Summer 1975 .....


the REAL value of "Jaws" to me was that it so embellished Summer 1975 in my memory--just as Summer 1977 belonged to Star Wars. I remember EVERYONE would be screaming "watch out for Jaws" as they drove past the beaches.
Summer 1976 did not have any movies that topped "Jaws" but "Logan's Run" was pretty popular with teens and audiences in general. Also from that summer Mel Brook's "Silent Movie" , and I think "Murder by Death". "Grizzly" a Jaws rip-off played that summer but was not a big hit movie. Oh- also "The Omen"-- that was the biggest hit of the year but I was not sure it it was a "summer" movie......

"Grease" marked the summer of 1978 certainly.

I do not think 1979 had a single "blockbuster" .,...maybe "Alien" and "Dawn of the Dead" come close.

And remember this was ALL before the phrase "Summer Movie" came into play!
I have no idea what was the "hit" for Summer 1980 ?


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I was 8 back in 1975 and remember going to see Jaws at the cinema. It was one of the first times I had ever been, Jaws scared the *beep* out if me back then, heck it still does. I watched it about a month ago and was still anxious through most of it even those I have seen it a million times. Now that's what a classic movie does to you. Alien does the same thing by the way.

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The first (and quite possibly only) film I've ever seen twice in a theatre, that very summer. 

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1980?

Empire Strikes Back comes to mind and maybe The Shining were probably the biggies. Although Airplane was a big success but hardly a blockbuster.

In 1975 my little brother and I had only 1 rule: We will never swim in the ocean again! I think that lasted about 5 years.

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Empire was naturally the blockbuster of the year. Looking at the other box office hits of 1980, Airplane was 4th for the year -- only Stir Crazy and 9 to 5 made more, and they were released near Christmas.

The Shining was 14th, which surprises me...I thought it was a bigger hit, too.

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Consider the film rating restrictions...


🇦🇺 All the little devils are proud of Hell.

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True. My parents managed to talk the ticket seller into letting me in (I was 15). Back then in Ontario, restricted meant no one under 18 was allowed in, even if they were with an adult.

I did notice, though, that four of the top ten movies that year were rated R -- including Stir Crazy, which grossed over $100m.

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The Shining wasn't a big deal when it first came out. It had lots of bad reviews. Times have changed.

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Summer of '75 I was 10. We tried seeing Jaws on the Sunday after it opened. The road leading to the drive-in was chaos in both directions. People honking, inching along...

Naturally, we didn't get in. The big "Lot Full" sign was put out well before we got close. We did see it the next weekend, though. Strangely enough, on the way home from the beach. Got there nice and early...

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The "Jaws" era is full of nostalgia for me. Back then, I was fond of themed birthday parties. 1974, 13th birthday: "Little House on the Prairie." 1975, 14th birthday: "Jaws." 1977, 16th birthday: "Star Wars."

Of these, "Jaws" was the only one of which I had neither read the book nor seen the movie--for the others, I did both. As a matter of fact, I don't even know whether my sisters (whose idea it was) had seen the movie, only that when they suggested it as a birthday party theme I lunged at it as great. Nowadays whole packs of themed-party merchandise are available, but the only commercially-produced items we had were the t-shirts. The "Time" Magazine cover of the shark served as a model for the cake we ordered at the bakery and also as a party decoration. Everything else--ice cream, cups, napkins--we did entirely by ourselves. We even teased Mom, who was fond of willowware and not so much of sharks, "Look, blue and white, just like you like!" After 42 years, I still have some of our hand-decorated styrofoam cups and a poster my sister drew. When this forum gets picture posting capability, I should share some pictures.

1975 fell during the thirty-year stretch when our town had no movie theater. Anyone who didn't drive had to ride with a friend 30 miles to a town which had a theater, or wait to see, after a movie was out for some time, whether it would play at the local drive-in, which also required a car. If my sisters did go, I was either not invited, or declined. When "Jaws 2" came out, they went to see it with our cousins. I was welcome to accompany them, but declined as, at the time and for many years thereafter, I was hesitant to say the least to view any film the highlights of which consisted of people being eaten by a shark. They came back from "Jaws 2" laughing about how fake some parts looked--the younger sister, in particular, described one victim as looking "like a Barbie doll being splashed around in a bathtub," with sound effects as bad as the visual, and I was still not inclined to see it even for laughs.

When my uncle and his Netflix account were here, we watched a string of Richard Dreyfuss films, but, strangely enough, "Jaws" was not among them. I actually did not see it complete, start to finish, until TCM's 2017 Oscar marathon, by which time I had been to Universal Studios and personally seen Bruce the Shark twice! At several points I was genuinely surprised--by the graphics in the shark video game near the beginning--at a time when people still played real (not video) pinball, and games which were all the rage a few years later looked primitive in comparison. Hair and clothing styles, music, everything enhanced a mostly very suspenseful and well-told story. After all this time, I was delighted to finally see this!

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In June of 1975, if you were into art house films you could've watched Love and Death or Nashville... the week that Jaws came out you could've watched either that Rollerball, Cooley High or The Drowning Pool

In June of 1976 you could've seen The Omen, Silent Movie, Midway with Charlton Heston. Logan's Run, Murder by Death and The Outlaw Josey Wales came out in late June.

In June of 1977, films like A Bridge Too Far, The Hills Have Eyes, The Deep, New York New York and Sorcerer came out. Star Wars came out in May and The Spy Who Loved Me was released in July.

In June 1978, The Driver, Convoy, Grease and Jaws 2 were released within a week of each other, Heaven Can Wait came out at the end of the month. Foul Play, Revenge of the Pink Panther, Animal House and Hooper came out in July

In May of 1979, Alien came out... Rocky II, The In-Laws, Escape from Alcatraz, Moonraker and Meatballs came out in June. Breaking Away, The Frisco Kid and the Amityville Horror came out in July.

In June of 1980, it was films like Urban Cowboy, The Blues Brothers, Bronco Billy and the Stunt Man. In July, it was Airplane, The Final Countdown, My Bodyguard, Cheech and Chong's Next Movie, Prom Night and Caddyshack.

Movies made way less money back then but they had more variety and character I think.

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Was Urban Cowboy really in 1980? Seems to me it was older, but I'll take your word for it.

Jaws was terrifying. I can't imagine getting the same impact of the film out of the book, since so much relied on the effective soundtrack and the shot early on of the woman swimming in the ocean.

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The book was a big deal back in the day, it's not great literature but it was probably Stephen King quality stuff. You can describe a lot of gruesome stuff that you can only allude to in the movie. Remember that the shark broke down so Spielberg used a lot of sleight of hand to create horror like Hitchcock did in Psycho.

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I don't remember the book being a big deal, only the movie. Which I have to admit terrified me, and at the time all I saw -- in the theatre -- was the trailer, and good god was that ever effective! Great editing.

Sure, gruesome things can be described in a book, but for me the extraordinarily frightening visuals and sound effects are what got to me.

Ha! I didn't know the mechanical shark broke down, but if Spielberg had to work around that, he did a magnificent job. Honestly, I'm not a very big fan of Hitchcock's in general, or Psycho. Although I love Bates Motel, and didn't think I would. The only Hitchcock film I really liked was Rear Window. Vertigo annoyed the hell out of me.

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You should watch North by Northwest or Dial M for Murder... Vertigo is one of his slower, more difficult films. I think he's a great director, but if you don't like those then Hitchcock probably isn't for you.

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I've seen North by Northwest, which I enjoyed, and to a lesser degree Dial M for Murder. I found the characters in Vertigo, and the plot, to be shallow and annoying. Not so in Rear Window, even though the late great Jimmy Stewart starred in both.

It wasn't Vertigo's slowness that bothered me, which never even occurred to me; it was the weak plot and poor acting (except Stewart did do his best). In fact the most common criticism of my favourite films and shows is that they are "too slow"!

You're right, Hitchcock just isn't for me (Rear Window aside). I did enjoy his Alfred Hitchcock Presents TV show, in general.

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I think you are supposed to find the characters in Vertigo shallow and annoying... it's not a healthy relationship... it's about uncontrollable obsession and lust. Contrast his relationship with his buddy Midge who represents a normal person.

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I hadn't considered that, but I still can't get past the poor plot and acting. Those characters have virtually no dimensions, and one of the things I most love about excellent films and shows are multi-dimensional, subtly drawn and acted characters.

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I think you'll find the most interesting people get stupid when they are head over heels, crazy in love with someone... when he talks with Midge and his police buddy he sounds exactly the same as his Rear Window character... it's only when he spirals out of control that he becomes controlling and unattractive and that's the point.

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That's hasn't been my experience, not by a long shot, and no one in Vertigo was in love. Reminds me of Great Expectations, which I found annoying for the same reasons (novel and film). And yet, the same theme didn't particularly bother me in Of Human Bondage (novel and film), because the characters were multi-dimensional. IMO, obviously.

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Of course this doesn't always happen, but it does sometimes. I think a lot of whether one can relate to this film depends on that. I'm not trying to change your mind, you don't like Hitchcock... I respect that, but on the flip side of the coin few fall in love using the witty repartee of a screwball comedy or a Woody Allen script either. People tend to fall in the middle of those spectrums and I was only saying that Hitchcock was examining an extreme example as most movies do. If people behaved sensibly on screen probably 90% of films wouldn't exist.

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The only Hitchcock films I've seen are Psycho and The Birds. The Birds fascinates me. I remember my first exposure being assigned to read the short story in 9th grade English.

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North by Northwest is good. I enjoyed it a great deal. Vertigo, on the other hand, is quite overrated, and not that good. I found Vertigo kind of boring, in fact.

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Jaws must have been awesome to see on the big screen. Unfortunately I didn't exist until 14 years after 1975 so I missed that opportunity by a significant margin. It was still pretty cool on DVD though.

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No matter what anybody says or thinks, a movie like "Jaws" is still better when it's viewed on a great big, wide movie theatre screen, with the lights down low.

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I saw Jaws at its first showing on opening day(a Friday) in June of 1975. I just so happened to be staying at a beach town that summer so...within a few hours of seeing Jaws at a matinee, I was at the ocean in the water, with my friends, and Jaws was on our minds. The movie and the summer rather wonderfully "merged."

And it just got better as the summer went on, and more people saw Jaws and there was more "tension in the water" as people swam and worried. I recall a lot of people running out of the water when a silvery mass moved through the water-- it turned out to be a school of fish...

And of course, a lot of people "faked" shark attacks, screaming and thrashing in the water. Must have annoyed the hell out of the lifeguards.

That first screening was full house and wall to wall screaming. When the guy's head popped out of the boat underwater, the screaming was so loud that you couldn't hear a thing that Dreyfuss, Scheider and the Mayor were saying in the next scene, by the billboard..though when they reached the marked-up billboard, the screams turned to big laughs.

In 1975, theaters would play trailers for what else was playing, "in the theater next door," and I recall that even though I had seen Jaws, every time I'd see the trailer again(in July, in August)...I wished I was seeing it again -- and not the movie I WAS seeing(nothing was as big as Jaws that summer -- it was the summer where one big summer attraction was the norm.

Jaws played into the fall and I recall going to see it one more time...in October. A real difference: no full house, NO screaming...it was like the movie, while still a great one, had "deflated" over the summer.

But I'll never forget the first time I saw Jaws...

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I did not get to see the movie "Jaws" when it was first out, and during its initial freshness, newness and popularity, but I have seen it a few times since. None of the viewings of "Jaws" that I've attended had any screaming. The Coolidge Corner Theatre, in Brookline, MA, plays "Jaws" every single year, on or around Labor Day, as part of this movie theatre's annual Big Screen Classic films program, and the showing of "Jaws" never, ever fails to play to a full house. The showing of "Jaws" sells out every single year.

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Great post ecarle and my Jaws history is similar.
I was 13 and working as a CIT (counselor in training) at a YMCA day camp that summer on a small island in Ct on the Long Island sound, the same water Jaws was filmed on in Marthas Vineyard.
Needless to say , very few campers wanted to sail or swim that summer of 75.

Man, what a great movie and summer that was!

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BOOM!

One of the best films ever made!

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1979 didn't see a single blockbuster? What about the classic The Black Hole?

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