Tiburón 2 backdrop
Tiburón 2 poster

TIBURÓN 2

Jaws 2

1978 US HMDB
junio 16, 1978

Han pasado cuatro años desde que aquel gran tiburón blanco aterrorizara al pequeño pueblo costero de Amity. El jefe de policía Brody sigue preocupado, a pesar de que hay en marcha varios proyectos para reavivar el interés turístico de las playas. El alcalde Larry Vaughn da la bienvenida al inversor Len Peterson y su equipo al pueblo. Dos submarinistas exploran la zona donde apareció el peligroso escualo en el pasado, y son devorados por otro enorme tiburón no sin antes obtener uno de ellos una foto del ojo del monstruo. La desaparición de los dos buceadores alerta a Brody, ya que es verano y los turistas llegan por centenares hasta Amity. Mientras tanto, un grupo de adolescentes entre los que se encuentra Mike y Sean, los hijos del policía, hacen una excursión hasta una península cercana...

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Equipo

Produccion: Richard D. Zanuck (Producer)David Brown (Producer)
Guion: Howard Sackler (Screenplay)Carl Gottlieb (Screenplay)Peter Benchley (Screenplay)
Musica: John Williams (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Michael C. Butler (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
Mismo lugar y mismo sheriff, pero han pasado algunos años desde los funestos acontecimientos que habían manchado de sangre las risueñas playas de la zona. Pero parece que un nuevo tiburón ha elegido estos litorales para banquetear y el único que entiende de inmediato la gravedad de la situación es el jefe de la policía local, mientras que todas las demás autoridades prefieren ocultar el problema. Al final, todos entenderán que el tiburón es un peligro real y el sheriff volverá a encargarse de eliminarlo. Tras el enorme éxito de la película de Spielberg, un secuela era inevitable. Predecible, casi una fotocopia de la primera pero sin la experta mano de Spielberg detrás de la cámara y eso no es poco, aburrido e evitable.
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RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (5)

Ian Beale

10 /10

Excellent sequel!

Intense sequel directed by Jeannot Szwarc (who also directed episodes of Columbo alongside Steven Spielberg!)

Performances here are every bit as good as the original and Szwarc manages to infuse of great sense of style to the proceedings - building upon and adding even more depth to the Brody story. The camerawork is extremely stylish - some great gliding point of view shots.

John Williams outdoes his work in the original movie with his Jaws 2 score.

The film feels more brutal than the original and leads to a nerve shredding climax.

A great counterpart to Jaws (1975).

  • Ian Beale
JPV852

JPV852

7 /10

Adequate but still entertaining sequel has some okay practical effects with the shark though still really silly given what happened in the last one nobody in charge would listen to Brody. Nothing overly special and doubt I'd revisit this anytime soon, but an okay sequel. 3.25/5

quasar1967

quasar1967

8 /10

just as good as the original, if not better

r96sk

r96sk

6 /10

A disappointing follow-up.

I enjoyed Roy Scheider's performance and the core action sequences near the end, but everything else is a bit boring. 'Jaws 2' puts high focus on the teenagers, though their story never possesses any intrigue. The effects for the shark, meanwhile, are a step down from the original.

It's not terribly far from being watchable, a slightly shorter run time might've helped in that regard, but I just personally found it to be an uninteresting 115 minutes or so. Perhaps initial director John D. Hancock's ideas would've came out better, though he was fired during production; speaking of which, the issues behind the scenes for this - and even the first film, really - are pretty fascinating.

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

5 /10

It's only after watching this that you realise just how crucial to the success of the first film Robert Shaw was. This is not the worst sequel I've seen by any means, but without his gnarled and charismatic "Quint", we are left with a pretty mundane effort from all concerned. This time our hungry finned friend has a group of young sailors - including, of course, the Brady bunch - "Michael" (Mark Gruner) and "Sean" (Marc Gilpin) firmly in it's sights. This necessitates their sheriff father (Roy Scheider) having to defy his own loathing of the water to try and rescue them. Director Jeannot Szwarc tries to mix it up a little, but there is just too much inevitability about the ending; and the screaming hysterics of the weans - especially the truly irritating "Jackie" (Donna Wilkes) started to get under my finger nails quite quickly. The photography is good, and some effort has been made to disguise the more mechanical elements of the shark attacks, but the calamitous fire pan to fire scenarios recycle themselves once too often. John Williams' score still works well to help generate some semblance of a sense of peril, but I'm afraid this isn't remotely scary and was quite a disappointing watch.

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