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Les Dents de la mer 3

Original title: Jaws 3-D
  • 1983
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
3.7/10
52K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,230
2,976
Les Dents de la mer 3 (1983)
A giant thirty-five-foot shark becomes trapped in a SeaWorld theme park and it's up to the sons of police chief Brody to rescue everyone.
Play trailer1:17
1 Video
99+ Photos
Monster HorrorSea AdventureSurvivalAdventureHorrorThriller

A giant thirty-five-foot shark becomes trapped in a SeaWorld theme park and it's up to the sons of police chief Brody to rescue everyone.A giant thirty-five-foot shark becomes trapped in a SeaWorld theme park and it's up to the sons of police chief Brody to rescue everyone.A giant thirty-five-foot shark becomes trapped in a SeaWorld theme park and it's up to the sons of police chief Brody to rescue everyone.

  • Director
    • Joe Alves
  • Writers
    • Peter Benchley
    • Richard Matheson
    • Carl Gottlieb
  • Stars
    • Dennis Quaid
    • Bess Armstrong
    • Simon MacCorkindale
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.7/10
    52K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,230
    2,976
    • Director
      • Joe Alves
    • Writers
      • Peter Benchley
      • Richard Matheson
      • Carl Gottlieb
    • Stars
      • Dennis Quaid
      • Bess Armstrong
      • Simon MacCorkindale
    • 395User reviews
    • 85Critic reviews
    • 27Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    Teaser Trailer

    Photos219

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    Top cast64

    Edit
    Dennis Quaid
    Dennis Quaid
    • Mike Brody
    Bess Armstrong
    Bess Armstrong
    • Dr. Kathryn Morgan
    Simon MacCorkindale
    Simon MacCorkindale
    • Philip FitzRoyce
    Louis Gossett Jr.
    Louis Gossett Jr.
    • Calvin Bouchard
    John Putch
    John Putch
    • Sean Brody
    Lea Thompson
    Lea Thompson
    • Kelly Ann Bukowski
    P.H. Moriarty
    P.H. Moriarty
    • Jack Tate
    Dan Blasko
    • Dan
    Liz Morris
    • Liz
    Lisa Maurer
    Lisa Maurer
    • Ethel
    Harry Grant
    • Shelby Overman
    Andy Hansen
    • Silver Bullet
    P.T. Horn
    • Tunnel Guide
    John Edson
    • Bob Woodbury
    • (as John Edson Jr.)
    Kaye Stevens
    Kaye Stevens
    • Mrs. Kallender
    Rich Valliere
    Rich Valliere
    • Leonard Glass
    • (as Archie Valliere)
    Alonzo Ward
    Alonzo Ward
    • Fred
    Cathy Cervenka
    • Sherrie
    • Director
      • Joe Alves
    • Writers
      • Peter Benchley
      • Richard Matheson
      • Carl Gottlieb
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews395

    3.751.6K
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    Featured reviews

    usinoh-1

    Jaws 3 a unique movie and not just a remake!!!

    JAWS 3 is one of my favorite childhood movies, I was so glad they did not make JAWS 3 take place on Amity Island where it would be just another remake of the first JAWS like JAWS 2 was, they went in an interesting direction, took a gamble and to some it worked and to some it did not the same can be said for HALLOWEEN III which is also a good movie. Joe Alves is a great director and his vision for the film works for me. If I were to complain about anything it would be the lack of people being eaten by the Great white Shark, especially during the water skiing scene where no one die I think at least one person should have gotten the big bite. The underwater scenes were done very well and in 3-D looked fantastic, I think a lot of the bad rap JAWS 3 gets are from those who have only seen the 2-D version, it is a shame that theaters can't do 3-D anymore it would be fun to have these classic 3-D movies pop up at your local Multiplex from time to time. On a final note The soundtrack to JAWS 3 by Alan Parker is outstanding.
    4modern_fred

    It could have worked, but DOES NOT

    I'm certain if you read the screenplay for this third entry in the Jaws franchise you'd think it could amount to a solid sequel. There's nothing fundamentally wrong with the idea, it at least adds many new elements to the Jaws formula. Where it all goes wrong is in the execution. The acting, direction, and production values are way, way below what they should have been. The 3-D effects are ridiculous. They bring to mind a SCTV parody of 3-D films, with exaggerated tricks that add nothing to someone watching this in regular format. Compare this to something like The Creature From The Black Lagoon, or It Came From Outer Space- those films were 3-D but play perfectly well as flat films. But those were made by people with talent, this film is not.

    There's also the weird idea of using the Sea World park, but making it a fictitious one located near the ocean with completely different attractions- it's a strange bit of promotional advertising. The real Sea World is quite different, and yet it's shown with all these fantastic elements that are pure fantasy. A better idea would have been to name the marine attraction something original. The scenes somehow come off way more corny and trite than the actual theme park was at the time. The use of the dolphins is a great idea that is staged horribly. The old Flipper show had better shark vs. dolphin scenes.

    The effects are wretched. In fact, had they worked it would have helped save the whole film from being a waste, but they are totally amateurish, below that of a Roger Corman exploitation film from the 50s or 60s. One expects more from a major studio mounting a sequel to a mega-hit.

    The actors offer nothing here. Dennis Quaid and Louis Gosset have shown remarkable talent, but none of it is on display here. Bess Armstrong and Lea Thompson are both very attractive, but again they don't really add anything, and Thompson seems especially vapid here. Luckily all these actors are in a film so filled with incompetence that the music, effects, editing and overall storytelling distract from their work.
    5snoozejonc

    Major problems but entertains in its own way

    A pair of Great White sharks attack Sea World in Florida.

    Jaws 3-D is a mostly weak film but has the redeeming quality of presenting such an outrageous concept you cannot help but watch it unfold. Additionally, it's artistic and technical merits are quite enjoyably flawed.

    Jaws 2 was an unnecessary yet well made sequel, but having members of Brody family face yet another "murderer" shark is a laughably daft concept. Rather disturbingly it continued a trend of movies that demonise sharks. There are numerous other ideas involving the behaviour of sharks/dolphins and reactions of the main characters that are equally as bizarre, but if you can switch the brain off and appreciate their entertainment value you might find it a worthwhile investment of time. It also contains recycled character arcs from the original movie that feel like pale imitations.

    Technically it has problems, particularly when most viewers will not get the chance to see the theatrical release. Most visuals designed for a 3-D experience stand out and do not have the same impact.

    The shark horror sequences have little build up or tension and are quite unconvincing. I do admire the ambition of attempting to create a victim's perspective sequence from the inside of its mouth, but most of the final scenes of painfully slow moving underwater horror, (particularly the moment in the control room) are incredibly ropey.

    That's not to say that the classic original did not (in principle) have the same problems. A mechanical shark looks like nothing else in every Jaws movie. However, Spielberg understood this and wisely kept the shark mostly hidden and focussed on developing great characters and tension.

    I feel sorry for the editor of this sequel as it appears they had to cut together footage from both above and below the sea level that make the water's depth and lighting conditions look very inconsistent.

    For some balance I am positive about the performances. Most actors do their best with dodgy material. Louis Gossett Jr, Bess Armstrong, and the coked up Dennis Quaid standout. Lea Thompson has some memorable moments as the "professional water skier". It feels the direction was more focussed on making the cast look good in shorts and swimsuits than character portrayals, but they manage to elevate some scenes. Armstrong convinces me as a whale/dolphin wrangler and I think she is the strongest performer.

    As a young child of the 80s I quite enjoyed it on VHS. On a recent rewatch I placed it in the genre: so bad it's good, and sub-genre: never rewatch and spoil that of which you have fond childhood memories.
    bob the moo

    Stupid plot, rubbish effects and almost no tension to speak of

    Mike Brody appears to be totally over the events that struck his family in his youth and now works in Florida's newest underwater attraction – Seaworld. His brother, Sean is less sure and never goes in the water – although a visit to see Mike and a new girlfriend help him confront his fear if not get over it. Meanwhile, something is picking off staff and swimmers getting Mike and the staff out on a shark hunt. They capture a small great white and take it into captivity, only for it to die when it is put in too small a tank. They think their problems are over until an examination of the bite marks on some bodies and they realize that the shark that did the killing is much, much bigger than the one they caught.

    I saw this film as a child but couldn't remember if it was any good or not – my childish fears may have made it scary even if the film was poor, so I decided to give it a go again recently. The first thing that struck me was the sheer rubbishness of the effects. In the original Jaws, Spielberg had hidden the shark as much as he could because the effects didn't work (and also therefore upping the tension); however here the makers just decide to show anything – a poorly superimposed image, a rubber shark, fake severed arms and so on – none of them are concealed, they are all shown up in all their rubbish glory. I could forgive it this due to its age but two other films had already managed to handle this issue before this film so I don't see why they went this route when it so clearly didn't work. Some shots are so bad that they could have been mistaken for being a spoof (witness the shark swimming towards the control room).

    Of course, after the poor effects the second thing that hits you is the laughable plot. True it is not as bad as part 4 in terms of plausibility but it is still pretty thin. No attempt is made to really give the characters any sort of, well, character and the very basic sea world plot just about manages to give the shark enough high profile feeding scenes to keep the film moving – just don't hold your breath for any logic or sense. In fact, the opposite is true and this film does deliver some moments that make you wonder what the writers were thinking when they conceived some of this stuff! The manner of Jaws' death here would be hilarious if it wasn't so darn pathetic. Even with the plot being poor the film should still have had at least a few moment of fear and tension – many of us fear being eaten alive so it isn't hard to draw on that, but this fails to have any tension or excitement to speak of. The effects suck a lot of this out – but a director who's name is listed in the dictionary alongside the work 'workmanlike' didn't do anything to stop the rot either.

    Without characters the cast are set adrift with nothing to do – how Quaid must have envied Roy Schnieder in the first films, at least he was a good character. Quaid runs around the place, Armstrong screams, Putch broods, Thompson screams and Gossett tries to act tough in the middle of a script that gives him nothing to do. I don't blame the cast but I am disappointed that nobody mention how very bad taste it was to make a happy ending out of the dolphins surviving while so many other people had not!

    Overall this is just a bad film. I'm not a big one for lists so I'll not play that game here but it is pretty much without any value at all. The plot is poor, the effects are rubbish, the direction is weak, the script just a load of nonsense and there is a total lack of tension, thrills or excitement. The original is a classic and this film is further proof that sometimes classics should be just left alone.
    Eric-62-2

    Not The Worst Of The Sequels, But Close

    I had avoided seeing this film for fifteen years because of it's bad reputation and because I love the first Jaws as one of the greatest movies ever made. Having survived the horror of "Jaws: The Revenge" once, I decided to see if I could brave this one, though.

    About the only thing that surprised me was that the premise wasn't quite as dumb as "Jaws: The Revenge" is. And while there is a reference to the events of "Jaws 2" at least they don't insult our intelligence with a shark pursuing one family etc. of any "Brody curse."

    What sinks this film though is that it's dull in every sense. The FX are cheap and terrible and too often it's hard to figure out what's going on here. Scenes that could have been suspenseful with a competent director just plod along in a muddled fashion. In the end, Jaws 3 comes off more as a glorified made for TV type disaster movie with none of the high quality that elevates the original Jaws above such fare.

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    Related interests

    Bill Skarsgård in Ça : Chapitre 1 (2017)
    Monster Horror
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to the book "Roy Scheider: "A Film Biography" (2002) by Diane C. Kachmar, Scheider, who starred in the first two Jaws movies, once said, "Mephistopheles couldn't talk me into doing (it). They knew better than to even ask." Reportedly, Scheider agreed to make Tonnerre de feu (1983) in order to ensure that he was definitely and contractually unavailable for this film. Scheider had made Les Dents de la mer, 2ᵉ partie (1978) reluctantly due to a contract issue with Universal Pictures, whereby he owed the studio two films after withdrawing from Voyage au bout de l'enfer (1978). To get out of this situation, he opted to do Les Dents de la mer, 2ᵉ partie (1978), a movie on which he didn't want to work, in exchange for the studio releasing him from his contract.
    • Goofs
      Sharks can't swim backwards. It's physically impossible. Their fins are not flexible like other fish. They can go backwards by stopping and falling backwards. However, the shark in this movie backs out of a filtration pipe, and it is implied that it used the pipe as a hiding spot. There's no way it could get out of the pipe once it got in.
    • Quotes

      Kathryn Morgan: Overman was killed inside the park. The baby was caught inside the park. Its mother is inside the park.

    • Crazy credits
      In the original 3D version, the Universal Pictures Logo is in 3D. Plus the title "Jaws 3D" comes "toward" the viewer, clamping together as if it was like a shark's mouth.
    • Alternate versions
      The UK cinema version was cut by 7 secs by the BBFC to edit closeup scenes of Overman's mutilated body and to remove a shot of a sea worm emerging from his mouth. The cuts were restored in the video version and the certificate upgraded to a '15' ('12' for the DVD release).
    • Connections
      Edited into Cruel Jaws (1995)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 21, 1983 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tiburón III
    • Filming locations
      • Universal Owned Property, Orlando, Florida, USA(now Universal Studios Florida)
    • Production companies
      • Universal Pictures
      • Alan Landsburg Productions
      • MCA Theatricals
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $20,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $45,517,055
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,422,500
      • Jul 24, 1983
    • Gross worldwide
      • $87,987,055
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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