Even if we did, I would NOT want to go back to anything. I want to keep moving/ persevering ahead/forward. I am a born-again christian and the future is going to be BRIGHT for me and all who have placed their faith in JESUS CHRIST. Rapture Ready 5/10/2024. 🎺🎺🎺🎺🎺Just think…seeing JESUS face to face. Now, that will be heaven to me. 🙏🏾🎚️🎺🕊️👍🏾💯🌺⏰⏰⏰. Take care.
I was 14 when I went to see JAWS with a bunch of friends I was holding the big tub of popcorn and when the head fell out of the boat that was under water the girl next to me grabbed my leg so hard I jumped and there was popcorn all over the place lol . . . Rollerball was also a great one
Yeah,our local newspaper had jaws listed at the cinema ,i remember the catchy phrase TENTH TEEHY WEEK.I should have saved those newspapers! Had t shirts too.Tose went into the wind also.
@@stephendacey8761Saw Jaws & Star Wars 10 times each. Three friends and I made a Saturday afternoon of going to see Jaws and sit through it twice, after we’d all already seen it. Good times!
I turned 25 in June that year. I sorta remember it. I was in college and learning computer programming while some kids named Bill Gates and Steve Jobs were tinkering with home computers. How ridiculous. Nobody would want that.
I was 12 when JAWS came out. I had read the whole book TWICE in anticipation. Went on vacation to Florida from Georgia and arrived on the day it came out. I INSISTED on going to opening night. I was so gobsmacked that I was AFRAID to be in the SWIMMING POOL that night and was AFRAID to be in the BATHTUB in the hotel! Hahaha!
I totally relate! I was about to turn 10 that summer, and lived in Florida. One of my friend's dad took a group of us to see it, I had always been fearful of the water, but that sealed the deal, never looked at the beach / ocean the same again!! 😬
Another masterpiece Fred. One of the things I remember the most, especially with Jaws, is the lines to see it in the theaters. This was the days when theaters were huge, not like the postage stamp theaters that are around now. And movies like this and Star Wars would run for months during their first run. Those were the days. Oh, and by the way Fred, that movie Night Moves with Gene Hackman, that was shown not too long ago on TV, not sure what channel it was, but that was a real eye opener. Definitely worth a watch, unedited.
Gregg, I saw Jaws while visiting NYC and every seat was filled in the huge theater. Then, when I returned home, I took my dad to see it and we had to sit in the front row!
You can definitely tell that Steven Spielberg was influenced by Alfred Hitchcock when he directed Jaws. Quint's monologue of surviving the sinking of the USS Indianapolis still gives me chills to this day.
Thank you Fred for this wonderful video. I was 20, a junior in college, using an antique Smith Corona typewriter for all my college papers. Where did the years go - so many things still on my bucket list. Thanks for bringing back great memories.
There was something really special about 1975--the culture, the music, the goings-on. I remember when my mom took me to see Jaws at our local indoor theatre. So scary! Thank you so much for the walk down memory lane!😄
Another movie that I liked was Airport 1975 with Charlton Heston as the pilot. That scene, in color, of the plane flying over the snow capped mountains was an incredible scene. It even influenced me to be a pilot.
Jaws! I remember the theater I saw it in: The Cooper, one of the great Cinerama houses. It essentially created the "summer blockbuster". That Captain and Tennille song makes me feel super nostalgic. Love and Death was made when Woody Allen wanted to be funny. God, Linda Ronstadt was talented. Love it, Fred.
Yeah, Robert, the 1,000-screen summer blockbuster was born with Jaws. But as much as I loved that and Star Wars, they essentially ruined movies. Studios went from great directors personal visions to mass audience pleasers. Even to this day.
@@FredFlix I think your comment is spot on, Fred. Movies went from being an artistic endeavor of a director to corporatized "product". Movie budgets are ridiculously inflated. 1976's Rocky, the best picture winner, couldn't be made today.
I saw a lot of kids in that theater for the movie Jaws. I distinctly remembered my parents would not let me see that movie because of the violence, even though it was only PG, and they wouldn’t let me see blazing saddles because of the profanity…I was eight years old.
Jaws was the first motion picture I saw at 11 and had to sneak out the house since my dad was religious and going to the movies was sinful but my mother was liberated and covered for me so I could go with my friends.
“Jaws” summer I was in Hawai’i where my parents lived, watching tourists stand in line for hours to go indoors, away from the sun, to watch a movie they could see at honey. Just my opinion. SMDH.
Nice Job, Fred! 1:43 - Toni Tennille turned 84 years old yesterday (May 8), so happy birthday to her! 5:55 - Jay Leno had a late 70s joke about David Janssen promoting a pain reliever as "He looks like a headache.". Leno reused the joke around the 1990s, using Tom Skerritt's name instead. 10:05 - Nice to think of a mortgage payment just over $200/month. 11:28 - John Travolta was nominated for a "Golden Turkey Award" for "Worst Movie Debut" in "The Devil's Rain". Tom Skerritt was quoted in the book as calling the movie "a picture to throw up by". I have no intention of ever seeing either film, but I imagine it was more nauseating than "Jaws".
Awesome show Fred, thanks sir! I can still remember my brother Duke asking me if I wanted to go to the movies, Mom asked what we were going to see. Duke said Heaven Can Wait with Warren Beatty. We get to the cinema, there's JAWS. I said how come we're not here to see that? Duke said we are, numbnuts! 😅
Saw all these films in the theater, except Night Moves. Can't think of doing that today :D Saw Rollerball on birthday. Jaws while vacationing in Maine and went swimming in the ocean the next day. We left Nashville at intermisson, not too funny for 10 year olds
I was stationed at Camp Pendleton in California when Jaws released. The weekend before it came out, the beach was quite busy as usual. After it came out, the beach had like 3 or 4 people laying on the sand, no one in the water.
Didn’t get to see Jaws until the 1978 re-release because Mom wouldn’t let me go. Lol. She was right to not let me see “The Exorcist” a few years earlier (good call Mom! I’m still not old enough for that one!) … but not sure about this one. However, my older cousin told me all the gory details which of course only built up the movie’s mythos in my mind. Great choice on “Love Will Keep Us Together,” Fred - really embodies the sound of music that summer, among a few others. Love that drill sgt. in Woody’s “Love and Death” 😂 - from Woody’s “earlier, funnier stuff.”
Over here in Australia, we also received the vast majority of this pop culture (music/movies etc) - JAWS was huge here as well (and remains a superb movie to this day). Thanks Fred for your great videos, like everyone else here, absoluetly enjoying your efforts!
Jaws was the 2nd movie I ever went to, I was 7 or 8 years old. I lived on a sail boat at that time, which was cool. That movie to this day is among my favorites. Great video, thank you 😃
i believe i saw at least one headline on the front page of the enquirer like the line you have in your description lol. along with "photo evidence" inside.
I was a 14 yr old teenage girl and had my first puppy love. It lasted 2 yrs and no sex. My favorite songs were"Get down Tonight by K.C &The Sunshine Band, "Love Won't Let Me Wait" by Major Harris and "Look at me I'm in Love" by The Moments. Just 2 yrs later i met my future husband and still together today.
I can't believe jaws was rated PG and you could smoke in theaters! Everywhere really! Thank u Fred! I remember working at hospital and smoking in hall or bathroom! LoL! I quit at 21.
@@FredFlix That is hilarious!!! I told you I saw Grease at age ten and I was smoking just like bad Sandy!lol! Still playing dolls.....my best friend's mom would let us play in the car like we were taking our " babies" on a trip and give us each a Virginia slim to pretend with. Well....after Grease we lit them! LoL! Smoked recreationally til 21 and quit. They were 85 cents a pack when I started and 1.50 when I quit. You were smart!:)
More great nostalgia Fred from my favorite year. Thanks for the shout out to Nashville, one of the greatest movies of that era. BTW- The Devil's Rain also costarred the then unknown John Travolta. A couple of years later the movie was re-released to theaters after he became a big star. The ads proclaimed him as the star of the movie even though his role was tiny
Rollerball wasn't an Oscar nominee, for good reason, although it was entertaining. It was miles better than the 2000s remake, featuring pro wrestling personality Paul Heyman in the John Houseman role.
I love the shell shocked look of people coming out of the theater after seeing Jaws. I saw it on opening day and the audience went absolutely nuts at the end. For those few who haven’t seen it, I won’t spoil it, but it was an amazing experience. I wish films today could evoke such emotions (fear, elation). No films today are even close
@@FredFlix it’s my favorite film. I have described it as the perfect film. Not just frightening but beautifully written, brilliantly acted, scenically gorgeous. AND. The production film had many problems including technical failures, a young inexperienced director and an often inebriated and belligerent Robert Shaw (who was brilliant btw). Despite all this, the film is perfect. The 70s produced some of the best films ever. I honestly cannot remember that many films from the 80s, 90s and beyond. When I think that of my 5 favorite films, actually three of them were made in the 1974-1975 period. They are 1) Jaws 2) Barry Lyndon and 3) The Taking of Pelham 123. Only one of my top faves was made after the 70s and that is Goodfellas
@@FredFlixAbsolutely correct. The script and acting is superb. I mean even the supporting actors who were locals at Martha’s Vineyard were incredible. I have never seen anything as good as
19, my parents took my younger brother and i down to vabeach then outer banks and ocracoke. By this time he had seen jaws 15 times and me 5...nobody was going in the water except us....lol
Great music selection I wouldn't dare choose from. In where the days when you had to practice the steps and choreo *before* going dancing to The Hustle. 🎵🎶🎵 Ha, this is getting better by the day, Fred. 💜🤟☺️
Hi, Fred: @ 2:20 I see a sign hanging out in that Times Square picture that says, Canadian Club which I think is a whisky. Was that a big thing down there? 'Andy Williams & Evel Knievel's Sister: It's Love'...until it comes crashing down. 'In the not too distant future, wars will no longer exist.' Not as long as humans are living on it. At 11:25 a good trivia question for younger people is, what was Nissan called before it took that name. William Shatner sure played his roll well in that Twilight Zone episode where he sees an imp out on the wing of the plane. Nice memories, Fred; thank you.
@@FredFlix Good attempt, Fred but look at the top car name on the magazine at 11:25 and that's the answer. Seems to me at that time they were rust buckets but I'm not sure of that.
I remember that plane crash. I saw a flash and heard a loud boom. My father said it was a plane crash. We heard sirens in the distance. There was a special bulletin later that night. Dad was right!😮 My dogs ran under the beds when they heard the boom.
"Jaws" was a big deal. 1975 was a good year for movies in general, but "Jaws" really packed the theatres; in fact, it played for ten months in Charlotte. I used to really love the movie ads in the newspaper, especially the ones that would read, 'Held Over-----for the 22nd smash week! See it today----if you dare!'
My favourite movie-Jaws-check. My Pops' favourite movie-Rollerball-check. Proof that disco started in '75, *not* '78, check. Did TV Guide really put that apostrophe in there? Say it ain't so, people-who-wrote-for-a-living.) Another excellent video from Fred-double check. Excellent, Fred.
I noticed the apostrophe too, CAM, being a former newspaper copy editor. (That won't preclude me from making the occasional grammatical goof in my videos, though.)
@@FredFlix Of course, a man of taste would notice. As an editor (you're never a "former". It's like the Grammar Mob.) you must lose your mind daily, if your city still has a newspaper. I keep a Sharpie with me to correct apostrophes on the go.
@@cainealexander-mccord2805 OMG, there's nobody there with a good understanding of -- or concern for -- grammar. People who know technology (and are fast) are promoted.
I remember seeing JAWS and my dad kept putting his hands over my eyes during some of the grossest parts. Um, it wasn't until I got older and watched it on TV that I found out why my dad did what he did. Other than that the 1970's was cool and I wouldn't trade it for anything.
I thought tobacco product advertising ended in 1971 There was a cigar commercial also a cigarette ad on a building near the theater showing Jaws Lots of scary movies those days
Correct, @@FredFlix. Cigar and pipe tobacco ads aired almost to the end of the '70s, with chewing tobacco and snuff commercials continuing into the early '80s, I believe.
I remember my dad took me & my brothers to see JAWS for my birthday. Sure gave me a scare, but it was to be one of many Summer blockbusters i'd see in the theaters in the coming years. Thanks for the memories (& that Playboy cover), FredFlix. 🦈