Posted by Alumni from The Atlantic
November 30, 2025
I saw Jaws with my father in the summer of 1975, the year it came out. When we walked out of the Oaks movie theater in Berkeley, California, we were giddy, punch-drunk. It's a perfect movie'a big, exciting American movie. From its opening minutes you live inside of it, your regular life suspended somewhere behind you. Waiting for my mother to pick us up, we noticed that we were both vaguely on guard against shark attacks, even though we were standing on Solano Avenue, where the only dangerous sea creatures were down the street in the King Tsin lobster tank. The tagline of the marketing campaign was 'You'll never go in the water again,' and my only non-Jaws thought during the movie was I am never going to the beach again. My father loved the movies, and he knew a lot about them. He'd grown up in Greenwich, Connecticut, and as a child he'd gone by himself to the Pickwick Theatre every weekend. On Saturdays, he'd get the whole enchilada: the serial, the cartoons, the short subjects,... learn more