a city to make me blogspot

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

вівторок, 11 грудня 2007 р.

Great Dads of the 70s #14: Roy Scheider in JAWS

Posted on 08:27 by jackichain

Film historians cite JAWS as the film that changed the way movies were distributed and marketed, i.e. more broadly and dumbed down to catch the widest, most generic/international audience. But JAWS itself belongs to the old school 1970s, with character development coming not from a few uninteresting scenes of suburban breakfasts or camaraderie in the office, but from relaxed, improvisational set-ups where parents drink and smoke (gasp!) in front of their kids and relate to them as people in a direct, caring way, free of socialized, pre-approved, “let the lawyers read the script first”-style sanitation.

There’s a great scene that occurs at the Brody dinner table where Roy Schieder’s Sheriff Brody, having allowed the beach to stay open and a kid to die (and maybe also Tippin, the frisbee-catching dog) is lost in wine-soaked regret. His younger son, with cool 1970s haircut looks at him in a direct, wide-eyed way that nowadays would have been cut (it’s too vague) and Roy says “Give me a kiss,” The kid says “Why?” and Roy says, “because I need it.”

Spielberg’s camera is behind Scheider’s head and we see the boy run up to kiss his dad on the cheek, someone is at the door just then and Roy gives him a good-natured “Get outta here” and sends him running off.

As one of those rare, lucky kids who grew up with a present, loving, hard-drinking/smoking father in that decade, this scene always gets me because it captures the dichotomy of fear and love that a young boy has for his dad; fear and respect because the dad is a “man” - i.e. not hiding his smoking and drinking, not pandering to the kid by talking to him in a high voice like Barney the Dinosaur, etc. The kid is a little afraid of his father, not for any reason of violence (something movies today overdo with coiled punches and ominous music) but because he is a big, tall, man with mysterious powers. That sort of fear is an essential ingredient in the stew of emotions a boy should have for his dad, along with respect, admiration, and so forth. Without it, the kid feels exposed to the dangers of life outside the parental sphere and even INSIDE the parental sphere, since dad is a "weakling" who can't protect the family. If there were zombies out your window or sharks in the bay, would you want some sensitive guy like Greg Kinnear as a dad? Can't you just see Greg Kinnear as a child psychologist dad, trying to placate the shark with some warm homemade chum and sympathetic understanding?

Brody's kid obviously has some trepidation about his big tall dad, and thus his seeing him dad in this moment of weakness could be a damaging moment for his developing psyche... but it's not. Though Brody actually needs the validation and support his kid provides, he is able to ask for it in a gruff but loving and offhand manner. Once he has the kiss, Brophy returns to the figure of authority and orders the kid out of his sight, but with an almost mock-macho panache.

We can see how dads in the Spielberg films (which in turn would profoundly and irreversibly influence the way all nuclear families are portrayed in cinema) would become more and more dependent on their son’s love, and the whole reversal of roles where the son has to be the father, which sends kids into rehab at such an early age these days.

No kid likes to see their parents in moments of weakness, least of all dependent on THEM for protection (it should be the other way around), this scene in JAWS shows how it can be done right. Compare this scene with the ones in just a few short years in Spielberg’s CLOSE ENCOUNTERS, where Dreyfuss is a little weasel of a dad, bullying his kids into seeing PINOCCHIO when they want to go to the water slide instead (he's a bigger brat than they are), and getting hysterical over UFOs and running to the government like a scared ninny instead of being the tough paternal signifier his unit needs him to be.

Here, though, with the mighty Scheider in control, the scene is just another little bit of actorly business in a film made in a different time, wherein the family dynamic was just that, dynamic.
Надіслати електронною поштоюОпублікувати в блозіПоділитися в XОпублікувати у Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Новіша публікація Старіша публікація Головна сторінка

0 коментарі:

Дописати коментар

Підписатися на: Дописати коментарі (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Kate Jackson was my Village
    I've been in a gloomy funk lately, so gloomy I had to turn to my ultimate solace: the first two seasons of TV's Charlie's Angels...
  • It's okay to keep talking about ZODIAC
    Like the serial killer case file it depicts, ZODIAC eats away at the mind months after you've seen it. Thoughts of politics and union ma...
  • 10 Favorite Characters Meme
    Hank Quinlan - Orson Welles ( Touch of Evil ) Welles at his most uninhibited, a shambling mess and "some kind of a man." Marlene D...
  • More Tentacles from the 5th Dimensional Rift
    Last night I finally saw THE MIST (2007), which is based on an old Stephen King novella I read in high school. I can't remember if the ...
  • Four Flies on Grey Velvet (1971): Cinebolically Dario
    The long-awaited decent DVD release of Four Flies on Gray Velvet is a late-inning coup for anyone trying to lose their moral compass, and y...
  • As a Sinner He's a Winner: The CITIZEN KANE of Timothy Carey
    The cable TV event of the century--more or less--happened this weekend with the 2 AM screening on TCM of Timothy Carey's more or less f...
  • The First David Lynch Movie? The Story of Temple Drake (1933)
    Faulkner's dank mint julep spiked with laudanum Southern Gothic ambiance suffuses DRAKE (it's based on his novella, "Sanctuary...
  • EXTREME SPORTZ OVERVIEW: The Good, the Ill and the Whack
    Thanks to a lengthy stint as a second tier film critic for Muze I've come to know a lot about "EXTREME Sports" movies. I'...
  • Barbara Stanwyck in "Ten Cents a Dance"
    TCM had another one of their Stanywck days today, and tivo nabbed me TEN CENTS A DANCE (1931). Stanwyck is on a great slow burn here, starti...
  • A Val Lewton-style Nancy Davis (Reagan), M.D. in SHADOW ON THE WALL
    Nancy Davis (pre-Reagan) is supberly understated as Dr. Canford, child psychologist, in SHADOW ON THE WALL, a 1950 psychodrama with progress...

Categories

  • 1970s
  • 1970s dads
  • 2012
  • 70s Dads
  • academic
  • AFI
  • African American
  • Alan Alda
  • alcohol
  • Alfred Hitchcock
  • anna karina
  • Anna May Wong
  • apes
  • apocalypse
  • Apocalypse Now
  • Asia Argento
  • avant garde
  • barbara bach
  • Barbara Stanwyck
  • Batman Returns
  • Beast with a billion backs
  • Bela Lugosi
  • belle du jour
  • Ben Hecht
  • bertolucci
  • Bette Davis
  • bigfoot
  • Blondes
  • Boarding Gate
  • Bob Dylan
  • Boris Karloff
  • borneo
  • brando
  • Brigite Bardot
  • Broken social scene
  • Buddhism
  • Burgess Meredith
  • Burning Bed
  • burt reynolds
  • butter scene
  • camille paglia
  • Canada
  • Candice Hilligoss
  • Capitalism
  • carol clover
  • Caroll Baker
  • castration
  • catherine deneuve
  • censorship
  • Charles Bickford
  • Charles Brackett
  • charlie's angels
  • Charlies' Angels
  • Charlotte Gainsbourg
  • chicks
  • childhood
  • children
  • Chrisopher Nolan
  • Christina Raines
  • chthonic
  • Clare Horgan
  • Clarence Muse
  • Co-Dependency
  • Cockfighter
  • Comedians
  • complex
  • conan barbarian
  • Consumerism
  • Counterculture
  • Cowboys
  • Criswell
  • crypto
  • crytpozoology
  • cultural theory
  • Dakota Fanning
  • daniel pinchbeck
  • Dario Argento
  • Daughter of Horror
  • David Cronenberg
  • David Lynch
  • Dean Stockwell
  • death drive
  • denise richards
  • Denzel Washington
  • Dimensions
  • diva
  • Dracula
  • drugs
  • Dylan Baker
  • ed wood
  • edgar mitchell
  • Ego
  • elektra king
  • Elizabeth Taylor
  • Ellen Page
  • Elvis
  • Emanuelle Beart
  • Endless Love
  • Eric Roberts
  • Erich Kuersten
  • Erskine Cauldwell
  • est
  • Ethel Waters
  • Eugene O'Neill
  • Eva Green
  • Existentialism
  • extreme sports
  • Fah Lo Suee
  • Farrah Fawcett
  • Father's day
  • faulkneresque
  • feminism
  • femme fatale
  • Fight Club
  • Flash Gordon
  • flickorna
  • football
  • freaks
  • Frederic March
  • Freemasons
  • freud
  • Fu Manchu
  • fucked up
  • futurama
  • Gary Cooper
  • Gene Wilder
  • giallo
  • Giant
  • Gigantis
  • Ginger Rogers
  • Godard
  • Godzilla
  • Gold-diggers
  • Greta Garbo
  • Gunnel Lindblom
  • Hal Ashby
  • hallucinations
  • hallucinosis pyschosis
  • Hard Candy
  • Heath Ledger
  • Helen Mack
  • Hell
  • Herzog
  • hippies
  • Hippy Detective
  • Hitman
  • hohokus
  • hokus pokus
  • Hollywood USA
  • homosexuality
  • homphobia
  • horror
  • Hounddog
  • institutionalized
  • irony
  • Isabelle Huppert
  • Italian
  • Jacques Rivette
  • james bond
  • James Dean
  • Jane Birkin
  • Jane Fonda
  • jane's addiction
  • Japan
  • Jason Voorhees
  • Jean Michel Gondry
  • Jessica Alba
  • jill clayburgh
  • Jimi Hendrix
  • Jody Hill
  • John Dahl
  • Joker
  • Jon Voight
  • Joseph Cotten
  • Joseph Von Sternberg
  • Josh Brolin
  • joshua
  • kali
  • Karl Freund
  • Kate Jackson
  • Kate Winslet
  • Kelton
  • Kim Morgan
  • Kim Novak
  • kris kristofferson
  • lacan
  • lacanian
  • Larry Fishburne
  • last year at marienbad
  • laura knight-jadczyk
  • leprosy
  • lesbian
  • Lillian Gish
  • Linda Fiorentino
  • lindsay lohan
  • linebackers
  • loch ness
  • Lois Maxwell
  • Lou Reed
  • Louis Armstrong
  • Lovecraft
  • lsd
  • Lubitsch
  • Luc Besson
  • Lucette Blodgett
  • luis bunuel
  • Lusty
  • Mae West
  • mantis
  • marijuana
  • Marilyn Monroe
  • marissa tomei
  • Marley Shelton
  • marlon brando
  • Marnie
  • masculinity
  • Masonry
  • matt groening
  • McDonalds
  • media studies
  • Mel Brooks
  • memoir
  • metatext
  • MGM
  • Michel Antonioni
  • Michel Piccoli
  • mickey
  • Mike Nicols
  • Miriam Hopkins
  • misogyny
  • Modernism
  • Monet Mazur
  • monsters
  • Monte Hellman
  • morality
  • morricone
  • Mr. Sparkle
  • Mummies
  • Murder
  • Myra Breckenridge
  • Myrna Loy
  • mysticism
  • Nancy Davis
  • Nancy Reagan
  • narcissism
  • Nayland Smith
  • new wave
  • Niagara
  • Nicholas Ray
  • Nietszche
  • night of the iguana
  • Noel Coward
  • Norma Shearer
  • nostalgia
  • observe and report
  • Olivier Assayas
  • orgies
  • Osaka
  • Oscarbait
  • Passion
  • Patrick McGoohan
  • Paul Marcos
  • Paul Robeson
  • Paul Thomas Anderson
  • peckinpah
  • Peter Boyle
  • pierrot
  • plan nine
  • Planet Terror
  • Political correcntess
  • post-modern
  • pratt
  • pre-code
  • pretentiousness
  • promiscuity
  • psychedelics
  • psychotronic
  • Punch
  • Race
  • racism
  • Rainn Wilson
  • Ralph Fiennes
  • Rape
  • Reincarnation
  • Reptilians
  • Repulsion
  • resanais
  • Revolt
  • Richard Burton
  • richichi
  • Robert Rodiriguez
  • Robin Wright Penn
  • Rock Hudson
  • Rod La Rocque
  • Rod Taylor
  • rodeo
  • roger corman
  • Roger Vadim
  • Roman Polanski
  • ronnie
  • rose hobart
  • rourke
  • Rusell Crowe. Jimi Hendrix
  • Russians
  • sade
  • salvia divinorum
  • Sam Jaffe
  • Sammy Davis Jr.
  • sandahl bergman
  • Sandpiper
  • Sandra Dee
  • Sandy Dennis
  • Satan
  • Saturn 13
  • Scarface
  • schneider
  • scimitar
  • Scott Walker
  • scythe swipe
  • Senility
  • Seth Rogen
  • seventies
  • sex
  • sexism
  • Shang Chi
  • shanghai express
  • she spies
  • Sidney Potier
  • Sigourney Weaver
  • slasher
  • snyderman
  • sophie marceau
  • space octopus
  • spider
  • stanwyck
  • stephen king
  • sublimation
  • subtext
  • summer of love
  • Sundance
  • Superheroes
  • tarantalo
  • tarantula
  • tarot
  • Temple Drake
  • tentacles
  • thanatos
  • the mist
  • theory
  • Tibetan Book of the Dead
  • Tippi Hedren
  • Toho
  • Tor Johnson
  • transfiguration
  • transubstantiation
  • TV
  • uncanny
  • Vampira
  • velvet underground
  • venus in furs
  • vera farmiga
  • Veronica Lake
  • vietnam
  • Vin Diesel
  • Vincente Minnelli
  • violence
  • Vortex
  • Walter Matthau
  • watchmen
  • Will Ferrell
  • William Faulkner
  • William Wellman
  • wrestler
  • Xena
  • yeti
  • Zach Snyder
  • zombies

Blog Archive

  • ►  2009 (42)
    • ►  липня (2)
    • ►  червня (6)
    • ►  травня (8)
    • ►  квітня (5)
    • ►  березня (8)
    • ►  лютого (7)
    • ►  січня (6)
  • ►  2008 (91)
    • ►  грудня (8)
    • ►  листопада (10)
    • ►  жовтня (4)
    • ►  вересня (3)
    • ►  серпня (11)
    • ►  липня (7)
    • ►  червня (8)
    • ►  травня (4)
    • ►  квітня (6)
    • ►  березня (9)
    • ►  лютого (14)
    • ►  січня (7)
  • ▼  2007 (34)
    • ▼  грудня (9)
      • 2007: The Year of Apocalyptic Texas Cinema & The D...
      • Chrissie Hynde Vs. Dracula
      • Poppies won't ever blow away
      • Great Old Drunk Writers and their Great Big Black ...
      • Queen of Disks - Part One
      • LAST TANGO IN PARIS: Brando, Butter, Stockholm Syn...
      • Great Dads of the 1970s #1: Jon Voight as Luke in ...
      • Great Dads of the 70s #14: Roy Scheider in JAWS
      • Great Dads of the 70's
    • ►  листопада (4)
    • ►  жовтня (4)
    • ►  вересня (3)
    • ►  серпня (4)
    • ►  липня (5)
    • ►  червня (2)
    • ►  травня (1)
    • ►  січня (2)
  • ►  2006 (8)
    • ►  листопада (1)
    • ►  вересня (2)
    • ►  серпня (3)
    • ►  липня (1)
    • ►  червня (1)
На платформі Blogger.

Про мене

jackichain
Дивитися мій повний профіль