Les dents de la mer: Un succès monstre

Les dents de la mer: Un succès monstre 6.7/10

In the summer of 1975, the young director Steven Spielberg set new standards for cinema worldwide with an oversized shark bite, a plastic shark fin and an unmistakable two-note main theme composed by John Williams. With the horror from the deep, a man-eating, gigantic great white shark, the film of the same name became a similarly traumatic reference as Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho": it triggered lasting primal fears across generations. On the beaches of the world, there was clearly a "before" and an "after". Steven Spielberg, who was only 28 at the time, not only set new standards for the thriller genre, but also hid his biting criticism of US capitalism in the 1970s behind it.

Similar Movies

The Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat
Every Day After
Microcosmos
Woman, Life, Freedom: An Iranian Revolution
Legasthenie - Wir dachten immer, du bist dumm
Inside Chernobyl's Mega Tomb
Sing Me a Song
Good Chemistry: The Story of Elemental
The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee
Swipe, Match, Murder: The Disappearance of Grace Millane
Papercut
A Day in the Life of French Cinema
Homo Cinematographicus
The Society of the Spectacle
Caravana
D'Emmanuelle à Emmanuelle
My Best Fiend
Jordan River Anderson, The Messenger
Sam and Colby: The Legends of the Paranormal
Full Circle