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[62] [67] Jaws eventually grossed more than $470 million worldwide ($1.9 billion in 2010 dollars [68]) and was the highest grossing box office film until Star Wars debuted two years later. [69] [70] Jaws 2 was the most expensive film that Universal had produced up until that point, costing the studio almost $30 million. [43]
1971 The Harness (TV movie) as Roy Kern; 1971 The Failing of Raymond (TV movie) as Sergeant Manzak; 1972 Deadly Harvest (TV movie) as Sheriff Bill Jessup; 1973 Incident on a Dark Street (TV movie) as Edmund Schilling; 1973 Murdock's Gang (TV movie) as Harold Talbot; 1973 The Way We Were as Brooks Carpenter; 1974 After the Fall (TV movie) as ...
Jaws is a 1975 American thriller film directed by Steven Spielberg, based on the 1974 novel by Peter Benchley.It stars Roy Scheider as police chief Martin Brody, who, with the help of a marine biologist (Richard Dreyfuss) and a professional shark hunter (Robert Shaw), hunts a man-eating great white shark that attacks beachgoers at a summer resort town.
Main cast 1978 The Love Boat: Laura Stanton Episode: "The Man Who Loved Women/A Different Girl/Oh, My Aching Brother" 1978 Getting Married: Kristine Lawrence TV movie: 1978 How to Pick Up Girls! Sally Claybrook TV movie 1979 Walking Through the Fire: Laurel Lee TV movie 1979 11th Victim: Jill Kelso TV movie 1983 This Girl for Hire: B.T. Brady ...
"You’re gonna need a bigger boat" (Jaws 1975) This iconic line was delivered by Roy Scheider, playing Martin Brody, when he first sees the huge shark terrorising residents of Amity Island.
Lorraine Gottfried (born August 16, 1937), better known by her stage name Lorraine Gary, is a retired American actress, best known for her role as Ellen Brody in the Jaws film series. She also appeared in 1941 and Car Wash .
Jeannot Szwarc, the French filmmaker known for directing films like Supergirl, Jaws 2, and Somewhere in Time, as well as numerous notable TV projects, died Tuesday at 87. His son Sacha Szwarc, a ...
Jaws was criticized for shepherding Hollywood out of the daring age of the late sixties and early seventies into a more impersonal multiplex age, but that's not the film's fault: That's just a ...