Jaws 2 -1978- -

Scheider’s exhaustion and rage in the film? 100% real. When Chief Brody screams, “Why don’t you come down here and chum some of this shit?!” at the town council, Scheider was channeling his feelings about the script.

Enter (a French TV director). His secret weapon? He knew the shark was a thing , not a character. His rule: If the shark is on screen for more than 3 seconds, someone better be screaming or dying. Jaws 2 -1978-

Goldsmith did something brilliant. He kept Williams’s iconic two-note shark motif but (for suspense) and added a screaming brass glissando for attacks. Then he wrote a new main theme: a lush, tragic waltz for the Amity kids sailing. Critics hated it at the time. Now? It’s considered one of the most underrated horror scores of the 1970s — equal parts beauty and doom. Scheider’s exhaustion and rage in the film

But the wildest cut scene? An underwater fight between the shark and a . They filmed test footage. It looked ridiculous. It was cut. Thank the ocean gods. 5. The Score: John Williams’s “No” and the Substitute Genius John Williams said no. He was busy with Star Wars and Superman . So Universal hired John Williams’s former orchestrator: Jerrald Goldsmith — yes, Jerry Goldsmith. Enter (a French TV director)