin word for "shark" and is often used by marine biologists as a generic name for sharks. Real great white sharks do not behave in the manner depicted in this film.

In fact, unprovoked shark attacks are very rare, with only a handful of them being fatal and two out of three people survive a great white shark attack. The film is set in a town in Massachusetts and has a mayor. Towns in Massachusetts and most of New England do not have mayors, instead they are governed by a board of selectmen as the executive and hold annual town meetings for legislative matters.

Only statutory cities in Massachusetts have mayors. MythBusters discovered that the shark was incapable of pulling the boat backwards by the cleats. To do so the shark would have had to pull twice its own body weight. When Brody and Hooper are on the beach trying to convince the Mayor that the shark is a great white and the beaches should be closed, Hooper tells the Mayor about the tooth he found but dropped when he found Ben Gardner's boat. The Mayor turns to Brody Martin and asks "did you see this tooth Roy?

After finding and losing the shark tooth from Ben Gardner's boat, Hooper and Brody try to convince the skeptical mayor what they have seen. The mayor doesn't believe them, since Hooper has lost the tooth. But what about Ben Gardner's badly damaged boat, and decapitated head? No mention is made of these again. Since there was a steady source of food e. However when Quint, Cooper and Brady go hunting for the shark, they do so at least miles offshore as it's clear that land is out of sight.

Why they would do this when the shark was again mainly seen near the beach is never explained. HOW they found the exact shark in a body of water the size of the Atlantic Ocean is never adequately explained, either. When Mike shows up at the beach Martin asks him to go to the pond instead with the boat and friends.

Then when the kids pull the fake shark stunt and everyone is running out of the water we see Ellen calling for Mike. But when she goes up to Martin she tells him that he's in the pond. How did she know that? Ben Gardner, who is later found dead, is shown with his hands on his boat's window as it's going out for the shark hunt.

A young crewman wearing a black jacket is seen standing right behind Gardner. A third crewman has to be driving the boat to keep it straight and avoid hitting all the other boats. Although it's presumed that the two crewmen were also killed by the shark, no one in Amity seems to notice their fates, and there is no mention of them in the film. At the end of the tiger shark scene the mayor tells a couple of guys to cut the shark down and "dump it in the drink" before it stinks up the whole island.

That night the shark is resting in a warehouse when Matt and Brody come to cut it open. Sharks, like other types of fish, propel themselves through the water by moving their tail fin. It's also how they change direction while swimming. The shark in the film is repeatedly moving through the water without moving its tail fin which is, of course, impossible. Just as Quint finishes scraping his nails on the chalkboard, the camera begins to move in closer when he takes the first bite of the cracker.

On the right side of the screen under Harry's chin, Roy Scheider is seen ducking down while staring at the camera, as it pans toward Robert Shaw, and he then lifts his left hand up, cueing Robert's line. The corners of Jaws' mouth change throughout the movie, whether we are seeing a footage shark or the mechanical one. When we see a real one, the lines of its mouth are parallel.

But when we see the fake one, the top corners of its jaws are overlapping the bottom ones. Despite driving to various incidents in the film where he could respond "Code 3" using lights and sirens, Chief Brody never does - because if you look closely the two red Federal Signal Twin Beacon Ray lights on his truck are bolted on but not wired in so can't be switched on.

As the camera begins to zoom in on Quint after he scratches the blackboard at the town meeting, Brody can be seen ducking down while trying to stay out of shot in the bottom right corner of screen. Then ten seconds later his shadow is seen on the blackboard as he stands up.

When the shark jumps onto the boat, you will notice daylight shining through his gills. The sharks used for filming included a right and left design. Which meant one side had skin and the other side didn't. This design allowed the daylight to shine through to the other end and through the gills. During the scene at the hospital after the shark attack in the pond, as Michael and his bed are being wheeled out of the room and down the hall by a female nurse and a male doctor the actor playing the male doctor looks directly into the camera.

When the shark swims out from under the Orca after nearly tipping it, the "sea sled" apparatus is visible under the mechanical shark, including the tow cable which is very visible pulling the shark from ahead of it and to its left. When Crissy's remains are found on the beach, the initial shot of the remains show crabs crawling on them, and then another crab is dropped on the remains from above, right before Sheriff Brody approaches.

During the beach panic, attendants dressed in white with black ascots can be seen at the water's edge trying to guide the swimmers to safety. One of them, a young man with slick black hair, breaks character and is just standing there with his hands at his sides, laughing. Later in the movie the shark is chasing the fishing vessel Orca after the intrepid crew has harpooned it and put "three barrels" on him, which are clearly seen following them in the background of the shot.

What is also clearly seen in this shot is the wake from the towline that attaches the barrels to the fishing vessel itself. During the pot roast scene, just before the end of the dock is pulled into the water by the shark taking the roast, you can see how the dock is rigged to break away easily. When the shark attacks a character, his severed leg floats to the bottom of the water.

When the leg hits the bottom, it doesn't behave like a leg with a real knee joint. The knee joint doesn't bend at all on impact with the bottom, for instance.

After Quint chops the rope to stop the boat from being pulled by the shark, a calm moment follows during which the men are just catching their breath. After a few seconds, three barrels suddenly appear, but during that time, you can see the barrels in the foreground just under the water, waiting to be released and pop to the surface.

The shots from under the water of Chrissie swimming show a brilliant light above her, but the sun is on the horizon and a first quarter Moon wouldn't be that bright. It can't be from a full Moon either as that would be opposite the Sun in the sky, and so it could not be overhead whilst the Sun is on the horizon.

During the first scene on the ferry dock on the Fourth of July, the male actor portraying a souvenir shopper wearing a white rimmed hat and a striped polo-style shirt, quickly cuts his eyes upward and to the right and looks directly into the camera.

As Quint smashes the radio, then when Brody yells at him, land which does not look far away is reflected in the windows behind them. There is no land that close both before and after this scene. Just after Brody and Hooper tie the barrel lines to the stern cleats, the boat is abruptly pulled by the shark, knocking both men to the deck. Yet when the boat is lurching, the lines are slack. One of the first scenes in which the shark engages the boat- Orca , you see Brody, Quint and Hooper fall to one side as the boat tips to the side.

If you watch closely, it appears that the actors appear to fall over, prior to the boat actually tipping over ,as if they are anticipating the effect. When Hooper is inserting the hypodermic into the bottle of strychnine nitrate, there is still air in his hypodermic; in reality, he would have removed the excess air first.

During the night scene with the fishermen on the pier, at the moment the chain goes taut and pulls out the wooden post, a thinner cable can be seen breaking the surface of the water to the left of it.

The chain was attached to the cable, which looped round a pulley and was actually pulled from the shore behind and to the left of the camera. When Quint is speaking in front of the chalkboard, a faint outline of a different shark drawn on the board is just barely visible in some shots may require adjustment of picture brightness and contrast on some screens.

This suggests that the original image was deemed unsuitable, but wasn't fully wiped off the board before the "proper" one was drawn. When Brody walks out of the store and talks to Hendricks, someone in the left window behind them is taking photographs of the scene being filmed. When the first victim, Chrissie Watkins, is attacked by the shark, the shark never surfaces even though it's was over twenty feet in length.

Some part of the shark would have appeared during such a violent attack, although the choice to keep the shark entirely beneath the surface was to add to the initial 'mystery' of what was attacking the young woman and heighten the cinematic tension. The goof items below may give away important plot points. The first victim in the film is the female student named Chrissie. Some of her remains are being eaten by crabs and this occurs in daylight.

According to the Police report Chief Brody prepares at the typewriter the time of her death is Monday 1 July at The time the deceased was discovered is listed as the next day, at The second victim in the film is the Alex Kintner boy. According to the reward notice posted by the boy's mother, he was killed on Sunday June 29th no year given - but surely must be same year as the first victim.

Therefore, the second victim in the film was killed before the first victim, going by the dates given second error. Finally, when one checks the calendar 29 June was in fact a Saturday, not a Sunday third error.

When Hooper climbs into the cage he is not wearing fins, yet when he is lowered in the cage, in the very first shot underwater, he is wearing fins. In the following shots he is not wearing fins, but after the shark destroys the cage and he swims to the bottom of the ocean, he is wearing fins once again. When the Chief and Hooper are trying to convince the Mayor to shut down the beaches, Chief Brody says there have already been two deaths. But, in fact, as of that time in the movie, the girl on the beach, the Kintner boy and Ben the fisherman are all dead.

However, this continuity mistake is somewhat understandable since the scene with Ben's head rolling into view of his destroyed boat was actually filmed after the movie wrapped - having been filmed in the film editor's swimming pool. So, when Chief Brody made that statement to the Mayor, there may have actually been no real proof of the death of Ben since it was actually filmed much later. When Brody blows up the shark, off in the background there is land in some shots and then no land in others.

As for all the naked bodies in the water? That probably played no role, Burgess added. Note to readers: if you purchase something through one of our affiliate links we may earn a commission. All rights reserved About Us. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Advance Local.

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