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My Name Is Henry Krinkle: The 10 Best Films Of The Seventies

Join us in our decade-based film retrospective, as we delve backwards all the way from 2009 to 1910. Most decade-based best movie lists grant you a whooping 50-100 entries, which makes perfect sense given all the years you have to take into consideration. But what if you were defining a decade in just ten films? Which movies would you recommend to somebody who might only watch a handful from a given decade? This week, we look back at the Seventies.

3. Jaws (1975) (Dir. Steven Spielberg)

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What should have been highly laughable remains cinema’s most accomplished blockbuster – it just so happens to have been the first one of its kind, too. Jaws is a masterclass in filmmaking from almost every avenue. Steven Spielberg, taking his cues from the novel of the same name by Peter Benchley (who also co-wrote the script), transformed a relatively average throwaway thriller into one of cinema’s great adventure movies – a feat he could not have pulled off without composer John Williams at his side, who racked up the tension with his brilliantly subtle score. What audiences got, then, was firstly a slasher flick built like a Hitchcock movie, followed by a high sea-bound second half that treats its wonderful characters like the crew on a pirate ship: the three leads still seem – after all these years – completely irreplaceable. Yes, Jaws is the pulp Moby Dick – and is arguably a better slice of fiction than that very famous Melville novel.