Tag Archives: Jaws

Disney+ Doc on ‘Star Wars’ Composer

Some of the dependable items of Disney+‘s still-evolving model has been adulatory celebrity-driven commercials masquerading as “documentaries” whereas providing cheery and worshipful portraits of figures like Jim Henson, Mickey Mouse and the collective Imagineering occupation.

Laurent Bouzereau’s 105-minute Music by John Williams, premiering at AFI Fest forward of its Nov. 1 Disney+ debut, is probably the most creatively profitable of this style. Particularly within the first hour, it’s a richly satisfying tribute to an unimpeachable cinematic legend who, one may simply argue, has change into much more beloved than the long-lasting administrators he collaborated with or the film stars whose legends his themes and cues helped burnish.

Music by John Williams

The Backside Line

Richly satisfying, if not precisely revelatory.

Airdate: Friday, Nov. 1 (Disney+)
Director: Laurent Bouzereau

1 hour 45 minutes

There’s little doubt that evoking the title “John Williams” produces a Pavlovian response extra immediately visceral than the response to “Steven Spielberg” or “Tom Hanks.” And extra diverse as nicely! Bouzereau is ready to make the most of that psychological burrowing, understanding that any room of a dozen viewers may make a dozen completely different prompt associations with any point out of Williams’ title — from ideas of Superman or E.T. withdrawing to the subaquatic rumble of a shark’s strategy to the orchestral Yahrzeit candle of Itzhak Perlman’s plaintive violin solos to the surprise induced by a primary encounter with a resurrected dinosaur or an alien spacecraft.

With out all the time digging fairly as deeply as nerdier movie followers would possibly like, Music by John Williams honors the breadth of Williams’ influence and legacy, pushing each emotional button for an expertise that can produce tears, edification and a compulsive want to right away search out 25 completely different Williams-scored options. A lot of which, not coincidentally, occur to be accessible on Disney+.

Bouzereau, whose introspective Hollywood on Hollywood documentaries have included substantive movies just like the Emmy-winning 5 Got here Again and glorified promos like Disney+’s Timeless Heroes: Indiana Jones & Harrison Ford, is ready to leverage his exhaustive resumé for impeccable entry right here. Would Steven Spielberg be this totally comfy hanging out with a director who hadn’t made an uncountable variety of behind-the-scenes options with him over time? Not possible to know for certain, however the very best elements right here present Williams and Spielberg actually simply standing round chatting about their collaborations.

These sequences, in addition to footage from an apparently exhaustive filmed retrospective panel with Spielberg and Williams, make a persuasive argument that this might have been an excellent easier film than Bouzereau’s already easy strategy has product of it. Put Spielberg and Williams or Lucas and Williams in a room collectively, give them a snippet of music to debate, take two steps again and let the magic circulate. To Bouzereau’s credit score, that’s a number of what he does.

Along with Spielberg and Lucas, Bouzereau has assembled an intimidating roster of Williams’ filmmaking collaborators, together with J.J. Abrams, Chris Columbus, Ron Howard, Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall, whose relationship with the maestro goes again to his personal childhood. The lineup of fellow composers and musicians is at the least equally spectacular, from colleagues like Alan Silvestri and Thomas Newman to a number of the most recognizable classical performers — Perlman, Yo-Yo Ma, Emanuel Ax, Anna-Sophie Mutter — and even Chris Martin of Coldplay and Branford Marsalis, whose giddy appreciation for the jazz bona fides of the Star Wars cantina band is contagious.

Music by John Williams‘ first hour, its only, is chronological. Making savvy use of Williams’ nostalgia-saturated rating from The Fabelmans, Spielberg’s most autobiographical function, Bouzereau traces a course by means of Williams’ music-driven childhood to his Hollywood introduction as a jazz pianist, session musician, orchestrator after which composer. None of it’s precisely revelatory, nevertheless it’s all the time useful to notice that Williams has had a journey that began with Gilligan’s Island and someway stretched all the best way to Schindler’s Checklist.

The memory-driven reflections on Williams’ first collaborations with Spielberg, which introduced him to work with Lucas, and the magical yr wherein Williams composed scores for Star Wars, Shut Encounters and Black Sunday are methodical. However owing to the heat of the storytelling and, in fact, numerous musical snippets, they by no means really feel dry.

Generally, the documentary even feels rigorous. Due to his ample entry to Spielberg’s dwelling films, Bouzereau is ready to give us behind-the-scenes treats like footage from numerous scoring classes, in addition to a number of valuable outtakes like music-free clips from Jaws and unused items from Star Wars. However I want there have been extra moments just like the one the place Williams blends musical idea and rhetoric to elucidate why the five-note central theme of Shut Encounters is simpler than the pages of extra five-note mixtures he experimented with.

There may stand to be extra precise dialogue of course of from Williams, and extra effort from the assembled musicians to nerd out about what makes Williams particular. As an alternative, we get David Newman giving a rudimentary definition of “leitmotif” and seeming nearly embarrassed at how fancy he’s getting. However there’s solely a lot that may be lined in a feature-length documentary.

It’s nearly inevitable that some items of Williams’ physique of labor will both be utterly ignored — depend The Fury and 1941 amongst my favourite Williams scores that don’t warrant a point out — or given quick shrift. I spent the latest Paris Olympiad pondering, not for the primary time, about how Williams’ Olympics fanfare is certainly one of his most important compositions. Right here, nevertheless, it’s introduced as first amongst equals in a “Listed here are a bunch of different issues Williams wrote for” phase.

A number of effort is put into making a long-since-settled argument about Williams’ important place as a cross-discipline titan of orchestral music in America, when it’s been perhaps 30 years since even the most important snob would have contended that John Williams was something aside from a boon to this nation’s classical music panorama. Williams’ personal classical work is absolutely acknowledged, although I’d have beloved extra commentary from artists like Perlman and Ma on the completely different variations of him that they’ve labored with over time, or from Marsalis on the proof of Williams’ earliest jazz work on subsequent scores like Catch Me If You Can. If the primary hour is extra point-by-point evaluation, the final 45 minutes are extra nebulous celebration, and I’ll state a choice for the previous.

With the movie’s focus on Williams the artist — at 92, he’s nonetheless composing and conducting at a tempo that defies cause — Williams the person is a little bit of an afterthought. There are a number of unhappy anecdotes concerning the loss of life of his first spouse and a few humorous notes on the significance golf to his present relationship along with his daughter, however Bouzereau and Williams determine that’s not what you’re anticipating.

You’ll come away from Music by John Williams feeling that Williams had been correctly celebrated — and that, if there’s any extra celebration required, it may be achieved by streaming Jaws, Lincoln, Saving Personal Ryan and Sugarland Categorical in a single wonderful and melodic night.

Jaws Doc in the Works for 50th Anniversary in 2025

The notoriously tumultuous making-of story behind Steven Spielberg‘s hit Jaws and the writing of its best-selling supply materials by Peter Benchley is getting the documentary therapy.

Timed to the fiftieth anniversary of the 1975 movie, Nat Geo has greenlit Jaws @ 50 (working title), a doc function that can concentrate on each the Spielberg movie and the writing of the horror bestseller by Benchley. A summer time 2025 launch is deliberate on Nationwide Geographic and for streaming on Disney+ and Hulu.

Laurent Bouzereau is ready to direct. The filmmaker simply accomplished the non-fiction undertaking Faye, centering on the profession and legacy of Hollywood star Faye Dunaway. Bouzereau wrote the e book Spielberg: The First Ten Years, the place he talked to Spielberg concerning the making of Jaws, and he’s additionally in manufacturing on a movie about composer John Williams.

The doc will embrace footage and images from the Benchley and Spielberg archives, and also will take a look at how the blockbuster gave rise to a brand new era of shark obsessives. The doc can be made in collaboration with ocean conservation and marine coverage advocate Wendy Benchley, the spouse of Peter.

Spielberg’s Amblin Documentaries and Nedland Media are behind the doc, which can be produced by Benchley and Laura A. Bowling. Amblin’s Darryl Frank and Justin Falvey will exec produce, with Nedland Media’s Bouzereau and Markus Keith and Nationwide Geographic’s Ted Duvall.

Jaws the novel by Peter Benchley and the movie by Steven Spielberg, outlined each widespread literature and cinema,” mentioned Frank and Falvey. “The thought of diving into the previous, current and future legacy of Jaws, mixed with an knowledgeable and provoking dialogue about sharks and the ocean in a single documentary, is a novel alternative to discover the right union between artwork and science.”

The manufacturing Jaws of was notoriously over finances and over schedule, as a 26-year-old Spielberg needed to cope with a always malfunctioning shark and inclement climate. The making-of story was the idea for a Broadway play The Shark is Damaged, which already was additionally on stage on the West Finish and hailed from Ian Shaw, the son of Jaws actor Robert Shaw.

“Being on Jaws grew to become a residing nightmare, and never as a result of I didn’t know what I used to be doing or as a result of I used to be struggling to search out the film in my head. I knew the movie I needed to make. I simply couldn’t get the film I had in thoughts on movie as rapidly as I needed,” Spielberg informed Bouzereau in Spielberg: The First Ten Yrs, as excerpted by Vainness Honest. “The tip by no means appeared to be in sight, and but I used to be the one one who may reassure the crew that there could be an finish to this some day.”

‘Jaws’ First Victim Was 77

Susan Backlinie, the stuntperson and actress who as a younger skinny-dipper out for a nighttime swim off the coast of Amity Island grew to become the shark’s first sufferer in Steven Spielberg’s Jaws, has died. She was 77.

Backlinie died Saturday at her residence in Ventura, California, her conference agent, Matthew Templeton, instructed The Day by day Jaws web site.

Backlinie was a nationally ranked swimmer {and professional} diver who had carried out as a mermaid and labored as an animal coach when she was employed at age 28 to play the skinny-dipping Chrissie in Common’s Jaws (1975).

“I didn’t need an actor to do it. I wished a stuntperson as a result of I wanted any person who was nice within the water, who knew water ballet and knew how you can endure what I imagined was going to be a complete lot of violent shaking,” Spielberg stated in Laurent Bouzereau’s 2023 e book, Spielberg: The First Ten Years. “So, I went to stunts to seek out her, and Susan was as much as the problem.”

“The very first thing [Spielberg] stated to me was, ‘When your scene is completed, I would like everybody beneath the seats with the popcorn and bubblegum,’” Backlinie instructed The Palm Seashore Submit in a 2017 interview.

Because the director described it in Bouzereau’s e book: “She had a harness on. There have been two eye rings in it and wires that led to 2 stakes on the seaside [about 50 yards away]. 5 crew have been on one aspect and 5 crew on the opposite, they usually mainly pulled Susan. There was a ribbon hanging from the wire, and when it acquired to one of many stakes, they needed to cease pulling and the opposite group took over and pulled the opposite method.

“What you didn’t wish to have occur was for each groups to tug on the identical time. For additional security, she had the power to shortly launch the wire if one thing went fallacious. It needed to be completely choreographed to offer the impression the shark was pulling her violently to the precise after which instantly violently to the left.”

Susan Backlinie in ‘Jaws’

Everett

Backlinie labored on the scene for 3 days in Martha’s Winery. “We might movie wherever from 6 or 7 within the morning till 9, due to the sunshine,” she stated in an interview final 12 months. “I’ll inform you, I used to be exhausted on the finish of the day.”

Due to her, folks by no means went swimming within the ocean once more.

Born on Sept. 1, 1946, Backlinie and her household moved from Washington to West Palm Seashore, Florida, when she was 10. She was a cheerleader and state swimming champion at Forest Hill Excessive Faculty; after graduating in 1964, she attended nursing college for a 12 months.

In line with the Submit, she swam as a mermaid on the Weeki Wachee Springs vacationer attraction in Florida and labored with wild animals in Miami at Ivan Tors Studios, residence of Flipper on NBC. On a nationwide tour with Tors, she shared a stage with Light Ben, the bear who would star on the 1967-69 CBS collection with Dennis Weaver and Clint Howard.

Backlinie was taking pictures on location with a tiger in Canada when the Jaws workers discovered her. She instructed Spielberg: “Should you use me, you can get close-ups throughout the stunt itself. Should you use an actress, she’ll have to cover her face.’”

Within the 2010 TV documentary Jaws: The Inside Story, she stated that in her scene, “as I might really feel my hips go to 1 aspect, I might simply throw my arms in the wrong way as exhausting as I may.

“I additionally had a pair of fins on as a result of once they would pull me to 1 aspect, I might go beneath, so I needed to kick with all my power to remain above the water. It took a whole lot of power, however I used to be in fairly good condition again then.” Between takes, Spielberg was in an interior tube beside her.

Jaws would mark her first film look. Backlinie went again into the water bare and at midnight for Spielberg in 1941 (1979) — there was that ominous music once more — solely this time she encountered a Japanese submarine.

Backlinie additionally appeared in Two-Minute Warning (1976), A Stranger within the Forest (1976), Day of the Animals (1977) — she was an animal coach on that as properly — The Nice Muppet Caper (1981) and a 1982 episode of The Fall Man earlier than retiring from stunt work.

She and her husband, Harvey, lived on a houseboat in Ventura.