Jaws Wiki
Tag: Visual edit
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Tag: Visual edit
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|appearances = ''[[Jaws]]''<br>''Jaws'' (novel)
 
|appearances = ''[[Jaws]]''<br>''Jaws'' (novel)
 
|alias = Bruce<br/> The shark
 
|alias = Bruce<br/> The shark
|relatives = [[Brucette]] (mate; deceased)<br>[[Vengeance]] (son; deceased)<br>|fullname=Bruce|gender=Male|occupation=}}
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|relatives = [[Brucette]] (mate; deceased)<br>[[Vengeance]] (son; deceased)<br> [[Brucetta]] (daughter; deceased)<br>|fullname=Bruce|gender=Male|occupation=}}
 
'''Bruce''' is the name of the Great White Shark who appears as the main antagonist of the first ''[[Jaws]]'' film, and was the collective name for a reoccurring group of supposedly-mutated Great White Sharks thought to be closely related genetically, however neither the film nor the novel ever refers to any of the sharks by a particular name. The name Bruce originating from the name given to the original animatronics by Steven Spielberg.
 
'''Bruce''' is the name of the Great White Shark who appears as the main antagonist of the first ''[[Jaws]]'' film, and was the collective name for a reoccurring group of supposedly-mutated Great White Sharks thought to be closely related genetically, however neither the film nor the novel ever refers to any of the sharks by a particular name. The name Bruce originating from the name given to the original animatronics by Steven Spielberg.
   

Revision as of 02:07, 25 September 2021

Jaws-shark-eating-boat
Bruce
Background information
Appears in
Feature firsts
Feature lasts
Character information
Full name Bruce
Gender Male
Status Deceased
Cause of death Killed after Brody shoots the oxygen tank in his mouth, causing him to explode
Other names Bruce
The shark
Occupation
Relatives

Brucette (mate; deceased)
Vengeance (son; deceased)
Brucetta (daughter; deceased)

Relationships
Allies
Appearances Jaws
Jaws (novel)
Portrayed by

Bruce is the name of the Great White Shark who appears as the main antagonist of the first Jaws film, and was the collective name for a reoccurring group of supposedly-mutated Great White Sharks thought to be closely related genetically, however neither the film nor the novel ever refers to any of the sharks by a particular name. The name Bruce originating from the name given to the original animatronics by Steven Spielberg.

This particular incarnation of the shark was depicted in the film Jaws released by Universal in 1975. In addition, there were slightly similar-looking designed sharks depicted in follow-up sequels (J2, J3, and J4, respectively). However, the shark design as depicted in Jaws, is by far the most respected variant among aficionados of the film franchise.

The shark was originally called "Bruce" by film crew members in reference to Steven Spielberg's lawyer, Bruce Raynor, knowledgeable fin fans tend to prefer using this as an official moniker. Interestingly, it has never been agreed upon as to the official name the shark should be called. Casual fans of the film franchise in general tend to call the shark JAWS, which is actually something of a misnomer, considering that there were different sizes and shapes of sharks featured in each of the four films in the franchise.

A hollow, static copy of "Bruce" from the film was discovered in a junkyard years later, and is in essence a fourth "Bruce" pulled from molds for the mechanical shark used in the production of the film. Serious fans of the film have christened this rare find, "Junkyard Bruce" or in

'Junkyard Bruce' has since been restored by special effects artist Greg Nicotero (Scream, Bride of Re-Animator) and is displayed in the Academy for Motion Picture Arts in Los Angeles, kindly donated after the owner passed away.

History

Bruce makes his first appearance at night, marking his first victim: Chrissie Watkins (Susan Backlinie), a young female tourist. (Bruce doesn’t make ANY physical appearances until the film is part way through the second act, his presence mostly indicated in clever underwater shots and the use of symbolism ie. the infamous yellow barrels) Deputy Hendricks (Jeffrey Kramer) finds Chrissie’s remains on the beach, and calls it in. Chief Martin Brody (Roy Scheider) and the medical inspector conclude immediately that it was a shark, but this is later changed when the mayor dismissed it as a “boating accident.” in order to reduce panic on the run up to the 4th of July celebrations. Bruce returns again to the Amity Beach side killing Alex Kintner, a young boy, in the process. Ms. Kintner puts up an ad to kill the shark responsible, causing a shark hunting frenzy. When two men, Denherder and Charlie moor onto a nearby pier, they attach Charlie's wife's holiday roast on a hook, attach it onto the wooden dock and use it to catch the shark. When Bruce takes the bait, it rips apart the whole pier, taking it and Charlie out to sea with it. Charlie slides off the broken pier and swims back to shore, avoiding the shark, chasing after him. A couple of shark hunters claim to have caught Bruce but Matt Hooper (Richard Dreyfuss) , the ocean expert, has his doubts as the bite radius on the tiger shark caught were different than the ones on Ms. Watkins. A drunk Brody and Hooper cut open the tiger shark and find no human remains, causing them to look for Bruce on the water, since Bruce is a “Night feeder” claimed by Hooper. The two stumble upon Ben Gardners ruined boat and Hooper goes to the hull of the wreckage, finding a tooth from Bruce and Ben Gardner dead, dropping the tooth in the process. Hooper and Brody insist on closing the beaches, but the mayor denies their pleads and leaves the beaches open for the tourists. Bruce reappears in the estuary, (Bruce first true appearance), killing a man in a raft (Ted Grossman) and flees back into open sea. Brody hires Quint (Robert Shaw), a grizzled shark hunter, to assist them in killing Bruce with his boat the “Orca”. After a while at sea with nothing to show, Bruce reveals himself whilst Brody chums the water. Bruce circles around the Orca as the group gets ready to make attempts to kill him. Bruce is hit with a yellow flotation barrel in korder to tire him to the surface, however, he dives underwater for until the evening. Bruce returns again while the group is trading tales and drinking and rams the Orca, damaging it in the process. Quint and Hooper make attempts to repair the boat until later the next day when Bruce, finally, tires and resurfaces. Quint and Hooper grab the barrel attached to Bruce and in doing so Bruce resurfaces and Quints hand is cut by the rope in the process. The group gives chase to Bruce, hitting him with two barrels. Bruce is tied to the stern cleats of the Orca and is hit with another barrel. Bruce then uses his mass strength to tow the Orca as the three make attempts to tie him off. Bruce begins to eat his way up the line towards the boat and Quint makes to cut the rope, however, the cleats that had Bruce tied eventually give out and Bruce tries to go back underwater, though he is unsuccessful. Bruce resurfaces with the three barrels behind him, but this time manages to go under. Quint is surprised by this as no shark has ever done this in his years of shark hunting. Bruce hits the Orca after resurfacing again and follows them as they make an attempt to bring him to the shallows and drown him. Quint burns the bearings of the engine, leaving the group stuck in the same place. Quint questions Hooper on the possibilities of his shark cage and they agree to Hooper descending in an attempt to inject bruce in the mouth with poison. Hoopers attempt fails after Bruce attacks the cage and he drops the pole, but he manages to escape the cage. Bruce jumps on the boat and, in doing so, kills Quint after he slides down the broken deck and into his awaiting jaws, he is dragged underwater. Bruce makes attempts to eat Brody, first by entering the sunken cabin and Roaring, but only gets one of the oxygen tanks lodged into his miuth. He is ultimately blown up in a last fight against Brody, who shoots the tank in his mouth with Quints rifle. Hooper resurfaces and swims to Brody, the two look at the barrels left behind by Bruce’s body. The two use the barrels as a float and swim back to shore.

Human Victims

Animal Victims

  • Pippet: Eaten (off-screen).

Appearance

Due to limitations in design production at the time of filmmaking and some mistakes in depiction, the Great White Shark in Jaws is depicted in the attack posture of a Great White Shark. With its mouth wide open and pulled back while the mouth is not presented. It is cruising where the "nose" of the shark is no longer pulled back. This was not intentional in the design as clips of footage of actual great white sharks in the scene with Hooper in the cage, so the Bruce shark design was only designed to depict a great white shark with its mouth in attack posture, but not for when the shark is cruising. Also there were jowls depicted on the shark that was a design mistake as great white sharks do not have jowls, this was most likely to hide the machinery that operated his jaw.

Joe Alves designed the original concept using dehydrated shark specimens from museums and was told to go as big as possible. The frames were completed and then sent to Martha's Vineyard for final touches in what was termed "Shark city". Bob Mattey (20,000 Leagues Under the Sea) was charged with building the monster shark.

There were several versions of Bruce used in various shots, some designed to be towed behind a barge to simulate swimming and others for a mechanical platform and arm, usually only being complete on one side for hero shots. The arm and track were attached to the sea floor, however, it did once sink and had to be rescued.

Throughout the movie and as production carried on, Bruce had to be mended almost daily as he battled the salt water, including swift repaints by divers. You can see in some scenes torn rubber and loosening of the fin attachments as he took on more water. You may also notice when he dives underwater that some water erupts from his eye sockets - it was the only way to maintain pressure. His teeth also noticeably bend backwards when he had Quint in his grip.

Incidentally, the shark on the cover of the Jaws novel is based on a Mako shark, rather than a Great White.

In Jaws, Bruce was destroyed by a compressed air tank during a sea battle led by APD chief Brody, oceanographer Hooper, and Sea captain Quint. A hollow, static copy of 'Bruce' from the film was discovered in a junkyard years later, and is in essence a fourth 'Bruce' pulled from molds for the mechanical shark used in the production of the film. Serious fans of the film have christened this rare find as 'Junkyard Bruce'.

At a whopping 25 feet long, Bruce would have weighed 4.9 tons in real life, higher than Quint's estimation of 3 tons.

Trivia

  • For the live-action film sequences involving Great Whites, footage of real Great Whites circling and attacking the cage in which a dwarf stuntman played Matt Hooper was filmed. As Bruce was a 25-foot shark, a dwarf diver helped to create the correct scale.
  • Stuntman Nick Castle (Halloween) was also used as a stand in for the scenes in which Hooper was attacked in the anti-shark cage.
  • Bruce became such a public icon that his name was used several times in various other films and documentaries, including as the moniker for an animatronic Bull Shark in the discovery channel documentary Anatomy of a Shark Bite and as the name of the Great White appearing in Finding Nemo.
  • In reality, many of the feats Bruce accomplished in the films are impossible for real Great Whites to accomplish; though a Great White can punch a hole in a boat's hull, the shark is by no means strong enough to sink a boat outright. Real Great Whites also cannot pull three floatation barrels underwater for unlimited lengths of time as Bruce did; the strength and endurance required is too much to be natural for a shark.
  • Bruce's size is exceedingly large for a Great White, though some real individual sharks have approached it in size; the legendary female Great White known as the Submarine, a supposed 23-footer that lived in False Bay, South Africa during the 1980's, was one of these. Another, known as Deep Blue, is a large female seen off of Guadalupe Island in Mexico in 2013 that measures about 20 feet long. This shark was likely of similar weight to Bruce due to her pregnancy at the time she was filmed. A third female, known as the Hunchback, was a 21-footer and a regular visitor to the great white hotspot that is the Farallon Islands, which lie 50 miles off the coast of San Francisco.
  • Only female Great Whites reach a length of 20+ feet in reality, with males said to be 16-18 feet, making Bruce, who is said to be male, gigantic for one of his kind.
  • Bruce's great size may be due to his longevity; as real Great Whites are capable of living 72+ years, it is likely that Bruce may be of advanced age, which might explain its size.
  • In the film, Bruce's attack on Alex Kintner was supposed to be more brutal, with the shark actually rising from the water to attack the boy. This was ultimately cut due to its extremely graphic nature. However, photos of the cut scene resurfaced in recent years, with Alex's actor floating on the raft and Bruce's animatronic head rising from the water, about to snatch him up.
  • A tribute to Jaws appeared in the 2008 animated series, Star Wars: The Clone Wars. The main antagonist of the episodes "Water War", "Gungan Attack" and "Prisoners", was a shark-like alien called a Karkarodon named Riff Tamson. Riff Tamson also died in a similar way to Bruce in Jaws; he was killed via an exploding weapon by the protagonist of the episodes.
  • Despite being the main antagonist of the first film, he only gets a total of four minutes of screentime. This was due to continuous mechanical failures of the animatronic shark as it had not been tested in salt water before production.
  • Although Bruce, and by extension, his family, was depicted as eating people and a large part of the reason why sharks are feared in the present day, in reality, Great Whites (Bruce's specific breed), don't actually feed on people, and in fact humans have too little fat to allow Great Whites to replenish energy to power their muscular bodies (plus, taking too long to digest largely thanks to the low fat content of human bodies), with the actual reasons for Great White Shark attacks generally being due to either mistaken identity or otherwise being territorial.

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