Bruce, patiently waiting for Captain Quint to bleed out:
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Here we see the shark showing patience while his prey bleeds out whiskey.
Bruce, patiently waiting for Captain Quint to bleed out:
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Lol !!!!!!!Here we see the shark showing patience while his prey bleeds out whiskey.
And how the cage was smaller to make the shark look bigger lolThat was great, but then Laurent Bouzereau always is.
I know no mass audience doc is going to cover props to a degree that would make an RPFer happy, but they breezed so quickly through the Academy Museum shark that it would give anyone not already in the know the impression that it was screen used. I think they should have left it out entirely.
Also a little weird how they talked about the documentary filmmakers getting footage but didn't point out what that footage was (a single shot of a shark thrashing on top of a cage).
And how the cage was smaller to make the shark look bigger lol
Yeah the junkyard shark they mentioned was fiber glass… I know that shark was made out of the original Bruce molds, but was the 3 sharks made for production fiberglass with latex covering it?
They really are..Grand mothers are always the best!![]()
Thats a Great Photo!In 1976 we visited Universal and they had this fiberglass shark hanging like it had been caught. Supposedly taken from the original molds ( I don’t doubt that) no teeth, and you could stand inside the mouth. Mom, no way we are doing that. She is taking this picture and some random dude walked in front of us to check the shark out. It’s our only photo.View attachment 1948569
Ah! Makes sense, I was going to say this was the first I heard of the movie sharks being fiberglass.The filming prop sharks were soft-skinned. The surviving one is fiberglass but it was cast from the original soft-skin molds. Joe Alves did a close-up inspection of the fiberglass one in recent years and confirmed it.
The mouth positioning of the fiberglass shark does not look mold-accurate to me, though. The original shark body was shaped with the mouth mid-way between open and closed. (They did that so the skin only had to stretch half as far either way.) But the fiberglass shark's mouth is all the way open.
Still an amazing photo.In 1976 we visited Universal and they had this fiberglass shark hanging like it had been caught. Supposedly taken from the original molds ( I don’t doubt that) no teeth, and you could stand inside the mouth. Mom, no way we are doing that. She is taking this picture and some random dude walked in front of us to check the shark out. It’s our only photo.View attachment 1948569
That shark got moved around, it was in another place when I was thereIn 1976 we visited Universal and they had this fiberglass shark hanging like it had been caught. Supposedly taken from the original molds ( I don’t doubt that) no teeth, and you could stand inside the mouth. Mom, no way we are doing that. She is taking this picture and some random dude walked in front of us to check the shark out. It’s our only photo.View attachment 1948569
iirc the Shark was redone for the sequels.The following movies, jaws 2 and 3
They used the same molds again right?
I wonder if they corrected all the problems with the first shark mechanics
I don’t remember the second or third film.. and don’t really care to watch them, I don’t remember the shark moving/performing any different than the first film.. hmmm
Wow! Excellent thanks for sharing! I was curious when the fiberglass shark was madeiirc the Shark was redone for the sequels.
The fiberglass Shark was the last to be pulled out of the original mold
Ah! Makes sense, I was going to say this was the first I heard of the movie sharks being fiberglass.
I thought the skin absorbed the water and over weighted the air pistons, making another problem for the sharks operation
Now with these cleared up and the fiberglass shark was made to display at universal
The following movies, jaws 2 and 3
They used the same molds again right?
I wonder if they corrected all the problems with the first shark mechanics
I don’t remember the second or third film.. and don’t really care to watch them, I don’t remember the shark moving/performing any different than the first film.. hmmm