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Jaws (James Bond)

Jaws is the nickname of a fictional henchman in the James Bond films The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and Moonraker (1979), played in both films by actor Richard Kiel. The character is known for his towering height 2.18 m (7 ft 2 in) and his metal teeth.

Jaws
James Bond character
Richard Kiel as Jaws, showing his metal teeth
Portrayed byRichard Kiel
Voiced byJan Rabson (James Bond Jr)
In-universe information
Affiliation
ClassificationHenchman

Creation

The character was inspired by Ian Fleming's description of a hoodlum named Sol "Horror" Horowitz in his novel The Spy Who Loved Me. When Horror speaks, he reveals steel-capped teeth. The initial script of The Spy Who Loved Me concluded with Jaws being killed by the shark, but after a rough test screening, Jaws was so well-liked that the scene was changed to have him survive. In the storyboard of the sequence from Moonraker (1979), Jaws appeared with an Emilio Largo-style eyepatch, and a mustache, neither of which were seen in the films.

The character's teeth play a prominent role in the films. Albert R. Broccoli is credited with adding steel teeth to the character for The Spy Who Loved Me. Katharina Kubrick Hobbs designed the teeth as cog-like in shape, as he felt that pointed teeth could have injured Kiel.[1] Broccoli originally hired John Chambers to make the teeth; however, these were not used, as they did not meet Broccoli's standards. Broccoli then sent Kiel to Peter Thomas, a dental technician who worked near Pinewood Studios,[2] to construct the appliances. Kiel stated the props were uncomfortable for him and he could only wear them for less than one minute before gagging.[1][3] When the script called for a close-up of Kiel using the teeth to bite through a cable, a stunt cable made from liquorice was used.[4] After shooting a scene, the teeth were placed in a plastic container with cotton wool in the bottom of it and the teeth were rinsed with mouthwash before drying for use in the next scene.[3] After the James Bond films, the teeth were taken to an unknown location.[3] In 2002, the teeth were displayed as part of an exhibition at Science Museum, London to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the release of Dr. No.[5][6]

Appearances

In films

Jaws first appeared in the 1977 film The Spy Who Loved Me as a henchman to the villain, Karl Stromberg. He was an assassin, and is last seen swimming in the ocean after escaping from the Atlantis city ship on which Bond had killed Stromberg before it was torpedoed and sunk.

In the next film, Moonraker (1979), Jaws is employed by both Bond's unspecified enemy in the pre-credits sequence, and the main villain Hugo Drax. Jaws is evidently well known among criminals, as Drax is pleased to learn that Jaws is available to hire.

In his second appearance Jaws changed from a ruthless and unstoppable killing machine to more of a comedic figure (commencing with the cable car sequence) and he eventually turns against Drax and helps Bond to defeat him. In addition to having steel teeth, Jaws was also gigantic and extremely strong, which forced Bond to be especially inventive while fighting him. In combat during The Spy Who Loved Me, Bond found himself caught in an unbreakable death grip by Jaws, who was about to fatally bite him; Bond escaped by using a broken electric lamp to send an electric shock through the assassin's teeth to stun him. In Moonraker he gains a girlfriend (Dolly) who, like Jaws, seems to almost never speak (she says nothing audible in the film) and who is the primary reason for his reformation.

Jaws also has an uncanny ability to survive any misfortune seemingly unscathed and come back to challenge Bond again. In The Spy Who Loved Me, Jaws survives an Egyptian structure's collapse on top of him, being hit by a van, being thrown from a rapidly moving train, sitting in the passenger seat of a car which veers off a cliff in Sardinia and lands in a hut below (to the owner's dismay), a battle underwater with a shark and the destruction of Stromberg's lair. In Moonraker, he survives falling several thousand feet after accidentally disabling his own parachute (he falls through a circus tent and lands in the trapeze net), a crash through a building inside a runaway cable car (where he meets and falls in love with Dolly) and going over Iguazu Falls. After each of these incidents (except the last), he always picks himself up, dusts off his jacket, straightens his tie (in much the same way as Bond himself) and nonchalantly walks away. As Jaws escapes from Drax's disintegrating space station to an escape pod with his girlfriend; they open a bottle of champagne, and Jaws speaks his only line in the entire franchise: "Well, here's to us." The viewer is later informed that Jaws and Dolly made it back to Earth safely.

In 1979, there were plans to bring Jaws back for a third film. In For Your Eyes Only, Jaws would marry Dolly.[7] However, due to a change in production personnel and a desire to make the films more down-to-earth, the producers chose not to bring Kiel or Jaws back.

Novelizations

Most of the background information on Jaws comes from Christopher Wood's novelisation of the film The Spy Who Loved Me; published as James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me to differentiate from Ian Fleming's novel. In Wood's version, Jaws' real name is Zbigniew Krycsiwiki. He was born in Poland, the product of a union between the strong man of a travelling circus and the Chief Wardress at the Women's Prison in Kraków. The relationship and subsequent marriage had been a stormy one and, when it broke up, the young Zbigniew stayed with his mother and attended school and subsequently university in Cracow. He grew to a prodigious height but in temperament he followed his father and was surly and uncooperative, given to sudden outbreaks of violent temper. Because of his size he commanded a place in the university basketball team, but he was sluggish of reaction and his lack of speed was constantly exposed by more skilful but less physically endowed players. After a failed attempt at a basketball career, Krycsiwiki was arrested by the secret police for having taken part in the (fictitious) "1972 bread riots". While he was imprisoned, the police "beat him with hollow steel clubs encased in thick leather" until they thought he was dead, leaving his jaw broken beyond repair. Krycsiwiki later escaped and stowed aboard one of Stromberg's vessels. Eventually he was caught, but instead of turning him in, Stromberg hired a prestigious doctor to create an artificial jaw. After 14 operations Krycsiwiki's jaw was restored using steel components that created two rows of terrifying razor-sharp teeth, although Jaws was left mute. Since none of the above is actually mentioned in either movie, this is not necessarily considered canonical, and Wood contradicts his own continuity when one compares his scripts and his novelisations.

In the novelisation of The Spy Who Loved Me, Wood specifically states that Jaws is a mute. However, though Jaws remains mute in Wood's James Bond and Moonraker novelisation, he actually does speak at the end of the film. In the book, Jaws remains attached to the magnet that Bond dips into the tank, as opposed to the film where Bond releases Jaws from the magnet into the water: "Now both hands were tearing at the magnet, and Jaws twisted furiously like a fish on the hook. As Bond watched in fascinated horror, a relentless triangle streaked up behind the stricken giant. A huge gray force launched itself through the wild water, and two rows of white teeth closed around the threshing flesh."[8]

Other appearances

Jaws appeared in the 1990s animated spin-off James Bond Jr. as a member of the SCUM organization and partner-in-crime of fellow henchman Nick Nack. In the show, Jaws underwent some change in his appearance; he was more muscular, his chin was also metal, and he spoke regularly. He is voiced by Jan Rabson.

Jaws' principal video game appearances are in the 1997 Nintendo 64 game GoldenEye 007 in a bonus mission in which he is a henchman to the deceased Hugo Drax whom Bond needs to defeat, and has multiple appearances in the multi-platform 2004 game 007: Everything or Nothing as a henchman to Nikolai Diavolo. Both games use Richard Kiel's likeness and voice (grunts and sound effects).

In Everything or Nothing, Jaws is electrocuted and is inside a train that plummets into a canyon. Later he drives a tanker intending to destroy the New Orleans levees, but Bond destroys his tanker by sending it off of the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway; Bond exclaiming, "I have a sinking feeling that won't be the last I'll see of him". In a fight on a large lift, in which Jaws is equipped with a flamethrower, Bond shoots the flamethrower backpack which ignites Jaws. Bond then climbs into the cockpit of a plane and ejects his seat as the lift plummets to the ground. When Bond subsequently lands on the remains of the lift, Jaws is nowhere to be found, leaving his fate ambiguous. He cannot be hurt himself, and any players that try to hurt him will be killed almost immediately by him.

Jaws is an unlockable multiplayer character in GoldenEye 007 as well as in 007: Nightfire, where he is the tallest character in the game, his punches can kill almost instantly, and the character model's teeth are visible at close range. Jaws is a playable multiplayer character in the 2010 remake GoldenEye 007 for the Wii, and in the 2011 re-release GoldenEye 007: Reloaded for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. He is also in the 2012 James Bond game 007 Legends.

Jaws appears in the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis game James Bond 007: The Duel, where he wanders briefly around a section toward the end of the first stage and defeats the player with one hit. He also serves as the game's final boss. Jaws also appears in the Game Boy game James Bond 007 as a boss, where Bond must lead him to magnetized pads that will temporarily hold him in place, allowing time for Bond to attack him.

Cultural impact

In the 2015 Bond movie Spectre, the henchman Mr Hinx (Dave Bautista) has similarities to Jaws, such as a massive build (though not an actual giant), immense strength and almost no dialogue. He also engages Bond in a lengthy fight on a train.

Jaws was spoofed in Mel Brooks' 1977 film High Anxiety, featuring a hired killer named Braces (played by Rudy De Luca) who is wearing large metal braces on his teeth. An unrelated character named Braces from the video games TimeSplitters 2 and TimeSplitters: Future Perfect is also referencing Jaws. The film 2008 Get Smart, which is both a parody of and an homage to the James Bond film series, features a character named Dalip (played by The Great Khali), who looks like Jaws and does his Moonraker stunt of falling from the sky without a parachute and surviving; he also helps the film's protagonists in the end.

Jaws makes a cameo appearance in the animated series Jackie Chan Adventures (episode "Tough Luck"), where he auditions as a prospective henchman for Finn and gets his steel teeth (which are revealed to be dentures) stuck in a board he bites into. In the final credits sequence of the film adaptation of Inspector Gadget, Doctor Claw's assistant is shown attending a Henchman's Anonymous meeting; Richard Kiel, who is billed in the credits as "Famous Big Guy with Metal Teeth", is in attendance. Kiel also played Reace, a very similar character to Jaws (complete with metal teeth), in the 1976 film Silver Streak. In Aces Go Places 3, the third movie in a James Bond spoof series, Kiel plays a villain named Big G, which resembles Jaws, though he has no metal teeth. The film also features an actor who resembles the character Oddjob, another James Bond villain.

In the 2002 French comedy movie Le Boulet, Gary Tiplady portrayed a similar character named Requin The Giant.

MythBusters tested the plausibility of Jaws biting through the steel cable car wire. The model based on the dentures used in the movie had little impact on the steel cable, even with a hydraulic press at ten times human bite strength. Jamie Hyneman then took huge metal pincers and became "Claws", who, as the announcer said, was "meaner than Oddjob, more ferocious than Jaws, taller than Nick Nack, and creepier than Tee Hee." With the metal pincers, he gets through the cord easily.[9]


References

  1. ^ a b Inside The Spy Who Loved Me. The Spy Who Loved Me Ultimate Edition DVD, Disk 2
  2. ^ "How teeth for Bond villain Jaws were designed in Denham". Buckinghamshire Advertiser. 2012-10-04. Archived from the original on 2013-07-07. Retrieved 2013-05-22.
  3. ^ a b c MacNab, Geoffrey (2009-05-08). "Geoffrey Macnab talks to Richard "Jaws" Kiel". The Guardian. Retrieved 2013-05-22.
  4. ^ Bochenski, Natalie (2012-10-04). "50 Classic James Bond Moments". Theage. Retrieved 2013-05-22.
  5. ^ "Inside Q's workshop". BBC News. 2002-08-01. Retrieved 2013-05-22.
  6. ^ "In pictures: Bond, James Bond". BBC News. 2002-10-15. Retrieved 2013-05-22.
  7. ^ Beck, Marilyn (30 June 1979). "Moore awaits word on James Bond future". The StarPhoenix. Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. p. 31.
  8. ^ Wood, Christopher (1977). James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me. Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-84544-2.
  9. ^ "James Bond, Part 2". MythBusters. February 6, 2008.

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Jaws is the nickname of a fictional henchman in the James Bond films The Spy Who Loved Me 1977 and Moonraker 1979 played in both films by actor Richard Kiel The character is known for his towering height 2 18 m 7 ft 2 in and his metal teeth JawsJames Bond characterRichard Kiel as Jaws showing his metal teethPortrayed byRichard KielVoiced byJan Rabson James Bond Jr In universe informationAffiliationKarl Stromberg The Spy Who Loved Me Hugo Drax Moonraker SCUM James Bond Jr Nikolai Diavolo 007 Everything or Nothing ClassificationHenchman Contents 1 Creation 2 Appearances 2 1 In films 2 1 1 Novelizations 2 2 Other appearances 3 Cultural impact 4 ReferencesCreation EditThe character was inspired by Ian Fleming s description of a hoodlum named Sol Horror Horowitz in his novel The Spy Who Loved Me When Horror speaks he reveals steel capped teeth The initial script of The Spy Who Loved Me concluded with Jaws being killed by the shark but after a rough test screening Jaws was so well liked that the scene was changed to have him survive In the storyboard of the sequence from Moonraker 1979 Jaws appeared with an Emilio Largo style eyepatch and a mustache neither of which were seen in the films The character s teeth play a prominent role in the films Albert R Broccoli is credited with adding steel teeth to the character for The Spy Who Loved Me Katharina Kubrick Hobbs designed the teeth as cog like in shape as he felt that pointed teeth could have injured Kiel 1 Broccoli originally hired John Chambers to make the teeth however these were not used as they did not meet Broccoli s standards Broccoli then sent Kiel to Peter Thomas a dental technician who worked near Pinewood Studios 2 to construct the appliances Kiel stated the props were uncomfortable for him and he could only wear them for less than one minute before gagging 1 3 When the script called for a close up of Kiel using the teeth to bite through a cable a stunt cable made from liquorice was used 4 After shooting a scene the teeth were placed in a plastic container with cotton wool in the bottom of it and the teeth were rinsed with mouthwash before drying for use in the next scene 3 After the James Bond films the teeth were taken to an unknown location 3 In 2002 the teeth were displayed as part of an exhibition at Science Museum London to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the release of Dr No 5 6 Appearances EditIn films Edit Jaws first appeared in the 1977 film The Spy Who Loved Me as a henchman to the villain Karl Stromberg He was an assassin and is last seen swimming in the ocean after escaping from the Atlantis city ship on which Bond had killed Stromberg before it was torpedoed and sunk In the next film Moonraker 1979 Jaws is employed by both Bond s unspecified enemy in the pre credits sequence and the main villain Hugo Drax Jaws is evidently well known among criminals as Drax is pleased to learn that Jaws is available to hire In his second appearance Jaws changed from a ruthless and unstoppable killing machine to more of a comedic figure commencing with the cable car sequence and he eventually turns against Drax and helps Bond to defeat him In addition to having steel teeth Jaws was also gigantic and extremely strong which forced Bond to be especially inventive while fighting him In combat during The Spy Who Loved Me Bond found himself caught in an unbreakable death grip by Jaws who was about to fatally bite him Bond escaped by using a broken electric lamp to send an electric shock through the assassin s teeth to stun him In Moonraker he gains a girlfriend Dolly who like Jaws seems to almost never speak she says nothing audible in the film and who is the primary reason for his reformation Jaws also has an uncanny ability to survive any misfortune seemingly unscathed and come back to challenge Bond again In The Spy Who Loved Me Jaws survives an Egyptian structure s collapse on top of him being hit by a van being thrown from a rapidly moving train sitting in the passenger seat of a car which veers off a cliff in Sardinia and lands in a hut below to the owner s dismay a battle underwater with a shark and the destruction of Stromberg s lair In Moonraker he survives falling several thousand feet after accidentally disabling his own parachute he falls through a circus tent and lands in the trapeze net a crash through a building inside a runaway cable car where he meets and falls in love with Dolly and going over Iguazu Falls After each of these incidents except the last he always picks himself up dusts off his jacket straightens his tie in much the same way as Bond himself and nonchalantly walks away As Jaws escapes from Drax s disintegrating space station to an escape pod with his girlfriend they open a bottle of champagne and Jaws speaks his only line in the entire franchise Well here s to us The viewer is later informed that Jaws and Dolly made it back to Earth safely In 1979 there were plans to bring Jaws back for a third film In For Your Eyes Only Jaws would marry Dolly 7 However due to a change in production personnel and a desire to make the films more down to earth the producers chose not to bring Kiel or Jaws back Novelizations Edit Most of the background information on Jaws comes from Christopher Wood s novelisation of the film The Spy Who Loved Me published as James Bond The Spy Who Loved Me to differentiate from Ian Fleming s novel In Wood s version Jaws real name is Zbigniew Krycsiwiki He was born in Poland the product of a union between the strong man of a travelling circus and the Chief Wardress at the Women s Prison in Krakow The relationship and subsequent marriage had been a stormy one and when it broke up the young Zbigniew stayed with his mother and attended school and subsequently university in Cracow He grew to a prodigious height but in temperament he followed his father and was surly and uncooperative given to sudden outbreaks of violent temper Because of his size he commanded a place in the university basketball team but he was sluggish of reaction and his lack of speed was constantly exposed by more skilful but less physically endowed players After a failed attempt at a basketball career Krycsiwiki was arrested by the secret police for having taken part in the fictitious 1972 bread riots While he was imprisoned the police beat him with hollow steel clubs encased in thick leather until they thought he was dead leaving his jaw broken beyond repair Krycsiwiki later escaped and stowed aboard one of Stromberg s vessels Eventually he was caught but instead of turning him in Stromberg hired a prestigious doctor to create an artificial jaw After 14 operations Krycsiwiki s jaw was restored using steel components that created two rows of terrifying razor sharp teeth although Jaws was left mute Since none of the above is actually mentioned in either movie this is not necessarily considered canonical and Wood contradicts his own continuity when one compares his scripts and his novelisations In the novelisation of The Spy Who Loved Me Wood specifically states that Jaws is a mute However though Jaws remains mute in Wood s James Bond and Moonraker novelisation he actually does speak at the end of the film In the book Jaws remains attached to the magnet that Bond dips into the tank as opposed to the film where Bond releases Jaws from the magnet into the water Now both hands were tearing at the magnet and Jaws twisted furiously like a fish on the hook As Bond watched in fascinated horror a relentless triangle streaked up behind the stricken giant A huge gray force launched itself through the wild water and two rows of white teeth closed around the threshing flesh 8 Other appearances Edit Jaws appeared in the 1990s animated spin off James Bond Jr as a member of the SCUM organization and partner in crime of fellow henchman Nick Nack In the show Jaws underwent some change in his appearance he was more muscular his chin was also metal and he spoke regularly He is voiced by Jan Rabson Jaws principal video game appearances are in the 1997 Nintendo 64 game GoldenEye 007 in a bonus mission in which he is a henchman to the deceased Hugo Drax whom Bond needs to defeat and has multiple appearances in the multi platform 2004 game 007 Everything or Nothing as a henchman to Nikolai Diavolo Both games use Richard Kiel s likeness and voice grunts and sound effects In Everything or Nothing Jaws is electrocuted and is inside a train that plummets into a canyon Later he drives a tanker intending to destroy the New Orleans levees but Bond destroys his tanker by sending it off of the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway Bond exclaiming I have a sinking feeling that won t be the last I ll see of him In a fight on a large lift in which Jaws is equipped with a flamethrower Bond shoots the flamethrower backpack which ignites Jaws Bond then climbs into the cockpit of a plane and ejects his seat as the lift plummets to the ground When Bond subsequently lands on the remains of the lift Jaws is nowhere to be found leaving his fate ambiguous He cannot be hurt himself and any players that try to hurt him will be killed almost immediately by him Jaws is an unlockable multiplayer character in GoldenEye 007 as well as in 007 Nightfire where he is the tallest character in the game his punches can kill almost instantly and the character model s teeth are visible at close range Jaws is a playable multiplayer character in the 2010 remake GoldenEye 007 for the Wii and in the 2011 re release GoldenEye 007 Reloaded for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 He is also in the 2012 James Bond game 007 Legends Jaws appears in the Sega Mega Drive Genesis game James Bond 007 The Duel where he wanders briefly around a section toward the end of the first stage and defeats the player with one hit He also serves as the game s final boss Jaws also appears in the Game Boy game James Bond 007 as a boss where Bond must lead him to magnetized pads that will temporarily hold him in place allowing time for Bond to attack him Cultural impact EditIn the 2015 Bond movie Spectre the henchman Mr Hinx Dave Bautista has similarities to Jaws such as a massive build though not an actual giant immense strength and almost no dialogue He also engages Bond in a lengthy fight on a train Jaws was spoofed in Mel Brooks 1977 film High Anxiety featuring a hired killer named Braces played by Rudy De Luca who is wearing large metal braces on his teeth An unrelated character named Braces from the video games TimeSplitters 2 and TimeSplitters Future Perfect is also referencing Jaws The film 2008 Get Smart which is both a parody of and an homage to the James Bond film series features a character named Dalip played by The Great Khali who looks like Jaws and does his Moonraker stunt of falling from the sky without a parachute and surviving he also helps the film s protagonists in the end Jaws makes a cameo appearance in the animated series Jackie Chan Adventures episode Tough Luck where he auditions as a prospective henchman for Finn and gets his steel teeth which are revealed to be dentures stuck in a board he bites into In the final credits sequence of the film adaptation of Inspector Gadget Doctor Claw s assistant is shown attending a Henchman s Anonymous meeting Richard Kiel who is billed in the credits as Famous Big Guy with Metal Teeth is in attendance Kiel also played Reace a very similar character to Jaws complete with metal teeth in the 1976 film Silver Streak In Aces Go Places 3 the third movie in a James Bond spoof series Kiel plays a villain named Big G which resembles Jaws though he has no metal teeth The film also features an actor who resembles the character Oddjob another James Bond villain In the 2002 French comedy movie Le Boulet Gary Tiplady portrayed a similar character named Requin The Giant MythBusters tested the plausibility of Jaws biting through the steel cable car wire The model based on the dentures used in the movie had little impact on the steel cable even with a hydraulic press at ten times human bite strength Jamie Hyneman then took huge metal pincers and became Claws who as the announcer said was meaner than Oddjob more ferocious than Jaws taller than Nick Nack and creepier than Tee Hee With the metal pincers he gets through the cord easily 9 References Edit a b Inside The Spy Who Loved Me The Spy Who Loved Me Ultimate Edition DVD Disk 2 How teeth for Bond villain Jaws were designed in Denham Buckinghamshire Advertiser 2012 10 04 Archived from the original on 2013 07 07 Retrieved 2013 05 22 a b c MacNab Geoffrey 2009 05 08 Geoffrey Macnab talks to Richard Jaws Kiel The Guardian Retrieved 2013 05 22 Bochenski Natalie 2012 10 04 50 Classic James Bond Moments Theage Retrieved 2013 05 22 Inside Q s workshop BBC News 2002 08 01 Retrieved 2013 05 22 In pictures Bond James Bond BBC News 2002 10 15 Retrieved 2013 05 22 Beck Marilyn 30 June 1979 Moore awaits word on James Bond future The StarPhoenix Saskatoon Saskatchewan p 31 Wood Christopher 1977 James Bond The Spy Who Loved Me Warner Books ISBN 0 446 84544 2 James Bond Part 2 MythBusters February 6 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jaws James Bond amp oldid 1125228652, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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