Jaws Script - Screenplay

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JAWS SCRIPT

Final Draft Screenplay

by

PETER BENCHLEY

PROD. #02074							PRODUCERS: 
RICHARD ZANUCK
								   DAVID BROWN

				      JAWS

1	OVER BLACK							
	1

	Sounds of the innerspaces rushing forward.

	Then a splinter of blue light in the center of the picture.
	It breaks wide, showing the top and bottom a silhouetted
	curtain of razor sharp teeth suggesting that we are inside
	of a tremendous gullet, looking out at the onrushing under-
	sea world at night.  HEAR a symphony of underwater sounds:
	landslide, metabolic sounds, the rare and secret noises that
	certain undersea species share with each other.

							CUT TO

2	EXT. LIGHTHOUSE - NIGHT						
	2

	Caught in its blinding flash, the light moves on, fingering
	the fog.  A lone buoy dongs somewhere out at sea.

3	EXT. AMITY MAINSTREET - NIGHT					
	3

	The quaint little resort town is quiet in the middle of the
	night.  A ground fog rounds a corner and begins spreading
	toward us.  It fills over sidewalks and streets like some
	Biblical plague.

4	EXT. THE SOUTH SHORE OF LONG ISLAND - NIGHT			
	4

	It is a pleasant, moonlit, windless night in mid-June.  We see
	a long straight stretch of white beach.  Behind the low dunes
	are the dark shapes of large expensive houses.  The fog that
	has reached Amity proper is seen only as a low-hanging cloud
	that is pushing in from the sea.  HEAR a number of voices sing-
	ing.  It sounds like an Eastern University's Alma Mater.

5	ANOTHER ANGLE - BEACH						
	5

	A bonfire is blazing.  Gathered around it are about a dozen
	young men and women who are merrily trading fight songs from
	their respective universities.  Two young people break away
	from the circle, Chrissie almost pulling a drunk and disorderly
	Tom Cassidy behind her.

6	CLOSEUP - CASSIDY						
	6

	makes a clumsy try at kissing Christina but she laughs and
	ducks away.	

7	ANOTHER PART OF THE BEACH					
	7

	The fire, now one hundred yards in the b.g., silhouettes
	Chrissie running up a steep dune.  Once there, she pauses to
	look at the ocean that we can only hear.  Cassidy plods up
	the dune behind her, grossly out of shape.

	Chrissie runs down a few steps, leaving Tom Cassidy reeling
	on the summit.  Chrissie's dress, bra and panties fly toward
	Tom, who can't make a fist to catch them.  The dress drapes
	over one half of his head.  Soggily aroused, Cassidy struggles
	to get his shoe off.

	But Chrissie is already in full flight toward the shore.  In
	she goes, a delicate splash, surfacing in a cold ocean that is
	unusually placid.  Chrissie pulls with her arms, drawing
	herself into deeper water.

	That's when we see it.  A gentle bulge in the water, a ripple
	that passes her a dozen feet away.  A wave of pressure lifts
	her up and eases her down again.  Her face shows the beginning
	of fear.  Maybe it's Tom.  She smiles and looks around for him,
	then her eyes go to the beach where Tom -- too drunk to stand
	-- one pantleg off, is struggling with his other shoe.  Chrissie
	turns and starts for shore.

8	CLOSE - CHRISSIE						
	8

	Her expression freezes.  The water-lump is racing for her.
	It bolts her upright, out of the water to her hips, then slams
	her hard, whipping her in an upward arc of eight feet before
	she is jerked down to her open mouth.  Another jolt to her
	floating hair.  One hand claws the air, fingers trying to
	breathe, then it, too, is sucked below in a final and terrible
	jerking motion.  HOLD on the churning froth of a baby whirl-
	pool until we are sure it is over.

9	ANGLE - CASSIDY							
	9

	in his undershorts, laughing, turning in slow stoned circles,
	a prisoner in his orange windbreaker that seems to have him
	in a full Nelson.  He stumbles to his knees.

10	INTERIOR - MARTIN BRODY'S BEDROOM - DAWN			
	10

	ALARM CLOCK-RADIO

	giving weather bulletin:  marina weather, westerly winds,
	light chop, etc.

	A pair of bumps under the bedsheets.  There is a rustling
	and two stockinged feet swing up and settle heavily on the
	floor.  Follow them as the pad along from hardwood floor
	to bathroom tile.  A light pops on and the feet arrive at a
	scale, board it.

11	INSERT - SCALE DIAL						
	11

	In a blur it goes to 191.  Then, as if by magic, the numbers
	float backward to 160.

12	ANGLE								
	12

	Martin Brody at forty-two, stands rigid, lifting himself
	from the sink counter-top with both hands.  Satisfied, he
	turns toward the mirror, squinting in the light, measuring
	himself up and down.  Advancing waistline, receding hairline.
	Gray around the ears.  Martin Brody makes another silent
	promise to get his act together -- tomorrow.

	He reaches for the sliding mirror and opens the medicine
	cabinet.  There is a travel brochure of Arizona attached
	to the shelf.  Brody shakes his head and removes it.  He
	closes the mirror which now reflects his wife, Ellen Brody,
	pert and poised off to one side.

				   ELLEN
		   Martin.  Aren't you tired of Maine
		   lobster, Long Island duckling and
		   Ispwitch clams.  Just once couldn't
		   go for a Big Mac at the bottom of
		   the Grand Canyon this summer?

				   BRODY
		   Look at me, I'm not even awake.

				   ELLEN
		   You've had no time off in two years,
		   Martin.

				   BRODY
		   Living here is time off.

	Brody opens the shower door to turn on the water.  Ellen
	has scotch-taped a travel folder for exotic Mazatlan, Mexico
	on the shower head.

13	INTERIOR - BRODY BEDROOM - MORNING				
	13

	Martin is getting dressed after his shower.  Ellen stands
	by the curtained window.

				   BRODY
		   Larry Vaughn says we'll pull a record
		   season.  Ellen, we're collecting high
		   enough rentals to cover the mortgage
		   payments for all three of our beach-
		   front investments.

				   ELLEN
		   I know where we can invest in an Indian
		   Chief Motor-home for the whole of August,
		   drop it off in Aspen, Colorado and jet
		   back to Boston by Labor Day.

	Ellen pulls from behind her back three brochures of trailer
	home rentals.

				   BRODY
		   Uh...look, Ellie.  Let's just ---

				   ELLEN
			   (completes the
			   sentence)
		   -- play it by ear.

	Ellen turns to open the curtains.  Sunlight and ocean
	sparkle pour in.  A glorious view.

				   ELLEN
			   (false happiness)
		   Another shitty day in Paradise.

	The sunlight catches Brody's Police Chief badge as he slips
	on his shirt, and we discover why he can't go anywhere.

14	INTERIOR - BRODY'S KITCHEN - MORNING				
	14

	Brody, ripping open a twenty-five pound bag of Kennel Ration
	as five hungry mutts somersault around his feet.  The tele-
	phone rings, and Brody one-hands it as he attempts to sow
	all five doggy bowls with missed double-helpings.

				   BRODY
		   Mornin' Hendricks.  What's what?

	He listens, sours, and takes a breath.

				   BRODY
		   First goddamn weekend of the summer...
		   great start!
			   (beat)
		   No...take him back to the beach.
		   Maybe she washed in.

15	EXTERIOR - ISLAND HIGHWAY - MORNING				
	15

	Martin Brody's Country Squire police wagon rushes past,
	taking the view to an enormous billboard depicting a
	typical summer day in Amity.  A beautiful model splashes
	in the golden surf, languishing in a Solarcaine sun.
	AMITY WELCOMES YOU is written above her flailing arms.

16	EXTERIOR - AMITY BEACH - DAY					
	16

	Three small figures in the landscape, walking the beach.
	The surf is rough and there is sea-floor debris strewn
	about from the receding tide.

17	CLOSER ANGLE							
	17

	Deputy Hendricks is searching the shore about one hundred
	yards down wind.  Meanwhile, Brody, in his casual police
	attire, and Tom Cassidy, still in the clothing we saw him
	in last night, poke around the smoking ashes of the bon-
	fire.  Brody fingers the missing girl's shoes, purse and
	clothes.  In the daylight, Cassidy looks like a junior in
	High School and misconducts himself, wavering between
	inflated maturity and tear-blown adolescence.

				   BRODY
		   Christine what?

				   CASSIDY
		   Worthingsly...Worthington -- no one
		   ever died on me before.

				   BRODY
		   You picked her up on the ferry.

				   CASSIDY
		   I didn't know her.

				   BRODY
		   And nobody else saw her in the water?

				   CASSIDY
		   Somebody could've -- because I was
		   sort of passed out.

				   BRODY
		   Sounds to me like maybe she ran out
		   on you.

				   CASSIDY
		   Oh, no, sir.  I've never had a
		   woman do that.  I'm sure she drowned.

	A shrill whistle makes them turn.  Hendricks is fifty
	yards away, on his knees.  He blows again, a feeble report
	this time.

				   BRODY
		   We may know in a minute.

	Brody runs toward Hendricks, Cassidy hesitates, then follows
	with:

				   CASSIDY
			   (pathetically)
		   You can't make me look -- !

18 	MASTER ANGLE - THE SAND DUNE					
	18

	A skein of seaweed garnishes the base of this isolated dune.
	The booming waves and fizzing surf make dialogue inaudible.

	Deputy Hendricks on hands and knees, looking white as a
	sheet.  Brody tells Cassidy to wait at the foot of the dune,
	and ventures up.  Hendricks stops him with a wave-off, saying
	something at the same time.  Brody nods understanding and
	steps up cautiously.  And looks down.

	Whatever he sees has a marked effect on his entire physique.
	Kicking out with his foot, Brody sends dozens of angry
	horseshoe crabs in an escape frenzy and they boil over the
	top of the dune and down its slopes.

	Cassidy takes a few uneasy steps backwards when Brody waves
	him over.  He shakes his head.  An awkward moment.  Then
	Cassidy shuffles forward and up the few remaining feet, his
	eyes looking everywhere but down.  Brody says something else
	and Cassidy shakes his head again, eyes out at sea.  Brody
	puts his hand gently around the quaking man's shoulder.
	Nodding, he starts to look down, an inch at a time. He looks.

	The jolt that assaults Cassidy is not unexpected.  He falls
	backward in a sitting position as though shot.  Nods yes --
	it's her.  Brody turns and slides off the dune, stumbling
	close.  Hear his BREATHING.  He looks around, envisioning
	the week ahead of him....

19	INTERIOR - BRODY'S OFFICE - DAY					
	19

	Brody walks through the door and enters his office, holding
	a fizzing glass of Alka-Seltzer.  Polly, his sixty-one year
	old secretary follows close on his heels with her shorthand
	pad of messages and reminders.

	In the outer office, Hendricks and Cassidy slump into chairs,
	sipping from fizzing dixie cups.

	Brody sits behind the typewriter, only to find that somebody
	has placed a travel folder to sunny Scottsdale, Arizona
	between the rolls of his Smith-Corona.  He sighs and replaces
	the colorful brochure with the grim accident report.  As he
	types, Polly reads his calendar to him, undaunted by Brody's
	heavy malaise.

				   POLLY
		   This is in no order of importance,
		   Chief:  There's a meeting on the
		   Amity Town Council on Aging this
		   Monday night, Bentoncourt Hall.
		   The Fire Inspector wants you to go
		   over the fireworks site with him
		   before he catches the one o'clock
		   ferry.  Mainly, you have a batch
		   of calls about that new Karate
		   school.

20	CLOSE - ACCIDENT REPORT						
	20

	Brody has just typed the girl's name.  He skips the space for
	Cause-of-Death, and just under it types the Next-of-Kin in-
	formation he has collected from her wallet.

				   POLLY
		   Searle's Rent-a-Bike, the Rainy
		   Ale, Tisberry's Hardware...they
		   say it's those nine-year-olds
		   from the school practicing karate
		   on all those nice picket fences.

	The phone rings and Polly picks it up.

				   POLLY
		   It's the Coroner.  Somebody pass
		   away in the night?

	Brody nestles the phone between ear and collar, listening,
	as he turns to the typewriter.

				   BRODY
		   Jesus, Santos.

21	INSERT - ACCIDENT REPORT					
	21

	Cause-of-Death line rolls into place.  The hammers punch
	out:  SHARK ATTACK.

22	BRODY								
	22

	leans forward, staring at what he just wrote.  Polly cocks
	her head and removes the phone from his ear.

				   POLLY
		   What's the matter?

	Brody takes a breath.  A new resolve comes over him.

				   BRODY
		   Polly, I want to know what water
		   recreation the Island fathers have
		   on for today.

				   POLLY
		   Right this minute?

	Brody gets up and moves hastily toward the door.

23	BRODY'S OUTER OFFICE						
	23

	Cassidy and Hendricks look up as Brody enters.

				   BRODY
			   (To Hendricks)
		   Where'd you hide the 'Beach Closed'
		   signs?

				   HENDRICKS
		   We never had any.  What's the problem?

	A local merchant comes through the door.

				   LOCAL MERCHANT
		   Glad I caught you.  There's a city
		   truck with New Hampshire plates
		   parked right in front of my....

	Brody pushes past him and out the door.

24	EXTERIOR - AMITY MAIN STREET - DAY				
	24

	In the busy center of a town preparing for the big Fourth
	of July weekend, Brody wends his way around sidewalk activ-
	ity, purpose and haste in each stride.  As he turns a corner
	a little man in a white smock emerges from the Funeral Parlor.
	This is Carl Santos, Amity's part-time coroner.  Santos
	looks both ways before crossing Colonial Drive.

	Brody passes Keisel's Bicycle Rental, navigating an awkward
	course through an odd assortment of Schwinns that line the
	sidewalk in front of a demolished white picket fence.
	Keisel intercepts Brody on the run.

				   KEISEL
		   Eight to ten years old.  Average
		   size about five-four, otherwise
		   the overhand chops would be higher
		   up on the fences.  And I have a
		   pretty damn good idea who two of
		   the little bastards are.

				   BRODY
			   (out-walking him)
		   Call me later in the afternoon,
		   Harry.


25	ANGLE - AMITY GAZETTE NEWSPAPER OFFICE - PORCH			
	25

	Santos emerges with Ben Meadows, the stylish, late-thirties
	editor of the Amity Gazette.  Together they cut a beeline for
	the other side of the street.

25-A	ANGLE - AMITY STREET						
	25-A

	Past taverns and chowder shacks, past bleacher construction
	and July Fourth posters, Brody enters Lynwood's Hardware and
	Sporting Goods...so overstocked that beach umbrellas, alumi-
	num deck chairs, and rainbow beach towels splash a surplus
	of color from the display window to the sidewalk.

26	INTERIOR - LYNWOOD'S HARDWARE & SPORTING GOODS - DAY		
	26

	The store proprietor is busy at work on an inventory list
	with a mainland delivery man.

				   LYNWOOD
		   Stuff's no good to me in August
		   when the Pilgrims come in June...
			   (to Brody)
		   Go on and help yourself to what-
		   ever you need, Chief.  Can you
		   work the register?

27	EXTERIOR - LYNWOOD'S - DAY					
	27

	Brody emerges with enough poster-board, wooden stakes, nails,
	paint, and brushes to close every beach on the island.  He
	starts back the way he came when Hendricks shoots up the
	street in the patrol jeep.  He stops fast enough to call
	attention, leans out the window.

				   HENDRICKS
			   (he has fully
			   read the report)
		   I sent Sammy out ahead of me to the
		   South Chop beach until I can make
		   up the signs.

				   BRODY
		   Let Polly do the printing.

				   HENDRICKS
		   There's a Scout troop in Avril Bay
		   doing the mile swim for their
		   Merit Badges.  I couldn't call
		   them in, there's no phones out
		   there.

				   BRODY
		   Oh, brother!  Gimme the keys, Lenny.

	Brody leaps behind the wheel as Hendricks steps out.

28	EXTERIOR - VAUGHN'S REALTY - DAY				
	28

	A secretary is removing four 8 x 10 glossies of beachfront
	houses from the display window, revealing Larry Vaughn, the
	Mayor of Amity, exchanging anxieties with Ben Meadows and
	Coroner Santos and two other city Selectmen.  They come out
	in a group, reach the sunlight, and squint down the street
	as Brody careens around the corner and out of sight.  Deputy
	Hendricks, laden with his arts and crafts, passes them on
	the street front.

				   VAUGHN
		   What have you got there, Lenny?

				   HENDRICKS
		   We had a shark attack at South
		   Chop this morning, Mayor.  Fatal.
		   Gotta batten down the beach.

	Vaughn and group exchange horrified looks, but we get the
	impression it is not in response to the shark-attack news.

				   VAUGHN
		   Who've you told this to, Lenny?

				   HENDRICKS
		   I just found out about it -- but
		   there's a bunch of Boy Scouts in
		   the water a coupla miles down the
		   coast from where we found the girl.
		   Avril Bay, thereabouts.  Chief
		   went to dry them off.

				   VAUGHN
			   (to Meadows)
		   Take my car, okay?
			   (to Hendricks)
		   You come with us, Lenny.

				   HENDRICKS
		   I've got all these signs here....

				   VAUGHN
		   C'mon, it'll give us time to think
		   about what they're going to say.

	They all crowd into a Cadillac El Dorado with Vaughn Realty
	signs on the doors.

29	EXTERIOR - AVRIL BAY - DAY					
	29

	A flotilla of twenty exhausted Boy Scouts round a lifebuoy
	that marks the quarter-mile.  A rowboat with Scoutmaster and
	bullhorn keeps pace.

30	ON THE BEACH							
	30

	Two older Seascouts time the event with stop watches, and a
	couple of dozen parents look on, shading their eyes.  Brody's
	jeep pulls up in the background and stops.  He gets out and
	starts down to the breakwater when the Mayor's Cadillac pulls
	up and skids to a stop.

	Brody pauses momentarily as Mayor Vaughn emerges, trying to
	affect an easygoing appearance.  Reaching Brody, he slips an
	arm around his shoulder, trying to slow him as Brody leads
	the gang toward the breakwater and the slogging Scouts.

				   VAUGHN
		   Where are you going to get the
		   authority to close the beaches?

	Brody stops.  He sees pitiful Hendricks standing by the car
	with the signboard material.  Brody begins to slow burn.

				   BRODY
		   Are you asking me as the Mayor, or
		   as a Real Estate broker, or our of
		   friendly interest, or what, Larry?

				   VAUGHN
		   I just want you aware of what you're
		   doing before you tinker with the life
		   blood of all those sage and discriminating
		   souls who elected you.  Next week's the
		   goddam Fourth of July!  We've got a couple
		   thousand summer people coming over here
		   who will gladly use the Cape Cod beaches
		   if they can't use ours.

				   BRODY
		   So what you're suggesting is we lay out
		   a smorgasbord for the shark.  All you can
		   eat for the price of a weekend on Amity
		   Island.

				   VAUGHN
		   We're not even sure it was a shark.

				   BRODY
		   What else could do that?!

				   VAUGHN
			   (to Coroner Santos)
		   Boat propeller?

				   SANTOS
		   Possibly.  Yes....

				   VAUGHN
		   Swims way out...night...fishing boat
		   comes along ---

				   BRODY
			   (looking at
			   both of them)
		   What is this?

				   MEADOWS
		   We've never had shark trouble here,
		   Martin.  They don't come in close.  No
		   reefs, or fish-processing plants, slaughter
		   houses.  Nothing to keep it interested.

				   BRODY
		   You print whatever you want.

				   VAUGHN
		   Martin, sharks are like ax-murderers.
		   People react to them with their guts.

	Brody looks toward the open water.  The Boy Scouts have made
	a turn and are passing the lifebuoy marking the three-quarter
	mile point.

				   MEADOWS
		   Whatever was out there is miles out
		   to sea by now.  Sharks don't have
		   swim bladders like most fish -- they
		   have to keep moving or drown.  Don't
		   you know anything about them?

				   BRODY
		   I...don't go around the water much.

				   VAUGHN
		   It's one chance in a million this'll
		   happen again.
			   (points)
		   Look at that...safe and sound.

	The Boy Scouts are emerging exhausted; some flop down on their
	backs, happy it is over.  Brody considers this.

				   VAUGHN
		   Had you yelled 'shark,' those Cub
		   Scouts would have broken the free-
		   style record for the hundred-meter,
		   then busted our backs with word of
		   mouth.

				   BRODY
		   If that's the test case for your
		   million-to-one shot, I'm glad I lost.

	Vaughn feels secure that Brody will not act in haste.  He puts
	a hand on his shoulder, turns and walks him toward the cars.

				   VAUGHN
		   Listen, Chief -- the funniest thing --
		   you know the white picket fence
		   around my realty office....

31	CLOSE QUINT							
	31

	Rising like Neptune from out of the deep, Quint walks the
	sidewalk in the pool of his own shadow.  He is a sleek and
	sinewy specimen, inches over six feet, and with a face making
	it hard to determine where the scars leave off and the wrinkles
	begin, though he is no older than fifty.

	Quint seems to be heading for the local tavern when a crunch
	of seafaring fishermen pour out, forming an impenetrable knot
	around the sidewalk in front of him.  One of them sees Quint,
	who approaches with no intention of slowing down.  The seven
	fishermen never give it a second thought, they part like the
	Red Sea, clearing a beeline trail to the bar doors.  Quint
	bursts through their obliging ranks and turns into the Music
	store.  The tiny bell jingles daintily.  Two of the Portu-
	guese fishermen spit three times, taking no chances.

32	INT. AMITY MUSIC STORE - DAY					
	32

	Quint brushes against the counter.  The shopkeeper is helping
	a ten year old boy fix a new reed to his clarinet.  The little
	boy produces a mellow low tone, then wonderingly rides the
	scale.  With little or no effort, Quint's gnarled hand floats
	up and drops like a sledge on the service bell.  The shop-
	keeper's eyes pop up, the kid hits a bad note and squeaks.

				   QUINT
			   (forced politeness)
		   Four spools number twelve piano wire.

				   SHOPKEEPER
		   Catch any monsters lately, Mr. Quint?

	Quint's eyes never leave the little boy.  He is drilling him	
	with a sidelong whammy.  The boy feels Quint nailing him and
	a ragged assortment of squeaks, blurps and missed notes over-
	ride the sounds of the shopkeeper unspooling the piano wire.

33	INTERIOR BRODY'S STUDY AT HOME - SUNSET				
	33

	A riffly blur, color alternating with black and white.  The
	dizziness stops on a book page showing a black and white
	rendering of eight species of shark.  The banner at the top
	of the page reads:  THE KNOWN AND REPUTED MANEATERS.

	The riffling begins again, stops on a grizzly photograph of
	scar tissue on six former shark victims.  Riffling -- stop.
	Photograph of five Ichthyologists posing on wooden stools,
	framed by the enormous jaws of a prehistoric shark from the
	family Carcharodon charcharias.

34	BRODY								
	34

	his reading glasses reflecting a stack of twelve library books,
	all on the subject of sharks and shark attacks.  The door
	opens and Ellen enters, quietly, in respect for Brody's mood.

				   ELLEN
		   Can you stand something to eat?

				   BRODY
		   Love a cup of tea.  With lemon.

	Ellen walks past Brody to the window and looks out the window
	which overlooks the south bay.  It is the hour of dusk.

				   ELLEN
		   Mikey loves his birthday present.

				   BRODY
		   Where is he?

				   ELLEN
			   (with a slight laugh)
		   He's sitting in it.

	Brody gets up, concerned, and joins her at the window.

				   ELLEN
		   Honey.  He has it tied up to the
		   jetty with a double-knot.

35	BRODY'S POINT OF VIEW						
	35

	Michael is sitting in the boat, but two of his young school
	chums are in the water, swimming around it.  Brody opens the
	window and calls down:

				   BRODY
		   Son! -- Out of the water now!

				   MICHAEL
		   My boat's neat, Dad!

				   BRODY
			   (turning to Ellen)
		   Tell him I want him out of the ocean.

				   ELLEN
		   It's three feet deep, Martin.  You
		   said that shark was half way back	
		   to Florida.

				   BRODY
			   (angry now)
		   Michael!  Come inside the house!

				   ELLEN
		   It's his birthday tomorrow.

				   BRODY
		   I told him not to go out until he
		   memorized the handbook, safety reg-
		   ulations and ---

	Ellen's eyes drift down to the open book.  One large text is
	open to a page of illustrations.  Among them is the famous
	painting, The Gulf Stream, which depicts a black fisherman
	in a small dinghy much like Michael's, being assaulted by the
	pressing jaws of three man-eaters.  Startled, Ellen closes the
	book, opens the window and sticks her head out.

				   ELLEN
		   You heard your father! Out now!

36	EXT. BEACH - DAY						
	36

	A jelly-bowl woman visitor to Amity's beaches plunges head-
	long into the white foam.  There's enough of her stuffed
	into a one-piece bathing suit to sate the appetite of any
	shark for weeks.  Remarkably buoyant, she chops at the water
	revealing other cheerful Sunday bathers trying to enjoy the
	last uncluttered weekend before the holiday crowds.

37	ANGLE - MARTIN BRODY AND ELLEN					
	37

	Brody is balefully alert this morning, sitting straight-
	back in his beach chair, coating the swimming area with
	careful looks.  About ten other adults and a dozen children
	attend this casual birthday get-together.

				   MAX
		   I don't envy you this summer, Chief.
		   Every year the swarms get worse.

				   MAX'S WIFE
		   I know now why there's not a sane
		   Parisian left in Paris from July to	
		   September.

	Brody hears a SCREAM from the water.  He cranes his neck past
	Max's wife in order to see.

38	BRODY'S POINT OF VIEW						
	38

	A young lady is being pulled underwater to her hair.  Instantly,
	she is jerked up again -- sitting on her boyfriend's shoulders,
	laughing hysterically.

				   BRODY
		   What?

				   MAX
		   What?

				   BRODY
		   Did you say something?

				   MAX
		   No -- yeah, I was wondering if it's
		   true.  That you sit in your car
		   the whole while over on the
		   mainland ferry.

39	BRODY'S POINT OF VIEW						
	39

	His son Michael along with sever other boys rush headlong
	into the gentle surf with their inflatable rubber rafts.
	Another youngster, Alex Kintner gathers up his Day-Glow yellow
	raft, but his mother takes issue and a tug-of-war ensues.

	Overlapping dialogue:

		   MAX'S WIFE			   ALEX
	What a terrible thing to say.	Please let me take my
					raft, Mom!
		   MAX
	C'mon Penny, I'm not ashamed		   MOTHER
	to admit that when I fly, my	Let me see your fingertips.
	feet sweat right through my	    (he holds them out)
	socks.				They're beginning to prune.
					Ten more minutes.

40	BRODY'S POINT OF VIEW						
	40

	The fat woman is going out too far.

				   ALEX' VOICE
		   Fifteen!

	We stay on the fat woman, almost hypnotically.

				   DENHERDER'S VOICE
		   I can't believe it!  Brody!

41	CLOSE - BRODY							
	41

	Snapping out of it.  Looks up at the dripping Selectman.

				   BRODY
			   (false normalcy)
		   How's the water?

				   DENHERDER
		   Fine!  Cold.
			   (to Ellen who
			   walks over and
			   sits next to Brody)
		   How'd you do it -- getting him to
		   the beach?

				   ELLEN
		   It's Michael's birthday.

				   DENHERDER
		   Hope we get this weather next
		   weekend!

42	BRODY'S POINT OF VIEW 						
	42

	The fat woman is not where he last remembered seeing her.  He
	sort of rises to one knee, his eyes combing the surf.

				   ELLEN
			   (kissing him on
			   the cheek)
		   Do you want me to call the boys in?
		   Honey, if this worries you ---

				   MAX
			   (bolting down
			   his drink)
		   Does this -- mortal fear of the
		   water have a clinical name, Martin?

				   BRODY
			   (throwing it away)
		   Drowning.

43	EXT. UNDERWATER - DAY						
	43

	A fish-eye view of people lying on rafts.  From below we see
	the outlines of swimmers, arms and legs dangling tantalizingly
	in the blue water.  Traveling this way from raft to raft,
	there comes a space of open water followed by a quick view of
	a single raft.  A pair of feet kicking and arms paddling produces
	bizarre underwater vibrations, louder than human ears would
	normally perceive.

44	ANGLE - SURFACE							
	44

	The fat lady floating on her back, wearing pink sunglasses.
	A black object surfaces next to her.  It emerges as a bather
	in a black bathing cap.

45	ANGLE - ALEX - WATER LEVEL					
	45

	paddling in circles, making motorboat sounds.

46	ANGLE - TWO LOVERS						
	46

	kissing, drawing each other below the surface.

47	ANGLE - BRODY'S SON						
	47

	separating from his friends, eating a huge piece of cake
	and trying to steer with the other hand.

48	ANGLE - GROUP OF KIDS ON RUBBER RAFTS				
	48

	They begin a water fight, slapping at the ocean with karate-
	type blows, sending little explosions of water at each other.
	Then, no more than ten feet beyond the fighting, a genuine
	water eruption upstages the child's play.  Everybody turns
	just as the ocean flattens itself out again.  A pug-faced
	over-sized twelve year old named "P.J." renews the fighting
	with a genuine Karate yell.

49	P.J.								
	49

	He hits the water, which sprays all over another youngster.

50	CLOSE - MATHEW							
	50

	His face dripping with red rivulets.

51	CLOSE - P.J.							
	51

	Looks down at his hand.  The water surrounding all the boys
	is slick with blood.

52	ANGLE - SHOREFRONT						
	52

	People begin to congregate around an older gentleman, definitely
	a mainlander by his outfit.

				   MAINLANDER
		   It came out of the water.  Didn't
		   anybody else see it?

				   WOMAN TOURIST
		   There's blood.

53	CLOSE - BRODY							
	53

	He stands all the way up this time.  Parents begin calling --
	a frantic inventory for lost children up and down the beach.
	Brody is on the move, barreling to the shoreline.  He kicks
	up sand passing Alex' mother, who looks up from her novel
	annoyed.

				   BRODY
			   (top of his lungs)
		   MICHAEL -- !  EVERYBODY OUT OF THE
		   WATER!!  MICHAEL -- !

	Other names from hysterical parents as the panic of a yet
	unseen tragedy rises.

54	ANGLE - MICHAEL							
	54

	Appears from the shoot of a breaking wave.  He is all right
	but the wave that curls after him carries the shredded pieces
	of the Day-Glow yellow raft.  The foam that breaks wide on
	the sandy beach is tinged with pink.

55	INTERIOR - THE COUNTY COURTHOUSE AND COUNTY OFFICES - DAY	
	55

	A crowd of men and women in an angry tangle outside of Brody's
	office.  These are the shop owners, real estate brokers,
	hotel managers and Selectmen of the Island.
	Through the windows, the Southbeach High School Band is
	practicing for the Fourth of July Parade.
	Brody and Vaughn exit Brody's office and enter the fray.

				   VAUGHN
		   I'm glad everyone could make this
		   meeting.  Why don't we wander
		   down the hall to my office where
		   there's room.

	All follow Brody and Vaughn.  Meadows pushes through the
	crunch to speak.

				   MEADOWS
		   Don't keep us in suspense Mayor.
		   What's the verdict?

	Vaughn cannot bring himself to say it right away.

				   BRODY
		   Larry and I have agreed to close
		   all beaches for a limited period
		   of time to give us a chance to
		   contact the Port Authority and
		   United States Coast Guard out on
		   Montaux.

				   MRS. TAFT
		   Well, that could take all summer!

				   VAUGHN
		   Twenty-four hours.

				   BRODY
			   (turns angry)
		   We never agreed to that.

				   MR. WISEMAN
		   I do a thrifty business her but
		   I'll not see it flourish at the
		   price of any more lives.

				   MRS. TAFT
		   Three reservations cancelled and
		   I still have August rentals open.

				   VAUGHN
		   So do I, Martha, so do I.

	They reach Vaughn's office.  It is being painted.  Newspapers
	are strewn all over the floor and paint-splattered tarps over
	the furniture.  Vaughn's secretary still dutifully takes calls.

				   SECRETARY
		   Larry, two Newsday reporters and
		   one from the New York Times, cal-
		   ling every 15 minutes.

				   MR. POSNER
		   Good people, nobody saw a shark.

				   MEADOWS
		   What they'll print is maybe it was
		   a shark.

				   MR. POSNER
		   Oh wonderful, and what we'll have
		   is maybe a summer.

				   MR. POLK
		   Town'll lose tax revenue, municipal
		   services'll deteriorate, the
		   people'll begin to move away.  Oh,
		   I don't care.  I never raised my
		   kids to be somebody's lunch.

				   VAUGHN
		   We have no way of keeping the lid
		   on what happened yesterday.  There
		   were well over a hundred bathers
		   on the beach, three-quarters of
		   them from the mainland.

	Vaughn leads the way down the hall toward the Bureau of Records
	room.

				   MR. GARDNER
		   I'm not interested in participating
		   in any cover-up Mayor.

				   VAUGHN
		   I wouldn't worry too much about
		   that, Max.  The President himself
		   couldn't stop the mushrooming at
		   this point.

	Selectman Denherder almost whispers in Vaughn's ear.

				   DENHERDER
		   But couldn't we just say the kid
		   drowned?

				   VAUGHN
			   (whispering back)
		   We couldn't even find the little
		   bastard.

	Vaughn opens the door to the Bureau of Records.  About two
	dozen children sit around, twisting multi-colored Kleenex
	into artificial flowers for the big parade.  Vaughn turns
	his face into a condescending grin.

				   VAUGHN
		   Could the big people have a grownup
		   meeting in here, please, children.

				   CHILD SPOKESMAN
		   Get lost.

	A voice from behind Vaughn draws him away.  It is a small
	but muscular black man named Salvatore.

				   SALVATORE'S VOICE
		   Mr. Vaughn?

	He steps out of the shadows, hat in hand.

				   SALVATORE
		   Mister Quint sent me down from
		   Jacobstown.

				   VAUGHN
		   What for?

				   SALVATORE
		   Well...he out catchin' them things
		   every day practily.  Price's right,
		   he come catch yours here.

				   VAUGHN
		   What's he get?

				   SALVATORE
		   Ten thousand and a color TV.

				   VAUGHN
			   (outraged)
		   How much?

				   SALVATORE
		   Twenty-seven inch.  Japanese one.

	Vaughn studies the little blinking man, ready to laugh.

				   VAUGHN
		   Mister Quint's services are not
		   required, thanks.
			   (stopping a secretary)
		   Is there an empty office anywhere
		   in this goddam building?

				   SECRETARY
		   Weights and Measures nobody ever
		   uses.

	Vaughn starts away and the crowd follows.

				   DENHERDER
		   I'd haul it in myself before I'd
		   pay anything to that maniac...you
		   wanna hear what he did to three
		   friends of mine on a Saint Valentine's
		   Day sporting charter?

	They are halted in their tracks by the grim appearance of
	Mrs. Kintner and her benign father.  She is dressed in church
	white with a black arm band.  Mrs. Kintner never says a word.
	She has just tacked something to the community bulletin board
	and is walking through the parting crowd.  With sympathy, all
	watch her leave, then press up to the cork board.  Brody
	fights his way through everyone until we are standing over
	his shoulder, staring at a homemade poster that offers:

		   "ALL OR A FRACTION OF $3000 BOUNTY
		   TO THE MAN OR MEN WHO CATCH AND
		   SLAUGHTER THE SHARK THAT SAVAGED
		   ALEX M. KINTNER, JR. ON SUNDAY,
		   JUNE 29 IN THE TOWN OF AMITY."

				   BRODY
			   (to Vaughn)
		   Listen, Larry, I'm going to talk
		   to her.  This isn't a contest we
		   want everybody from Boston to
		   Quebec entering.

				   MRS. TAFT
		   I agree.  If she's going to adver-
		   tise, I wouldn't recommend out-of-
		   city papers.  There's enough of
		   us here in Amity could take care
		   of this.

				   BRODY
		   Larry, I'm responsible for the
		   public safety around here....

				   VAUGHN
		   So I think tomorrow you should go
		   out with whoever, and see that
		   they don't get hurt.

				   BRODY
		   But nobody sport-fishes for shark!

	No one will listen.  Already plans are being discussed, sides
	chosen, boats, tackle and tactics recommended.  The din
	overrules Brody, who we pull close to and ---

							CUT TO

56	INT. QUINT'S CHUM SHED - DAY					
	56

	A naked 100-watt bulb illuminates the electric grinder purring
	in one corner.  The slick black carcass of a pilot whale
	dominates the lighted area.

	Quint is hacking slabs off the whale with his Marine machete
	as his mate, Salvatore rolls an empty barrel to the grinder.

				   SALVATORE
			   (suspicious)
		   Where you find this whale anyway?

				   QUINT
		   Way out.  Dead as a doornail.

				   SALVATORE
		   How come harpoon holes in him?

	Quint doesn't reply as he hacks away.  The mate rolls away
	a full barrel.

				   SALVATORE
		   You hardly never use this chummin'
		   for shark.

				   QUINT
		   For some kinds.

	Quint muscles a new slab into the grinder, slowing it to a
	low growl as it purees the blubber.

				   QUINT
		   Go hose the deck, we're chartered
		   for nine a.m.

				   SALVATORE
			   (awed, looking
			   at chum)
		   Think it's one of those they got
		   down there?

	Quint's grim smile is reply enough.  Salvatore, looking worried,
	indicates some barrels full of whale pulp.

				   SALVATORE
		   Load these on or what?

	Quint is hacking revenge from the mutilated carcass.  He spits
	away the dripping perspiration.

				   QUINT
		   'Not required'...you heard the
		   man.
			   (answering Salvatore's
			question)
		   Just a regular charter tomorrow...
		   I'll keep this on ice for a while.

57	ANGLE - QUINT'S MARINE CORP MACHETE				
	57

	Chop, chop, chop....

							CUT TO

58	A SHOVEL 							
	58

	whump, whump, whump...pounding the sharpened standard into
	the sand.  The sign reads:  NO SWIMMING OR WADING -- Amity
	P.D.

59	SUNSET ON THE BEACH						
	59

	Hendricks and another deputy are assisting Brody.  Silhouettes
	of townspeople look on like mourners at a funeral.

	In the background some workmen are taking down the shutters
	from a quaint summer cottage.  They pause to watch the
	declining moments of the day.

	Three Selectmen also stand watching.  One of them seems to be
	whispering bounty news to three youngish men on a nearby
	dune.

	Sounds:  Surf and hammering.

							CUT TO

60	EXTERIOR - GRASSY INLET AND PIER - NIGHT			
	60

	Selectman Denherder and his buddy, Charlie, a professional
	angler, push a wheelbarrow ahead of them as they near the
	tumble-down jetty that leads fifty feet out into the black
	water.  Both men scuff along, exhausted.

				   DENHERDER
		   You wanna call it a night after
		   here?

				   CHARLIE
		   It's only two-thirty.  What, are
		   you tired?

				   DENHERDER
		   Yeah, Charlie, I got my second wind
		   three nibbles back.

	Denherder hefts a bloodstained laundry bag from the wheel-
	barrow, revealing about a hundred feet of coiled dog chain
	and a large patched inner tube.  Charlie takes out a monster
	hook and together they push the wheelbarrow onto the rickety
	pier that is only about five feet across.

				   DENHERDER
			   (reaching into the bag)
		   Leg of lamb this time?

				   CHARLIE
		   Screw lamb -- let's shoot the sirloin!

				   DENHERDER
			   (a hyena laugh)
		   We're blowin' half the bounty on
		   bait ---

	The splintered pier sways to and fro as the men reach the
	end and start to work.  Charlie baits the hook with a massive
	chunk of sirloin while Denherder secures the loose end of
	chain to a skinny piling.  Charlie then fastens the inner tube
	to the chain five feet from the end of the hook.

				   DENHERDER
		   One more after this, then I'm going
		   home.

				   CHARLIE
		   Set?

	Denherder tugs the chain against the piling to prove that it
	is.  Charlie heaves the bait.  Splash!  The inner tube follows
	and both men eagerly watch as it floats seaward, the chain
	playing out from the wheelbarrow.

				   CHARLIE
		   Tide's taking it right out.

	Charlie lights his pipe and sits back against a piling.  He
	turns on his transistor radio and loops one end around a
	fractured board.  Denherder paces, bored to death.

				   DENHERDER
		   You do this all the time, right,
		   Charlie?

				   CHARLIE
		   Twenty years.

				   DENHERDER
		   I can't believe that people pay
		   money to go fishing.  This is really
		   dumb.  This isn't even relaxing...
		   it's just boring.

61	CLOSE - CHAIN IN WHEELBARROW					
	61

	Suddenly zipping out, faster and faster, as both men straighten.
	Denherder is goggle-eyed.

				   DENHERDER
		   Hey!  What's this?

	The chain is coming out so fast that it begins to drag the
	wheelbarrow to the end of the jetty.  A section of chain
	tangles around the handle and flips the entire machine into
	the air.  Both men watch dumbfounded as the inner tube, racing
	out to sea in a wake of white water, suddenly dips under.

				   CHARLIE
		   Look at him take it!

				   DENHERDER
		   Do I set the goddam hook?

				   CHARLIE
		   Let him do it!  Go-go-go-go-go!

	It is then that the chain whips taut against the narrow pilings.

62	CLOSE - PILING							
	62

	A lineup of five decrepit 2 x 4 inch pilings SNAP with a
	resounding CRACK.

63	ANGLE - JETTY							
	63

	The end of the jetty is yanked loose.  Denherder is flipped
	like a chip over the side and into the cold night water, where
	he manages to snag hold of a splintered timber.

64	DENHERDER'S POINT OF VIEW					
	64

	The severed section of jetty, a joined platform of footboards,
	is being dragged seaward with Charlie sitting dazed on top of
	it, his lit pipe still going.

				   DENHERDER
		   CHARLIE!  JUMP!

	Charlie rolls into the water, sputters, turns to watch the
	flotilla of wood draw away.

65	CLOSE - CHARLIE							
	65

	looking seaward.

66	CHARLIE'S POINT OF VIEW						
	66

	The end of the jetty makes a 180-degree turn and heads back
	in his direction.

				   CHARLIE
		   Holy Jesus Christ!

	Denherder steps up on the broken-off piling just to be out of
	the water.

				   DENHERDER
		   Get the hell out!  Charlie!  Swim!

	Charlie, inhaling terror, trying to slog to shore.  The jetty
	is getting closer.  Suddenly the chain dragging it through the
	water is severed, and the charging wood falls behind -- an
	enormous black fin breaks water like a periscope, making course
	corrections as it comes for Charlie.

	Denherder jumps from piling to piling, almost losing his balance
	on his way to help Charlie.  Charlie has reached the last pylon
	toward open sea, and his hands clamber for a hold.  But ---

67	INSERT - CHARLIE'S HANDS					
	67

	The algae is too slippery, and his fingers keep sliding back.
	That's when the fin behind him seems to reach up to the sky
	and -- CHARLIE SCREAMS.  An explosion of water and bubbles
	mercifully blot out the image.

68	EXTERIOR - AMITY HARBOR - DAWN					
	68

	Ben Gardner, ruddy faced and ornery, is a fisherman as sea-
	worthy as they come.  With his make, Swede, he starts to
	board the Flicka, a Bertram 28 Sports Fisherman.  Absently,
	he makes preparations for casting off, his attention focused
	on surrounding dockside activity and ---

69	HIGH ANGLE - HARBOR						
	69

	Chaos.  A dozen cars and trucks double-parked on the dock with
	out-of-state plates from New Jersey, Rhode Island, Connecticut.
	Other vehicles are pulling up and parking.  Men unloading their
	weapons.  Boarding small boats.

	A queue of up-islanders, down-islanders, out-of-towners at the
	boat rental shack.  From rank amateurs in their green golf
	slacks to the alley-poor in levi tatters -- all of this dis-
	dainfully observed by Ben Gardner.

	Cries of "Cast Off," the starting of diesel engines in con-
	trast to the flooded baby Evenrudes -- all of this helped
	along by a lot of honcho swearing.

70	CLOSE - HARBORMASTER						
	70

	Sleepy, the old salt bends over the dock, washing out his
	coffee pot in the oily harbor water.  He sets down the pot,
	pulls a small wooden chair into position, on which teeters a
	bowl of Kellogg's Rice Krispies, and collapses into it with
	spoon in hand.  He watches stoically as:

71	CLOSE - BRODY							
	71

	Riding up on his police bicycle, Brody joins Deputy Hendricks
	who is trying to break up an argument at the Rental stand.

				   HENDRICKS
		   Christ, Martin, that Kintner lady
		   must have taken out an ad in Field
		   & Stream.

				   BRODY
		   Looks more like the Harvard Lampoon.

				   OUT-OF-TOWNER
		   I didn't come all the way out here
		   from New Rochelle to be gouged in
		   the seat of the pants by this loan
		   shark.

				   BOAT RENTAL MAN
		   Prices always go up around here
		   after June One -- isn't that right,
		   Chief?  If you want leaky boats at
		   lower rates, go up to the Hamptons.

72	ANGLE FROM ONE OF THE BOUNTY BOATS				
	72

	The narrow channel leading out of port lies ahead.  An incoming
	boat, a Formula 22 Inboard/Outboard with 110 h.p. Volvo engines.
	A few of the smaller craft begin zig-zagging to clear the right-
	of-way, their wakes causing annoying chop in the bay.

73	ANGLE - INCOMING FORMULA 22					
	73

	Matt Hooper, a bearded, backpacking young man, is at the helm,
	peering ahead at the ragtag armada.  He ties up, revealing for
	the first time a seven-by-four foot steel cage in the stern,
	drawing some attention.

74	BACK TO DOCKSIDE						
	74

	Another man and his two buddies heft a trash can into one
	of the boats.  He lifts the lid, and the stench throws his
	head into near whiplash.

				   WALTER
		   What is this sewage?

				   BARWOOD
		   For chum.  Let's move it.

				   WALTER
		   What's chum?

				   BARWOOD
		   Anything that attracts 'em.

	Brody looks over the dockrail at the boarding.  Eight men
	have piled into a tiny Glasstron and are now loading various
	and sundry weapons, from crossbows to spear guns.  Brody
	walks over to the harbormaster.

				   BRODY
		   Isn't there a limit to how many
		   men those boats'll carry?

				   HARBORMASTER
		   Sit down next to me, son, and we'll
		   find out.

75	CLOSE - GARDNER							
	75

	exchanging distasteful looks with his mate.  He is casting
	off the bow lines just as Felix and Pratt, two down-island
	characters run over.

				   FELIX
			   (more a declaration)
		   Okay, we go out with you.

	Gardner quickly pushes off, leaving Felix with his boarding
	leg in the air.

				   GARDNER
		   Hunt with the pack, sport.  I'll
		   fish for it my way.

	Felix and Pratt make obscene gestures and run off, looking
	for boats not yet filled to capacity, trying to make a deal.

76	ANGLE - LANDING							
	76

	Hooper sees Brody, up in arms about something, walking toward
	him.  Hooper starts to speak, but Brody veers aside and yells
	over the pier at the loading boats.

				   BRODY
		   No dynamite!  Hand that stuff over
		   or you'll never leave port!

				   MAN IN BOAT
		   It's fireworks.  I read somewhere
		   it attracts 'em.

				   HOOPER
		   Sharks are equipped with two long
		   cords of nerve tissue that function
		   as a sort of radar for homing in on
		   underwater vibrations.
			   (to Brody)
		   Understand you're having a little
		   shark trouble.

	Brody turns and walks away, Hooper barely keeping up with him.

				   HOOPER
		   I know you have a visitor off your
		   southern shores.  I think it could
		   be my shark.

				   BRODY
		   It belongs to whoever catches it.
			   (to a late arrival)
		   You'll move this car to a parking
		   slot, mister, or it won't be here
		   when you get back.

				   HOOPER
		   Sir, I'm not with these others ---

				   BRODY
		   It's always nice to meet an educated
		   man.

				   HOOPER
		   I'm interning at the American
		   Museum of Natural History, but the
		   Oceanographic Research Institute in
		   South Africa is co-sponsoring my
		   thesis paper arm in arm with the
		   Natural Institute of Health and the
		   Marine Fishery Service.

	Brody pauses to look hard at Hooper. A careless amateur trips and 
falls
	into the harbor beyond him.

				   BRODY
		   I don't have time to help you with
		   your homework.

	Brody goes over to lend a hand.  Hooper persists.

				   HOOPER
		   I'm trying to prove that the shark
		   that killed Christine Watkins last
		   Friday was the same rogue that
		   savaged these.

	Hooper pushes a mimeographed sheet in front of Brody.  About
	twenty names and addresses in all.

				   BRODY
		   One shark did all this?

				   HOOPER
			   (his excitement
			   multiplying as
			   he goes on)
		   The trail of a rogue shark leads
		   all over the world.  This is only
		   a theory.  It has never been authen-
		   ticated, but there is a wonderful
		   chance that the shark that killed
		   the Watkins girl and the man-eater
		   I tagged off the Great Barrier Reef
		   are the one and the same.  Off and on
		   I've tracked it to New Zealand,
		   Santiago Bay, Cape Town South Africa
		   ...uh...the Gulf of Guinea, then
		   West Palm Beach, Florida last
		   December -- and finally predicted
		   it would follow the warming Gulf
		   Stream into the Northern Seasonal
		   Zones, and release an attack pattern
		   along the Jersey Coast.  I was off
		   by just three hundred miles.  It
		   hit you instead.

				   BRODY
		   You'll pardon me i f I don't help
		   you get your Ph.D. while my town here
		   degenerates into some high-class
		   ghost resort.

	Brody starts away.  In the background all boats are heading
	toward open ocean.

				   HOOPER
		   All I'm asking is for a little future
		   cooperation.  I could predict future
		   outbursts of attack activity in the
		   area.  Use me...Let me use you.  I
		   scored 93 on my Orals, for crying
		   out loud!

				   BRODY
		   We've had two other attacks since
		   the Watkins thing, both fatal.
		   Could you kill it for us?

				   HOOPER
			   (honest response)
		   No sir, I couldn't.

				   BRODY
		   Then how do we begin to cooperate?

				   HOOPER
		   By letting me see Christine Watkins.

77	EXTERIOR - OCEAN - DAY						
	77

	The armada is spread out and moving in a ragged circle, fif-
	teen boats in all.  One man heaves cherry bombs into the water.
	A smaller boat going in the opposite direction offers us
	Barwood, forking spaghetti leftovers into the ocean while his
	friend pours out a bottle of ketchup.

	A speedboat chugs by, one of the occupants reading instructions
	aloud from a book entitled "Sharks - East Coast, Vol. I."
	A boatload of impoverished scallop fishermen throw a net over-
	board, full of gaps and split ends.  The professionals look
	professional, but the landlubbers out for the $3000 make it
	impossible for everybody.  Collisions are barely averted.

78	THE RUBE GOLDBERG ERROR						
	78
thru									
	thru
84	The Out-of-Towner in a small boat is bent over in a life and	
	84
	death struggle, his rod in a tight arc.  His buddy leaps across
	to lend a hand.

	Twenty yards away in another boat the same struggle ensues.
	This time it's the overloaded boat with the poor scallop fisher-
	men.  Shouts of I'M ON!  DIG IN!  STRIKE!  Then a tangle of
	tackle springs from the water.  They have hooked each other.

	Joy turns to swearing.   Arnold Felix stands up to applaud the
	mishap, while his buddy Pratt takes careful aim with his
	Remington 1100 12-gauge and blasts at the tackle as if it were
	a clay pigeon.  The tangle explodes ---

	Both the Out-of-Towners and the Scallop Fisherman falls over
	backward ---

	The Scallop boat swerves right, and bows into an eleven-foot
	Glasstron ---

	A Proud Mariner standing in the stern with his 30.06 is
	knocked off balance and pitches forward into the drink, his
	gun exploding outward and ---

	The wad of shot from the exploding rifle hits the rigging of
	a passing boat sending the jib, mains'l and about twenty
	pounds of rigging on top of the bewildered occupants.

85	ANGLE - HARRY'S BOAT						
	85

	Three men are aboard, one holding a rod which holds a fast
	arc.  A few yards off stern we see a triangular dorsal fin
	crossing back and forth, struggling, jerking, the mighty tail
	threshing.  One man is screaming success, the other two slapping
	the angler on the back.

86	CLOSE - PRATT AND FELIX						
	86

	They spot it and sour.

				   PRATT
		   Well, get over there! He ain't
		   caught it yet!

	The owner of Pratt's boat throws it forward and Pratt removes
	a .45 automatic from the holster of his belt.  He tests it,
	firing once in the air.  As they near the scene of the struggle,
	eleven other boats begin converging, until ---

87	HARRY'S BOAT							
	87

	Everyone wants to get into the act.  They are attacking the
	threshing beast with all they've got.  Pratt uses his auto-
	matic, another blasts point blank with a shotgun.  There are
	occasional water ricochets and the bounty hunters duck from
	time to time as bullets skip by.  Finally, the shark stops
	threshing.

88	FELIX AND PRATT							
	88

	Their boat has moved close to the shark, closer than Harry's.

				   PRATT
			   (exultant)
		   Hand me that pole!  Quick!

	One of his party in the over-filled boat grabs a gaff and
	leans out to grab the moribund shark.  But Harry won't give
	up the line, still reeling in.

				   HARRY
		   Beat it!  I hooked him!

				   PRATT
		   How's the family, Harry?
			   (to the man with gaff)
		   Go on and do it!

				   MAN WITH GAFF
		   We split down the middle?

	Pratt nods reluctantly.  The man swings, lodges the gaff and
	hauls the shark up onto the gunwale.  A paroxysm of cheers
	from the surrounding boats.  Smoke flares are fired into
	the air.

				   HARRY
			   (a tug-of-war)
		   Let go my shark!

	It is a ten-foot blue, and what a mess -- splattered with
	bullet punctures, gashes, bleeding from several orifices.  But
	it is not dead -- it kicks back to life and threatens to cap-
	size the boat.  Pratt panics and fires six times with his .45.
	The bullets pierce the shark's head, pass through, and split
	the fiberglass hull through which a flood of water rises.  Every-
	body stands up as the boat slips beneath them.

89	HIGH ANGLE FROM SHORE						
	89

	On a hummock overlooking the cluster of boats stands Quint.
	He is laughing out loud -- a sharp, piercing bark that has
	little real humor in it.  Below, the circle of boats tighten
	around the spreading stain of crimson.

90	INTERIOR - MORGUE - DAY						
	90

	Hooper is measuring the bite marks on the Day-Glow raft with
	his dial calibrators.

				   HOOPER
		   I'll look at her now if you don't
		   mind.

91	ANGLE - BRODY, CORONER SANTOS, HOOPER				
	91

	Hooper scribbles notes, then mumbles something inaudible
	into his pocket cassette recorder.  Coroner Santos looks
	to Brody, plaintively.

				   CORONER SANTOS
		   That was a different sort of acci-
		   dent.  As I told you ---

				   BRODY
			   (guilty, angry)
		   Let him.

	The coroner hesitates, then walks to the ice chest and slides
	open the drawer.

92	CLOSE - HOOPER							
	92

	At first his face registers shock.  Then, with forced composure,
	Hooper steadies his hands and begins to take pictures with his
	Minolta.

				   HOOPER
		   I've heard the boat-propeller story
		   several times.  And the nocturnal
		   hatchet-murder story, the dashed-
		   upon-the-razor-coral story --
			   (to Brody)
		   The little boy was never found?

	Brody nods, looking down at his feet.

				   HOOPER
		   They're very successful creatures,
		   sharks.  Eighty million year's
		   antiquity for the species of the
		   Great White.  The family goes as far
		   back as three-hundred million.  Plenty
		   of time to get good at what they do.

	An attendant flies into the room, joyfully out of wind.

				   ATTENDANT
		   They called from the dock, Mr. Brody!
		   They got it!

93	CLOSE - HOOPER							
	93

	He appears stunned.

94	CLOSE - BRODY							
	94

	enjoying a lightheadedness he hasn't felt in weeks.

				   BRODY
		   Want to see?

95	EXT. - BREAKWATER LEADING TO THE PUBLIC BATHING AREA - DAY	
	95

96	A PROCESSION OF TWENTY MEN					
	96

	dragging the shark by a tail-rope from harbor to beach.
	A dog follows, barking at the remains of the blue.  As they
	arrive at the beach Meadows takes charge.  Talks to both his
	photographer and the bounty hunters.

				   MEADOWS
			   (to photographer)
		   I want a good one for under the
		   headline -- nearer the water.  Get
		   a group shot with the shark.  Use
		   it on page one, six inches by six
		   columns, center.

	Some of the men have run ahead, happily knocking down some
	of Brody's NO SWIMMING signs.

				   MEADOWS
			   (seeing this)
		   Great!  Bring one over here.

	In the background; voices, laughter.  Some joke about the
	"big-time fisherman" -- "Ben Gardner, not even back yet!"
	Others open beer, throw frosty cans around, making it look
	like a Miller's commercial.

	Meadows positions the shark and vigilantes.

				   MEADOWS
		   Group around Charlie Tuna...that's
		   right.  No, leave it clear in back
		   -- closer with the sign.

	Brody and Hooper are seen approaching fifty yards up the
	beach.

				   MEADOWS
		   Smile, boys!  On three, drop the
		   sign.
			   (to photographer)
		   On three, Bill.  One...two...three.

	Click.  Cheers.

				   MEADOWS
		   One more.  Just the two prize-winners.

	Mock groans as the posse moves aside.  Pratt and the gaffer
	remain.  One of the others raises the sign again for take
	two.

				   HARRY
		   I hooked him y'know?

				   MEADOWS
		   In a little tighter please.

	The gaffer doesn't fancy sidling up to the critter.

				   GAFFER
		   Better check this bastard.

	He starts to poke it in the eye.  Pratt on the other side
	leans forward for a closer look, gaff in hand.  The gaffer
	pokes the eye.  The Blue shark is wide awake, a vicious
	lunge in the opposite direction that snaps the gaff in
	Pratt's hand completely in half.

				   VOICE IN CROWD
		   Christ!  Ain't it dead?

	Pratt squeezes out a little smile and shuffles eight feet
	to his right out of range.  Hooper and Brody walk into the
	frozen tableau.  Hooper walks over to the shark, eyeing it
	with both amusement and disappointment.

				   BRODY
		   Yours?

				   HOOPER
		   No, this one's a blue.

				   HARRY
			   (insisting)
		   I hooked him.

				   BRODY
			   (persisting)
		   Is it the one?

	Hooper unravels a lab thermometer on a long nylon cord,
	twirling it over his head like a lariat, finally hurling
	it out into the ocean.  He then unhooks a steel tape measure
	from his bag of tricks and spools out feet and inches from
	the shark's nose to tail.

				   HOOPER
		   It's sure big enough -- ten point
		   six feet.

				   PRATT
		   Who is this guy?

	Hooper is reeling in his thermometer.

				   BRODY
			   (doesn't want to say
			   a 'student')
		   The Institute of Sharks sent him
		   to lend a hand -- Matt Hooper.

				   PRATT
		   That's right, except he's half a
		   day late now that I already caught
		   it.

97	HOOPER								
	97

	reading the thermometer.

				   HOOPER
		   I'm not so sure.  Blue sharks pretty
		   much operate on the warm-water law,
		   and limit their attacks to seventy
		   degrees and up.
			   (holding out thermometer)
		   Ocean's fifty-five.

				   PRATT
			   (after a stymied beat)
		   Who is this guy?

				   HOOPER
		   The Great White's body temperature
		   in the lateral musculature is almost
		   eighteen degrees above whatever the
		   temperature of the water.  I don't
		   know if this is our bite culprit.

				   PRATT
			   (beginning to rave)
		   If you'd have seen the fight he put
		   up, you'd shut up.  Hell, he ate a
		   nine-year-old boy yesterday morning,
		   the bastard, and goddammit...
			   (kicks the shark
			   in the nose)
		   ...this is my shark!

	Hooper removes from its sheath the meanest fourteen-inch
	hunting knife Pratt has ever seen.

				   HOOPER
		   Only one way to know for sure...
			   (handing Pratt the
			   knife, handle first)
		   ...and since it's not my shark, I'm
		   not slitting open the belly to see
		   what portions of the boy is still
		   inside.  Am I...?

	Groans are heard from the bounty hunters, some of whom start
	to turn away.

98	CLOSE - BRODY							
	98

	Uncomfortable and queasy at the thought of it.

99	CLOSE - PRATT							
	99

	He wraps his hands behind him in defiance of the proffered
	blade.

				   PRATT
			   (whiny)
		   Well, shit -- this guy caught it
		   with me.  And Harry over there
		   hooked it!

100	ANGLE - HARRY							
	100

	starts to whistle up toward the clouds.

101	BACK TO HOOPER							
	101

	as he poises the knife himself toward the underbelly and ---

		   BRODY			   HOOPER
	Not here, Mr. Hooper ---	This could be it.  He's big
					enough all right, but I still
					can't be sure until ---

				   BRODY
			   (nods toward
			   upper beach)
		   -- the boy's mother.

102	POINT OF VIEW							
	102

	Mayor Vaughn, Mrs. Kintner and her father approaching.
	Mrs. Kintner is draped in black mourning, and never utters
	a sound.  She lifts her veil, walks two paces forward and
	spits down at the shark, takes two paces back and replaces
	the veil, recovering her poise.

				   VAUGHN
			   (to Brody)
		   This it?

				   HOOPER
			   (interrupting)
		   I won't know until I perform a
		   full autopsy.

				   VAUGHN
			   (sotto to Brody)
		   Who is this kid?

				   BRODY
		   He's a fish expert from the Oceano-
		   graphic Foundation.

				   VAUGHN
			   (looking him up and
			   down; in a wholly
			   irreverent tone)
		   Well, it doesn't take much of an
		   expert to see that this is the big-
		   gest, ugliest, meanest-looking shark
		   ever hooked around Amity Island.
			   (to the gathering
			   of men)
		   Who caught her?

	Harry steps forward, pointing.

				   HARRY
		   This guy, Pratt, and me.

				   VAUGHN
		   A thousand dollars apiece is not a
		   bad day's haul.

	Vaughn begins shaking hands with the three winners, and
	Meadows snaps some bonus pictures.  Mrs. Kintner's father
	draws close to Brody and Vaughn, handing Vaughn a card
	from his pocket.

				   FATHER
		   At whatever the cost, my daughter
		   has requested that all preparations
		   be made to ship this animal to her
		   home town of Marblehead, Mass.  Can
		   you accommodate us?

				   VAUGHN
		   What the devil for?

	Nary a blink from the old man, and Vaughn looks to Hooper,
	weighing the alternatives.

				   VAUGHN
		   We'll see it through, Mr. Sands.
			   (to Martin)
		   Martin, you start collecting those
		   signs.  And keep your friend away
		   from that demon with his pigsticker
		   there.  Let's show some respect for	
		   the loss we've incurred.
			   (to Meadows; walking
			   him up the beach)
		   Get the story on the state wire.
		   Try to get AP and UPI to pick it
		   up in New York or Boston to put it
		   on the national.  Call Dave Axelrod
		   in New York and tell him this is
		   from me, and he owes me one.

103	ANGLE - FATHER AND MRS. KINTNER					
	103

	walking up the beach with Pratt, Harry and the gaffer follow-
	ing behind.

104	BRODY								
	104

	kneels next to the shark, making a face at the wafting stench.

				   BRODY
		   Some field you picked.

				   HOOPER
		   Well, there's dolphins -- but they
		   talk too much.

							CUT TO

105	INT. RADIO ROOM - COAST GUARD STATION #4 - EVENING		
	105

	One man is at the radio, another, a laundry-white officer,
	walks toward Brody.

				   OFFICER
		   Can't seem to raise your Mr. Gardner.
		   Maybe his radio is out.  Or he could
		   have put in somewhere else.

				   BRODY
		   He would have called his wife.

	They walk out together, into an eerie dusk fog.

				   BRODY
		   No point sending up a plane, huh?

				   OFFICER
		   I'll get a patrol boat on it.  If
		   you'd like to go ---

				   BRODY
			   (laughing under
			   his breath)
		   I don't do so hot on boats.

				   OFFICER
			   (going)
		   We'll contact you down there if ---

				   BRODY
			   (urgently
			   stopping him)
		   Listen ---

				   OFFICER
			   (they've been
			   over this)
		   Brody, sharks are always around.
		   Blues, browns, makos, thousands ---

				   BRODY
		   Can't you get rid of just one for
		   us?

				   OFFICER
		   Where is it?  How do we find it?
		   It shouldn't come around again.
		   Odds are worse on the highways.

				   BRODY
		   But you could protect the beach -- !
		   I mean, you have access to ---

				   OFFICER
			   (stopping him)
		   We could put up a show.  We could
		   give you spotters, but in where
		   the waves break, the water's
		   cloudy and it's hard to spot.
		   Or we could string out shark
		   repellent -- sometimes it's effec-
		   tive.  But then, sometimes ---

				   BRODY
		   What do I do then?  Pray for
		   lousy weather?

				   OFFICER
		   We're just the Coast Guard, Brody.

	Brody walks into the fog until he disappears.

106	SLOW ANGLE - LIGHTHOUSE						
	106

	Brody walking away from the station and lighthouse preoccupied
	with a dozen alternative thoughts.  A shattering blast from
	the fog horn catches him unprepared and he nearly comes out
	of his skin.  Hands clasped to ears, he passes a sign that
	can barely be seen through the fog:  WARNING!  FOG HORN CAN
	BE DAMAGING TO YOUR HEARING!

107	EXTERIOR - FRONT PORCH OF BRODY'S HOUSE - NIGHT			
	107

	Hooper is having after-dinner with Ellen and Martin
	Brody, while a spectacular heat-lightning display colors the
	night clouds and dances on the water miles out.

				   HOOPER
		   There're good things to be said
		   about meshing.  It's worked in
		   Australia for years.  Repellent's
		   a myth.  Now there's a cable avail-
		   able charged with 7,000 amps that
		   could be strung along the entire
		   bathing area.

				   ELLEN
		   We have Kahlua, Mr. Hooper.

				   HOOPER
		   Matt.  And I don't drink alcohol,
		   but thank you.
			   (back to Brody)
		   We think the Great Whites possess
		   an electrical sense ---

	Michael walks in.  He doesn't smile after the Sunday
	incident.  He is quite dry this evening, and is in possession
	of a ghastly watercolor of a shark tearing a man in two.

				   MICHAEL
			   (shy, his eyes
			   on Hooper)
		   Mrs. Pfister had us all draw
		   sharks in school today.

				   BRODY
		   I told you not to wear that cracker-
		   jack ring.  It's too big -- you're
		   gonna catch it on something and
		   lose a finger.

				   HOOPER
			   (always interested)
		   This is a very good rendering,
		   Mike.  Looks like a thresher.
		   Where'd you learn to draw him?

				   MICHAEL
		   I -- cheated, and found pictures
		   in one of Dad's books.

				   HOOPER
			   (delighted)
		   Get bitten by the subject...or
		   just morbid curiosity?

				   BRODY
		   More in the spirit of the public
		   interest.

				   MICHAEL
		   Mrs. Pfister says if we have a bad
		   season, we could sell our pictures
		   to the tourists.  We get to paint
		   through American History again
		   tomorrow.

	Ellen and Brody exchange worried looks.  Hooper digs around
	in his pocket for something, then looks through his satchel
	purse.

				   ELLEN
		   You want me to speak to her tomorrow?

	Hooper hands Michael a shark's tooth on a wire necklace.

				   HOOPER
		   I picked this up in Macao.  There's
		   supposed to be a superstition about
		   these things -- that if you keep it
		   with you, you'll be safe from shark
		   bite.

	Michael smiles for the first time, and a warm moment passes
	between him and Hooper.

				   MICHAEL
		   I gotta show this to Guber.

				   BRODY
		   Don't sleep with that on, son.
		   You'll cut something in the night.

				   ELLEN
			   (squeezing his hand
			   across the table)
		   That was nice.  Michael hasn't
		   smiled since his birthday party
		   and that Kintner accident.

				   HOOPER
		   He was a witness?

				   BRODY
			   (changing subject,
			   referring to storm)
		   Yeah.  Listen.  I'm no crack meteor-
		   ologist, but I think we're in store
		   for some surf.

				   HOOPER
		   Hope not.  I'm longlining in the
		   morning.  You should come along,
		   Martin.

				   BRODY
		   In case you haven't caught the
		   island gossip, I never take baths
		   -- just showers.

				   HOOPER
		   Aquaphobia or what?  Mind if I
		   smoke?

				   BRODY
		   No.  Here, wait.

	Brody takes out a lighter as Hooper puts a twisted cigarette
	in his mouth.  Instead of inhaling, Hooper takes a long hit,
	and it doesn't take long for the shock to beat the aroma to
	where Ellen and Martin sit.

				   HOOPER
			   (behind the hit)
		   I'm going to try and snag the old
		   boy with 3/32 of an inch stainless
		   steel aircraft cable.

				   BRODY
			   (dubiously amused)
		   I could throw your ass in jail for
		   that.

				   HOOPER
		   Brought my own cage, thanks.  If
		   this really is my shark, he's got
		   a Peterson disc tag on his anal
		   fin.  It can't be seen from a boat.

				   BRODY
			   (growing anger at
			   this young man's
			   impudence)
		   Once hooked, what then?

	Hooper brightens and reaches into his duffel, pulling out
	a shiny stainless steel object about the size of an alarm
	clock.

				   HOOPER
		   Biotelemetry.  It's a radio collar.
		   I bell the cat and then follow him
		   anywhere.  I'm trying to make a
		   deal with a satellite tracking
		   station at Houston, Texas.

				   BRODY
			   (getting riled)
		   Now let's wait a minute.  You have
		   him hooked, right?

				   HOOPER
			   (trying to be jovial)
		   Well, I'll never take him without
		   a fight, but --

				   BRODY
		   And you stick that -- cigarette
		   case to his neck?

				   HOOPER
			   (wondering where
			   this is leading)
		   That's the game plan.

				   BRODY
		   Then you let it loose.  You let
		   it go free.

	Hooper sees where this has arrived.  He swallows the roach
	and takes a breath.

				   HOOPER
		   I know what you're saying, Martin.

				   BRODY
		   Your little lab experiment has
		   seen three innocent people killed
		   over the past three days.

				   ELLEN
		   Martin, it's not his shark.

				   BRODY
		   And your list makes me sick.  You
		   carry it around with you like
		   you're keeping score.

				   HOOPER
		   Nature has no conscience, Mr. Brody.

				   BRODY
		   Oh, Christ.  Whose side are you on?
		   You told me you'd help us get rid
		   of it.

				   HOOPER
		   What I said was, I'd help predict
		   future attacks in your area.  If
		   this device works, the early warn-
		   ing to other shorefront resorts --
		   not just here, but anywhere it
		   ranges in the world ---

				   BRODY
		   I don't give a crap about your
		   worldwide conquest.  What about
		   right here?  This town is going
		   under today!  Where's your humanity?
		   You could kill this thing for us,
		   flatten its ass and ---

				   HOOPER
			   (rising)
		   I'm staying at the Abilard Arms.

	Hooper gathers his things, climbs into his backpack.
	Smiles at Ellen and kisses her hand.  Ellen smiles, not
	yet recovered from embarrassment.

				   HOOPER
		   I really liked dinner.

	He leaves.  Ellen looks at her hand.  Brody turns and sees
	her.

				   ELLEN
			   (it's all she
			   can say)
		   Nobody kisses hands anymore.

				   BRODY
		   If you stick that wet spot under
		   the black light at the Coney
		   Island Aquarium, they'll let you
		   in for nothing.

108	EXTERIOR - ABOARD HOOPER'S BOAT - FOGGY DAY			
	108

	The boat is slicing gentle swells into the flat water.
	Hooper is mainlining from a big reel.  Tuna-halibut clips
	attached to each of the lines that bear hooks and floats
	every ten yards.  Large bait chunks are tossed into the
	water.  In the boat with him is Meadows, huddled in a
	corner and trying to appear eager to learn.  Hooper is
	not cooperating.  He storms around, upset and frustrated.

				   MEADOWS
		   Okay.  What's the second species
		   of shark on your dangerous list?

	Hooper opens the throttle half-speed, looking into the sonar
	display that casts a green glow in the soupy weather.  A
	blip appears on the screen that draws a speculative hum from	
	Hooper.

				   MEADOWS
			   (trying to
			   sound scientific)
		   Fish activity?

				   HOOPER
		   Very deep -- looks like a school.
			   (more to himself)
		   Mackerel.  Really clumped together.

	As the two huddle together in the green spill, Hooper touches
	the throttle to increase speed, still slightly puzzled.

				   HOOPER
		   Staying right with us.

109 	INSERT - SONAR ACTIVITY						
	109

				   MEADOWS (o.s.)
		   And didn't you say activity stops?
		   If any of those whoppers are
		   around?

				   HOOPER
		   Tends to.  Gets very still down
		   there.

110	CLOSE - MEADOWS							
	110

	looks up from the scope, and his expression turns to horror.

				   MEADOWS
		   Look out!

	Hooper looks up in time to avert a near collision with Ben
	Gardner's boat, the Flicka.

	It is completely awash, with water in the cockpit right up
	to the gunwales.  Seat cushions and hatch covers float about,
	banging and thumping.  The boat is wallowing and it seems
	that, given a touch more weight, it will sink.

				   MEADOWS
			   (shocked)
		   That's Ben Gardner's boat!  Ben!
		   Ben!

	Hooper comes up alongside, cuts his engine and goes forward
	to tie his bowline to a forward cleat on the Flicka.

111	INSERT - SONAR SCOPE						
	111

	Bigger blips, both visually and audibly.

	Taking note of this, Hooper stands a moment trying to figure
	out what could have done this.  There doesn't seem to be any
	damage fore or aft.  Then he notices that one of the after
	cleats on the Flicka has been torn away...there are scars
	on the wood where the screws are used to hold the cleats down.

				   MEADOWS
			   (skin crawling from
			   the foggy stillness)
		   He must have hit something...I'm
		   sure they had life-belts on board.

	Hooper nods toward the water.

112	ANGLE - WATER							
	112

	We see life-belts and jackets floating in the unearthly
	stillness.

113	HOOPER - WIDE							
	113

	He gingerly steps onto the rail of Flicka, peeks into the
	cockpit and cabin.  Awash.  No sign of life.  He puts more
	weight down as he cranes his neck further and the whole
	boat lists to one side.  Hooper leaps back to his own.

114	ANOTHER ANGLE - HOOPER'S BOAT					
	114

	He opens a locker and pulls out a wet suit and other gear.

				   MEADOWS
		   Maybe we should just tow it in.

				   HOOPER
			   (suiting up)
		   I'd better see the damage first.

115	INSERT - SONAR SCANNER						
	115

	Blip, blop, blip, blip.

116	CLOSE - MEADOWS							
	116

	suddenly cold, zips up his windbreaker and turns the collar
	up, as Hooper zips up his wetsuit and clasps on a weighted
	belt.

				   HOOPER
		   Did he have a dinghy on board?

				   MEADOWS
			   (just wants
			   out of here)
		   I don't know.

	Hooper hyper-ventilates as he places on mask, checks his
	"hot" flashlight.

				   MEADOWS
			   (alone)
		   I'd rather we just towed it in,
		   Mr. Hooper.

	Hooper finishes hyper-ventilating...smiles to reassure him.

				   HOOPER
		   Be up in a minute.

	He's ready to go, but hesitates a moment, staring out at the
	sea -- the first time Hooper has appeared to be doubting his
	next move.  He shakes it off, takes a huge breath, lets out
	half and splashes in....

117	ANGLE - MEADOWS							
	117

	all alone in the boat.  Just he and the active sonar.  He
	checks the second-hand sweep of his watch, counting out loud.

118	UNDERWATER SEQUENCE - HOOPER					
	118

	Hooper descends in a froth of bubbles.  Warily he turns a
	full circle with his hotlight.  At first we see nothing out
	of place about the Flicka except that it is lying so low
	in the water.  But as Hooper travels the bottom looking for
	damage, he comes across a jagged hole two-thirds of the way
	forward.  The hole is about the size of a basketball, and
	the wood around it has been bashed and splintered.  Hooper
	explores the hole with his hands, then takes the knife from
	its sheath and begins to dig at something.  Whatever it is
	comes free in his hand.  As he studies his find, his light
	wanders upward, pointing directly into the dark hole.  Hooper
	looks up....

119	CLOSE - HOLE							
	119

	Ben Gardner's dead face stares out through the hole in the
	Flicka, eyes and mouth gaping in frozen horror, his skin
	pinched like a prune.

120	CLOSE - HOOPER							
	120

	bumps his head in trying to get away, seems to yell through
	escaping bubbles.  His mask fills with water as he flails
	for the surface.  Miscalculating, he bumps into the hull of
	his own boat, scrambles around it, finally coming up between
	the two boats...gulping air, unable to speak yet, shocked
	and scared, out of breath....

				   MEADOWS
		   Bad -- ?

	All Hooper can do is hold out his hand, open for Meadows to
	see.  A shiny white tooth, at least two inches long, rests
	in the palm of his hand.

				   HOOPER
		   A White -- it's a Great White, I
		   knew it...!  Looks like he died
		   of fright in there.

				   MEADOWS
			   (scared shitless)
		   No shark did that to a boat ---

	Hooper rolls up his sleeve, and with one stroke of the tooth
	shaves all the hair off him forearm.

				   HOOPER
		   One this big could do anything!

	Meadows will never be the same.

121	INT. VAUGHN'S REALTY OFFICE - DAY				
	121

	On the run and seeing red, Larry Vaughn speed-walks out of
	his office, grabbing his coat and out the door, cuss-mumbling
	all the way.  Meadows, still in his boat clothing, appears
	behind him, his tie undone and sweating.  Vaughn jumps into
	his car, and just before Meadows can open the passenger door,
	takes off in it.

122	EXT. ISLAND HIGHWAY - DAY					
	122

	Just under the roadside billboard, Hendricks and another
	deputy, Joyner, prepare for a climb with ropes in their
	arms, paint cans and large canvas brushes.

	Beyond them a few feet away, stand Brody and Hooper, watching
	Vaughn pacing back and forth, sucking on a Havana.  He has a
	newspaper in his right hand.  Hooper is sketching on a sketch
	pad.

				   VAUGHN
		   It says here IT IS CAUGHT!  Period!

	Brody holds out the two-inch tooth.

				   BRODY
		   Mr. Hooper figured its size from
		   this -- it's over a ton.  It's
		   also over ---

				   VAUGHN
		   Put that rotten thing --
			   (he pushes it
			   away, it slices)
		   Yee-ow!

	Hooper steps over to show him his sketch.

				   VAUGHN
			   (wrapping handker-
			   chief around his hand)
		   If my hand gets infected....

				   HOOPER
		   Meet Carcharodon charcharias.

				   VAUGHN
		   What is it?

				   HOOPER
		   The shark that just bit you on
		   the hand.
			   (sketching)
		   And this...is you.

	Hooper has sketched the reduced ratio figure of Vaughn with
	cigar standing in front of the jaws.  He looks like a dwarf
	by comparison.

				   HOOPER
		   Seventeen feet from anterior to
		   posterior.

				   VAUGHN
		   No shark grows seventeen feet,
		   for Christ's sake.

				   HOOPER
		   The famous Swedish naturalist
		   Linnaeus believed that the 'great
		   fish' that swallowed Jonah was not
		   a whale, but a great white shark.

				   VAUGHN
		   Love to prove that, wouldn't you?
		   Get into the National Geographic.

				   BRODY
		   What should we do about this white?

	Hooper has come prepared.  He takes from his backpack a
	Bomar Brain calculator and ticks away at it while talking.

				   HOOPER
		   The longer there's nothing to
		   munch on here, the better your
		   chances he'll go.  That means, of
		   course, keeping your beaches
		   closed, your fishermen in port.
		   The other alternative is non-
		   corrosive, 100-gauge steel mesh --
		   say, 30,000 feet of it around your
		   bathing area.  Concrete blocks and
		   installation would run you...oh,
		   four, five hundred thousand.  That
		   is, unless you could seek a deputa-
		   tion from the federal government --
			   (notes Vaughn's non-
			   believing countenance)
		   Beats getting swallowed, doesn't it?

	Vaughn is apoplectic.  His seemingly dead cigar glows again.
	He takes Brody by the arm and leads him out of earshot of
	Hooper.

				   BRODY
		   Maybe we can make it up in August.

				   VAUGHN
		   That beach will be open ON the FOURTH
		   OF JULY, DAMMIT!

				   BRODY
		   We have to give this a coupla weeks.

				   VAUGHN
		   A couple of days.  And that's bad
		   enough.  I'll have to think of
		   some reason that'll keep the
		   grease from frying.  In the mean-
		   time, I want that shark killed.
		   Either do it yourself, or hire a
		   pro, but go door to door with the
		   offer.  No more of his bounty
		   crap.  And Brody ---

	Vaughn gestures up at the billboard.  The beautiful model
	splashing in the golden surf with flailing arms has been
	significantly reinterpreted.  Some pranksters have painted
	a huge dorsal fin cutting through the waves next to her, and
	she now looks like an hysterical beach-goer stampeding out
	of the water.  The deputies begin covering it over with paint.
	People have been gathering throughout the scene on bicycles
	and a few station wagons.

				   VAUGHN
		   First the picket fences -- and
		   now this.  I want to see those
		   little bastards hanging upside
		   down by their Buster Brown shoes.

	Vaughn storms away before Brody can reply.

123	EXT. DOCK AREA - DAY						
	123

	Hooper is loading some mainline floats and smelly bait fish
	on board.  Two young long-hairs are assisting him.  The old
	harbormaster dips his coffee percolator into the water and
	rinses it thoroughly while watching Hooper load.  He rises
	to his feet and walks across the pier, looking in the oppo-
	site direction about three slips away.


124	ANGLE - A HIDDEN SLIP						
	124

	Brody and Deputy Hendricks are supervising another loading
	activity.  Six local fishermen are converting their 16-foot
	fiberglass double outboard into a gunboat.  A sealed crate
	of high concussion palm-sized depth charges gingerly finds
	a place in the bow section, over which fishing gear and
	nets are positioned to disguise the mission.

				   BR0DY
			   (to Hendricks)
		   Don't let him out of your sight.
		   Not for a second.  Stay at a dis-
		   creet distance -- and dammit,
		   Lenny, no shark talk!  The way
		   sound carries over water, you're
		   a dead giveaway.

				   HENDRICKS
		   Who's with him?

				   BRODY
		   Local hire...I don't know.  I want
		   to hear from you, Len.

125	EXT. PICKET FENCE ROW - DAY					
	125

	Angling down a stretch of picket fence.  Little karate cries
	are accompanied by little flat hands piercing through splin-		
	tering wood.

126	EXT. MAIN STREET - DAY						
	126

	The hardware store proprietor, bored and withdrawn, suns
	himself on a chaise lounge surrounded by summer surplus
	that no one is buying, while --

	-- the Amity Gift and Candle shop is offering an outside
	display on a carousel postcard rack of artificial shark-
	tooth necklaces, along with an open-air gallery of shark
	books.  A dozen tourists bunch up as business booms here
	today.

127	INT. BRODY'S OFFICE - DAY					
	127

	Ellen is somehow mired behind Brody's desk, two travel
	folders in her absent-minded grasp.  She talks into one
	phone, at the same time she is talking on another to a
	breathy, ticky landlady.  All of this overlapping.  Brody's
	secretary Polly is in the outer office doing three things
	at once.

		   ELLEN			   LANDLADY
	    (into phone)		First it's twenty-four
	I don't know where my husband	hours, then it's two days.
	is, Mr. Kretzler.  He's only	It one more guest of mine
	closed the beaches to insure	leaves for Cape Cod, I'll
	your safety....			start a petition!

	From the outer office, we hear:

				   POLLY
			   (into phone)
		   Until further notice!  You'll have
		   to ask him about that when he gets
		   back.  Good-bye.

	Three people enter.  Two of them, an elderly tourist couple,
	push past Polly and into Brody's office where Ellen stands
	beside the desk.

				   MAN TOURIST
		   Excuse me -- I see by the papers
		   they caught the killer shark.  I
		   see by the signs that the beaches
		   are still closed, and we were just
		   wondering....

				   TOURIST WIFE
			   (reaches out and
			   takes Ellen's hand
			   in hers, glowing)
		   I think it's a simply wonderful
		   positive sign of our times to see
		   a woman Chief of Police in a nice
		   place like ---

	Ellen removes the receiver from her ear, from which angry
	geese-like sounds filter through.  She starts to explain,
	instead bursts out laughing -- one of those spontaneous,
	funny cries for help that leaves you weak.  She falls
	helplessly into her husband's swivel chair, covering her
	face with Acapulco brochures.

							CUT TO

128	INT. QUINT'S RESIDENCE - NIGHT					
	128

	Entering Quint's abode is not unlike a spooky ride at
	Disneyland...the placement of objects, the dungeon lighting,
	the tendrils of smoke and dust in the air makes a visitor
	wish he were carrying a 100-watt bulb.

	There is gear everywhere.  The walls are adorned with jerky
	shark hides, coiled ropes dangle like serpents above a galley
	stove that leaks smoke and holds two weeks worth of filthy
	dishes.  Tubes, barrels, rods, reels, harpoons, an antique
	gun collection and a dizzy array of shark hooks line the
	walls, with one entire wall dedicated to a collection of
	laminated jaws from the blue shark to the Great White.  Con-
	spicuously in the center of the room is a swivel fighting
	chair and it looks like the perfect place to have all your
	teeth pulled.  Into this orifice of decay, Brody enters,
	and from his point of view, we see Quint hunched over a tub
	of steaming Borax.

				   BRODY
		   I know it's late, Mr. Quint.

	Quint lifts a ghastly set of dripping jaws from the solution.

				   QUINT
		   Snappy little novelty item.

	Quint demonstrates by holding them up to frame his face through
	the round jagged opening.

				   QUINT
		   Picture frame...
			   (holding it down)
		   Toilet seat....

	He looks up at his gallery of jaws.

				   QUINT
		   No offense, you guys!
			   (confidentially
			   referring to what's
			   left of sixteen
			   sharks)
		   Very touchy.  All set for the
		   Hallelujah chorus and stuck on
		   the first note.

	Brody enters the room like he's treading on hot charcoal.

				   BRODY
		   I would have called you ---

	Quint walks toward Brody with Borax dripping from both hands.
	He places one of them hospitably on Brody's shoulder.

				   QUINT
			   (without losing
			   a beat)
		   Sure you would, sweetheart.

	And ushers him into the fighting chair.  He then busies him-	
	self around the premises and Brody must use the swivel chair
	to follow him, feeling chills whenever Quint move behind him.

				   BRODY
		   I'm Chief Brody, Mr. Quint --

				   QUINT
		   Suits me.  I'm a social undesirable
		   myself.

				   BRODY
		   Listen ---

				   QUINT
		   Me and your Great big White.

				   BRODY
		   Who told you?

				   QUINT
			   (scrubbing teeth
			   with a wooden brush)
		   What's the count up to down there
		   anyway?  You can't have much of
		   a town left!

				   BRODY
		   Got Ben Gardner this time.

				   QUINT
			   (feigning shock)
		   Ben?  Sharks'll eat anything.

				   BRODY
		   I need to talk to you, Quint ---

	Quint slips past Brody's blindspot to the opposite wall, and
	Brody tenses and swivels too fast, almost spinning 360 degrees
	before braking with his feet.

				   QUINT
		   Anything!  Know what I found inside
		   that tiger?  Aside from fish and
		   all?

	He moves proudly to the shelf of jaws and souvenirs
	collected from the bellies of sharks.

				   QUINT
		   Twenty feet of cable, half an army
		   cot, four brass buttons, a cocker
		   spaniel, license plate, a drip-
		   dry shirt, and a six-pack of diet
		   Pepsi....

				   BRODY
		   We can't have this damn thing
		   sneaking in ---

				   QUINT
			   (as though alarmed,
			   he touches a hand to
			   Brody's mouth)
		   Chief!  Show a little respect.
		   Jesus!  Whites are head of the
		   mob out there, this sounds like
		   Lucky Luciano.

				   BRODY
			   (wiping his mouth)
		   Ever caught one?

				   QUINT
		   A thirteen-footer and one fifteen --
		   teenagers.

				   BRODY
		   Now you're asking ten thousand
		   dollars, but look ---

				   QUINT
		   Chief, Chief, Chief - forget it.
		   I get two bills a day from charters.
		   I sell the hides, I sell the teeth,
		   I sell the fins to chinks for soup --
		   you ought to try a little shark
		   sometime!  Hammerhead's terrific -
		   here!

	Quint hops to the oven.  An avalanche of pots and pans, a
	burst of smoke, and before you know it, Quint is presenting
	Brody with a hot plate.

				   QUINT
		   Home-fried hammerhead!

	Brody turns away from the stink.

				   QUINT
			   (obsequiously
			   apologetic)
		   Sorry, nothing fancier tonight --
		   boy, I do a Mako Provencale -
			   (kisses his fingers)

				   BRODY
		   How's four hundred a day, Quint?

	Quint is suddenly across the room, lowering a bucket in front
	of Brody.

				   QUINT
			   (fuck off)
		   Serve yourself, Chief.  Shark-liver
		   oil!  Best lubricant in the world!

				   BRODY
			   (desperate)
		   How much do you want?

	Quint turns, suddenly bitter.  He walks over to a cage with
	a parrot in it.

				   QUINT
			   (to parrot)
		   Clowns trying to bargain....

				   BRODY
		   I came on my own, Quint.

				   QUINT
		   Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum.

				   BRODY
			   (rises, pleading)
		   See, if we could make a deal tonight --

				   QUINT
		   Here's what the price is tonight,
		   Chief.

	Quint stalks Brody as he talks.  Brody trying to look reasonable
	as he backs around the room, bumping into objects d'art.

				   QUINT
		   Twenty-five grand to go for it,
		   plus twenty-five more if I land it,
		   all repairs on the boat, and on
		   me, a new rod from Haydy's in
		   London, a life subscription to
		   Playboy, a stereo 4-track and the
		   color TV.

				   BRODY
		   Quint, you know they'll never ---

				   QUINT
		   Let me finish!  If it gets me,
		   different deal -- seventy-five,
		   no extras!

				   BRODY
			   (bewildered)
		   Seventy-five for who?

				   QUINT
			   (wildly improvising)
		   For nobody!  To make this place a
		   museum or something!  'Quint's
		   Monster Palace!'  How's that?
		   Maybe have me stuffed in the middle
		   here --- !

	Quint poses stuffed with a harpoon in the middle of the room.
	This is the first time he has stopped moving.

				   BRODY
			   (addressing stuffed
			   Quint)
		   I have to tell them something
		   reasonable ---

	Brody looks for the door...completely disoriented, he tries
	to open one of the walls.

				   QUINT
		   No problem!  Tell 'em that joke
		   from World War Two --
			   (walks over to
			   parrot)
		   About the Marines in the landing
		   barge?  Sergeant splashes right
		   in, yelling 'Hit the beach men,
		   follow me and....'

	Quint taps the bottom of the bird cage, and without losing
	a beat, the parrot squawks in falsetto:

				   PARROT
		   Watch out for the shark!

	Brody has found the door and is gone.  The door swings in a
	breeze.  Quint turns to his gallery of jaws and smiles with
	a mock-courtly bow.

129	EXTERIOR - DOCKS - DUSK						
	129

	Hooper's Formula twenty-two tying up in his rental slip.
	He looks dog tired as he steps off and stretches his legs on
	dry land.  The most astonishing thing about Matt this evening
	is his obvious disappointment.

	The gunboat is also tied up, the men unloading.  They are in
	terrific spirits.  Each has caught his limit.  The boat is
	filled with fish, the men filled with stories.  Only Len
	Hendricks shows the strain.

130	ANGLE - BRODY							
	130

	riding up on his police bicycle.  He sees Hendricks fifty
	yards away in the dusk, shaking his head.  Brody turns and
	rides down the dock toward Hooper, saying good-bye to his
	day help.

				   BRODY
			   (tired, apologetic)
		   Any luck?

				   HOOPER
		   Might be for you, Mr. Brody.  I
		   think it's all over.

				   BRODY
		   How can you be sure?

				   HOOPER
		   The sea is full of fish again for
		   one thing.  You won't find sea life
		   in the territory of a Great White.
		   All the fish we saw in the ocean
		   today.  You'd think they were cele-
		   brating.  I played low-frequency
		   music underwater -- that usually
		   works faster than blood.
			   (shrugs "nothing")

				   BRODY
			   (gives him a
			   long look)
		   Are you feeling okay?

				   HOOPER
		   There are signals in the water.  I
		   can always read them.  And the currents
		   are shifting.

				   BRODY
		   Vaughn's going to want a statement.
		   What about taking precautions?

				   HOOPER
		   I'd take them, sure.  Lookout posts.
		   An alarm system.  If you can afford
		   picket boats equipped with sonar
		   repellent line across the bathing
		   area.  Jesus...we must have gone six
		   times around this crummy island.

				   BRODY
			   (still perplexed)
		   And you're sure it's ---

				   HOOPER
		   You'll never be immune to attack.
		   It knows where you live now.  Good-
		   night.

	Brody is left alone on the dock, the sky darkening behind him.

131	INT. FERRY BOAT - DAY						
	131

	Two cavernous iron doors.  Then a crack of vertical light as
	six burly crewmen muscle them apart.  The Amity ferry landing
	is approaching, people in colorful outfits waiting dockside
	for the first filled-to-capacity shuttle of the summer season
	and ---

	Bach's Little Fugue is the musical accompaniment to this
	wholly visual montage of disembarkation.  The next two minutes
	should be treated like a "short film" taking into account all
	of the colors, episodes, faces and behavior of a variety of
	Americans who colonize Eastern resort communities for the
	ninety-day season.

	A.  A train of cars trundle down the ramp, bumper to bumper.

	B.  Young beautiful people from Princeton, Yale, N.Y.U.,
	    wearing knapsacks, toting luggage, babies riding in
	    papoose rigs, energized children, senior citizens hold-
	    ing hands on the pedestrian ramp, a few wheelchairs.

	C.  The sidewalk vendors hawking balloons for the kiddies,
	    hotdogs, hot fried clams, Italian ices.

	D.  The Amity Cab Company, small blue Toyotas, run by students
	    on vacation queued up like a bomber wing.

	E.  Hooper is watching.

	Station wagons with pale winter faces pressed anxiously to	
	the windows, Cadillacs with Rear Admirals at the helm, their
	wives with blue hair remembering the way from the years before.

	Then six blonde and tanned Coney Island meatballs descend the
	ramp.  They all wear Men's Club Lifeguard patches and matching
	collegiate windbreakers.  They scour the landing, looking for
	someone to save.

	The boat is empty.  Everybody heading inland, anticipating the
	best Fourth of July ever.  Already there is debris on the
	docks and the cleaning crew works away at it.

132	INSIDE THE FERRY						
	132

	As Bach's Little Fugue ends, the six burly crewmen lean their
	combined weight against the Cathedral doors, closing out the
	light and locking in the trade.  The doors latch shut with a
	resounding clang!

							GO TO BLACK

133	EXT. COAST GUARD STATION - DAY					
	133

	A young Ensign is demonstrating "Shark-Chaser" to Brody from
	the concrete pier.  He lowers a canister of it into the
	water and a dark cloud begins to diffuse.

				   OFFICER
		   You'll need about 150 of these --
		   twelve feet apart, behind your
		   surf-line.  We'd have to string
		   them right across, that's say, 2000
		   feet....

				   BRODY
		   Makes sort of a long black
		   curtain.

				   OFFICER
		   Repellent.

				   BRODY
			   (leveling)
		   But it doesn't always work.

				   OFFICER
		   Well...it inhibits them, Mr. Brody.
			   (brightens with facts)
		   The astronauts use it.

				   BRODY
			   (not impressed, gazes
			   into water)
		   That, and Tang.

134	EXT. AMITY MAINSTREET - DAY					
	134

	If you lifted out any hunk of mid-day Manhattan intersection
	and set it here on the colonial corners of Main Street and
	Pilgrimage Way, you couldn't do worse.  This is what Amity
	feeds on between July and September.  This is what the
	tourists pick over between 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M.  This is
	what it's all about.

135	EXT. AMITY MOVIE HOUSE - EVENING				
	135

	The marquee lights go on.  Moby Dick is the new substitute
	feature offering.  Pan down to show the theatre manager and
	a boiling, pacing Larry Vaughn.

				   VAUGHN
		   I want this off before the weekend.
		   And if it's not -- !

				   MANAGER
		   I thought with all this interest...
			   (weak smile)
		   It's not a documentary, you know.

136	INT. MOVIE HOUSE						
	136

137	FULL SCREEN							
	137

	Gregory Peck as Captain Ahab in an outpouring of classic
	Melville.  The white whale explodes through the waves and
	crushes sixteen harpooners.  A single sandpapery laugh
	accompanies each special effect.

138	ANGLE - MOVIE HOUSE						
	138

	Quint sits in the center aisle, popcorn and ju-ju-bees
	stuffing his face.  The splayed projection beams dance
	around his head as he roars with amusement.  People are
	getting up and moving away from him.  He is watching with
	delight, slapping his thigh, thumping the seat-back with
	his feet.

139	FULL MOVIE SCREEN						
	139

	We watch as Ahab gets tangled in the line and dragged under
	by the whale.  Quint can be heard OVER.

140	EXT. SOUTH BEACH - THE FOURTH OF JULY				
	140

	A four foot surfer's swell curls and crashes on shore, rider-
	less.  The broad sandy beach is a mosaic of summer color as
	one thousand vacationers practice fun in the sun, but not in
	the water.  Hot dog stands and ice cream vendors are every-
	where.

141	ANGLE - LIFEGUARD STATIONS					
	141

	A half-dozen lookout lofts.  As many handsome lifeguards
	with Walkie-Talkies strapped to their trunks and loudhailers
	at arm's reach.  Bored, two of the hot dogs train their
	binoculars on some local color.

142	AT SEA								
	142

	Tactically flanking a three-hundred-yard apron of black
	repellent are four small watch-boats.  A fifth tiny pleasure
	boat darts around the repellent line.  Farther out, cross-
	ing back and forth, are patrol boats six and seven.  To top
	it all off, a Coast Guard blimp floats three hundred feet
	above.

143	ON SHORE							
	143

	A crunch of gawkers makes life miserable for a mobile TV
	crew on their van-shaped unit.  A graduate from the Columbia
	School of Broadcasting is interviewing Martin Brody in front
	of dozens of camera-conscious kids.

				   INTERVIEWER
			   (humorous)
		   Will you be going for a dip,
		   Chief?

				   BRODY
			   (ill at ease)
		   No, I'll be sticking to business
		   today.  As you see, we have spotters
		   up and down the beach, and out there's
		   the Coast Guard, State Police, County
		   Police -- everyone's cooperating
		   on this ---

				   INTERVIEWER
		   The question is, if it's so unlikely
		   as you seem to think ---

				   BRODY
		   It never hurts to play it safe.

				   INTERVIEWER
		   Thank you, Chief Brody.
			   (to crew)
		   Let's do a group at the hot dog
		   stand.

	Vaughn is watching the ocean, aware that nobody is in yet.
	He turns in the direction of a Selectman and his family,
	and after grunting hellos, falls on his haunches and talks
	through a dogged smile.

				VAUGHN
		Will you please get in that ocean.

				SELECTMAN
		What?

				VAUGHN
		Nobody's going in -- move!
			(indicating his family)
		Them, too!

	He gets up, gesturing "go in" to another townsman.  The
	Selectman gathers his senses, swallows back nagging nerves.

				SELECTMAN
			(to his family,
			false cheer)
		How about a swim, gang, huh?
			(to 12-year-old
			daughter)
		Not you, you have a cold.

	Vaughn spies Hooper, alone on the sand in his trunks, look-
	out at sea.  The Selectman and his family of four start
	into the ocean as Vaughn approaches Hooper.

				VAUGHN
		You've earned a day off, Doc.
		And thank you.

	Hooper just looks at him.

				VAUGHN
		We feel you've done a heck of a job,
		you know.

				HOOPER
			(nods, looks
			back to sea)
		I feel the same about you.

144	ANGLE - SELECTMAN AND HIS FAMILY				
	144

	They walk into the surf, deeper and deeper, until a wave
	washes over their heads.  The Selectman surfaces, and realizes
	he is wearing his watch.  Never mind.  Others follow suit
	and begin to trickle into the white surf.

145	BOAT #2								
	145

	Four State Police with their 30.06's stowed discreetly under
	their seats.  As a Beering State Policeman talks to Brody on
	the Walkie-Talkie, we notice Boat #5, a short-range speedster,
	working the repellent line.

				   BEERING POLICEMAN
		   We're putting the fresh cans on,
		   Brody.
			   (takes beer
			   from ice chest)
		   Calm down, will you?
			   (shouting to
			   Boat #5)
		   You guys want a beer?

146	BOAT #5								
	146

	Two men and a boat-load of canisters.  One holds up the nylon
	repellent line with a pole as the other replaces a can and
	shouts back.

				   SAILOR
		   I want a pair of rubber gloves.

	To demonstrate what he means, he holds up two hands, black
	with dye.  A wet can of Budweiser tumbles into one of them.

	Sailor's Walkie-Talkie squawks like a strangled chicken.

				   VOICE
			   (Walkie-Talkie)
		   Daisy to Blimp...Daisy to Blimp...
		   thirty yards off my port side....

	The two sailors turn to port.

147	BOAT #7								
	147

	Hendricks is on the radio while a Coast Guard spotter works
	the sonar.

				   HENDRICKS
		   Anything?  Thought I saw a shadow.
		   Over.

	Pan to the water.

148	INT. BLIMP							
	148

	A breathtaking view.  The blimp spotter looks down with
	naked eye and binoculars.

				   BLIMP SPOTTER
		   Nothing from up here, Daisy.  Over.

149	CLOSE - HENDRICKS						
	149

				   HENDRICKS
			   (into Walkie-
			   Talkie)
		   False alarm.  Must be this glare.

150	ANGLE - BEACH - CLOSE ON BRODY					
	150

	He is walking down the beach, threading his way through the
	happy hordes.

				   VOICES
		   Who's scared to go in!  I was in!
		   Up to your knees, yeah -- So
		   come with me -- I'll go again.
		   How far?  Etc., etc.

	A group of youngsters playing with Michael Brody's dinghy.
	They are hauling it toward the surf.

				   BRODY
		   Hey Mikey -- !

	Michael turns as Brody trots toward him.

				   BRODY
		   You're not going to the ocean
		   with that, are you son?

				   MICHAEL
		   I'm all checked out for light
		   surf and look at it.

				   BRODY
		   Do me this favor just once.  Use
		   the ponds.

				   MICHAEL
		   Dad, the ponds are for old ladies.

				   BRODY
		   Just a favor for your old man.

				   MICHAEL
			   (confused)
		   Sure, Dad.

151	SWIMMERS AND SURFERS						
	151

	A surfer waving to impress his girlfriend on the beach.  He
	dives off his board and swims around the black dye.

				   COUNTY POLICEMAN
			   (through loudhailer)
		   Not so close to the line, please....

	The eighteen-year-old surfer submerges, comes up all inky.
	His girlfriend laughs, impressed.

152	TV CREW - NEAR WATER						
	152

	Clowning, posing, boasting for the cameras, dozens of
	youngsters ride in baby waves, stand on their heads, on
	the shoulders of friends, wave, swim out, kick up the water.
	The TV cameramen are going crazy.  Burning film.  Zooming.

153	REPELLENT LINE - SURFER AND COUNTY POLICEMAN			
	153

	The Surfer won't leave the area.

				   COUNTY POLICEMAN
			   (through loudhailer)
		   Get clear of the repellent line,
		   son!

	Suddenly his Walkie-Talkie fizzes, and the Blimp Spotter's
	voice overloads the speaker.

				   BLIMP SPOTTER
		   Blimp to Daisy!  Red Four, Red Four!

154	BOAT #7 - HENDRICKS						
	154

	Guns are up, heads turning everywhere.

				   HENDRICKS
			   (into Walkie-
			   Talkie)
		   Where --- ?

				   BLIMP SPOTTER
		   Went under your -- There!

	The Coast Guard sonar operator spots it and pales.  A slick
	black dorsal fin is slicing a wake toward the swimming area.

				   SONAR OPERATOR
		   Jesus Christ ---

155	BEACH - BRODY							
	155

	Rigid and choked, he almost breaks the "send" button trying
	to transmit.

				   BRODY
		   Everybody out!  Out of the water,
		   please -- leave the water, please ---

	Hooper is on his feet.  The lifeguard next to him begins
	blowing on his whistle.

156	CLOSE - BRODY							
	156

	shouting hysterically into his Walkie-Talkie.

				   BRODY
		   No whistles!  No whistles!

157	THE BEACH							
	157

	Dozens of bathers halfway out of the water, turn to see.  More
	whistles, and they start toward shore.  The loudhailers sound-
	ing more urgent now, and a contagious dread seizes one person
	after another.  Entire groups of people begin pulling toward
	shore, some of them obviously trying to control a growing
	hysteria in others.

158	BOATS #6 AND #7							
	158

	are converging, heading toward the repellent line as if track-	
	ing an underwater shadow.  The fin is beyond the repellent
	cordons and heading into the crowds.

159	THE WATER - BATHERS						
	159

	People begin screaming.  Kids are suddenly separated from
	their parents.  Others seem to forget how to swim.  One
	myopic little girl has her glasses bumped off and she begins
	to cry in blinded panic.

160	BOATS #2, #3, #4						
	160

	The riflemen in the boats are trying to get a bead, but too
	many civilians create a hazard.  The Coast Guardsmen attempt
	to sever the repellent cord to gain access to the bathing
	area and the heaving fin.

161	THE WATER - BATHERS						
	161

	This is a confirmation of our worst dread -- a full-blown
	headlong water panic.  Screaming vacationers claw their way
	over the bodies of the less able.  Some literally attempt to
	walk over the bobbing heads and glistening backs of others
	pulling for dry land.

162	CLOSEUPS - PANIC						
	162

	Horrified faces.  Some are stunned and wandering in slow,
	tentative circles, while others are helped out by friends.
	Five people try to mount a rubber raft.

	Ugly reminders that each of us is Number One.

	Brody enters shot, yelling into his Walkie-Talkie, Hooper
	charges past him to help an old man out of the water.  He
	returns to pull several others to their feet.

163	EXT. - THE BEACH						
	163

	Hooper keeps plunging in, dragging the helpless from the surf.
	Tears well in Brody's eyes.  The screaming is deafening.  The
	TV unit pushes past Brody.

				   INTERVIEWER
			   (pointing)
		   Zoom in!  Over there!

	One thousand survivors pack the beach, standing absolutely
	still.  A numbing cold sets in, and people shiver against
	each other.

	Muted sobs, whimpering, coughing.

	The six burly lifeguards huddle together like Cub Scouts.

164	ANGLE - BATHING AREA						
	164

	The monstrous black fin turns a slow circle as two Coast
	Guardsmen manage to cut their own repellent line.  All
	boats converge on the dynamic fin.  Men raise their guns
	to fire.  Others adlib nautical commands in a uniquely
	calculated fashion.

165	CLOSE - FIN							
	165

	It slips sideways, revealing for the first time a tiny
	blue snorkel.  Then appears the faces of two youngsters whom
	we will recall from the coven behind the dune.  The fin bobs
	back, a beaverboard replica attached to a partially sub-
	merged surfboard.  One youngster looks up and is greeted by:

166	YOUNGSTER'S POINT OF VIEW					
	166

	Twenty rifles and shotguns pointed directly at him.  Surround-
	ing him on three sides.  Some of the policemen start to
	lower their guns -- struck dumb.

167	CLOSE - YOUNGSTER						
	167

	his only defense, he begins to cry -- and feebly raises his
	hands in unconditional surrender.

168	ANGLE - ESTUARY							
	168

	The narrow estuary leading into the half-mile is rough today.
	Two children digging in the sand and unaware of the beach
	panic one hundred yards away look up, and the little girl
	points.

169	A BLACK DORSAL FIN						
	169

	is cruising through the narrows and toward the busy pond.

170	ANGLE - POND							
	170

	Michael is tacking full-sail in his boat with a friend, Kit.
	Kit is admiring the shark's tooth necklace around his own
	neck while Michael rubs some water on the scratches left by
	it.  The fin, huge, black and real, crosses behind them.
	They are not yet aware.  The fin seems to circle and return.
	It heads toward Michael's boat when another small dinghy gets
	in its way -- a weekend novice just finishing a thermos of
	coffee when he is "bumped."  The entire boat is overturned.
	Michael sees the fin now as it collides with him, the entire bow
	lifting out of the water and rolling over on the port side.
	Michael and Kit are thrown head first.

	Three heads in the water come up sputtering, the fin between
	them crossing back.  Michael freezes.  The fin comes directly
	at him, growing into the sky, passing him so close he could
	touch it, but ignoring him as it follows the flailing and
	panicked weekend novice.  Catches him.  Michael watches.
	That all too familiar explosion of water -- a choked off
	scream -- the head and upper torso of the novice passing
	Michael swiftly as though being carried off -- a current
	of blood trailing around.

	The renewed cry of SHARK!  SEMENTIA POND!

171	CLOSE - BRODY							
	171

	He turns.  Oh God!  Running through the slogging sand.

172	CLOSE - COAST GUARDSMEN IN PICKET BOAT				
	172

				   COAST GUARDSMAN
		   Block the estuary!

	Three boats racing to carry out the orders.  The black fin
	repassing the two children, racing to get out.  One rowboat
	reaches the mouth before the others.  The fin won't veer off.
	It smacks into the little vessel, tearing off the bow and
	beaching it in its wake.  Racing into open water.  Blood
	leavings.

173	CLOSE - HOOPER							
	173

	He is pulling Michael out of the water as Brody runs up.
	Michael is conscious but in shock -- his eyes staring at
	nothing.

				   HOOPER
			   (feeling his face)
		   He's in shock.  Get blankets!

	People gather and Brody snatches beach towels out of their
	hands.  They cover Michael and carry him off the beach, feet
	raised above his head.

				   HOOPER
		   I can read signals in the water --
		   when they're around -- when they
		   leave.  I saw the signals.  It
		   moved on.  They reported an attack
		   up the coast, toward Ipswitch, Maine
		   today.  Oh, Jesus, Martin, I'm sorry.

174	INT. QUINT'S SHACK - DAWN					
	174

	The 1940's hit HUBBA, HUBBA, HUBBA blares from the new stereo.
	Barbara Walters blares from the new color TV.

	Brody has the look of a man who has gone without sleep for
	two days.  He slouches in the fighting chair, watching Quint
	who is shoving Salvatore toward the door.

				   QUINT
			   (shouting over the noise)
		   You know which cans, stupid -- the
		   whale meat.  Get 'em out of the
		   deep freeze and on board.

	This done, Quint picks up a harpoon, tests the point.
	Sharpens it on a shark hide.

				   QUINT
		   And where would you like this shark
		   delivered, sir?

				   BRODY
			   (even)
		   Anywhere we can see it's dead.

				   QUINT
			   (looking at TV)
		   You want him gift-wrapped?

	Brody rises to go.

				   BRODY
		   Call me.  Soon as you have some news.

	Quint talks past him in a load open voice.

				   QUINT
		   What is it now?!

	We see Salvatore, afraid of him, but resolved.

				   SALVATORE
		   I ain't going.  Ain't goin'.

	Quint snaps the generator off.

				   QUINT
			   (quiet menace)
		   You ain't what??

				   SALVATORE
		   I ain't that crazy, that's what!
		   Now I brung in some mean big mothers
		   with you, but I'm resignin' on
		   this...no, sir!

				   QUINT
			   (to his gallery
			   of jaws)
		   Mutiny on the Bounty!

				   SALVATORE
		   I don't mess with nothin' built
		   like no station wagon, 18 -- 20
		   foot ---

				   QUINT
			   (bored)
		   How much do you want?

				   SALVATORE
		   Not with no man-eater!  He ain't
		   gonna live to no reputation on
		   me ---

				   QUINT
			   (sharply, turning
			   away)
		   Go load up.

				   SALVATORE
		   That's all I'm gonna do.

	Quint picks up a length of rope and starts to coil it, turns
	to Brody.

				   QUINT
		   Might have to wait till I dig up
		   another ---

				   BRODY
		   I'll go.

	Quint takes him in with a tight smile.  He tosses Brody the
	length of rope.

				   QUINT
		   Tie me a barrel knot.

	Brody feels useless holding the rope end.

				   BRODY
		   I really want to go, Mr. Quint.

				   QUINT
			   (ignoring him)
		   Five lengths of half-inch...twenty
		   number 14's, straight gaff ---

				   BRODY
			   (leaving)
		   I'll get a pro to come along.

	Quint runs through his check list...to himself.  Pan down to
	the floor and an arsenal of hand-to-shark weaponry.

				   QUINT
		   Flying gaffs, tail rope, eye-splices,
		   M-One, pliers, irons.

							CUT TO

175	EXT. QUINT'S DOCK - DAY						
	175

	Hooper's fighting gear is on deck.  His colleague from Woods
	Hole looks at him with some dismay as they go over the check
	list of fighting gear from the Oceanographic Institute.  The
	Colleague, in a smaller boat alongside, hands him the last
	few bits and pieces.

				   HOOPER
			   (grim)
		   Powerhead, C.O.2 darts...hypo...
		   regulator...tanks...depth gauge....

	The Colleague glances up toward the flybridge and Quint.
	Salvatore goes back and forth rolling on chum barrels.

				   COLLEAGUE
		   You shouldn't be in on this, Matt.
			   (pause, watches)
		   Hunting anything down -- I mean,
		   that's not our area.

				   HOOPER
			   (signing receipt)
		   Maybe I'm in the wrong area.

	Quint looks down at the undersea cage that is sitting on the
	transom of the Orca.

				   QUINT
		   What's this glamour-boy...a portable
		   shower?

				   HOOPER
			   (shakes hands with
			   Colleague, who pushes
			   off, shaking his head)
		   Thanks.  I'll see you.

				   QUINT
		   Huh?

				   HOOPER
			   (disinterested in
			   what he thinks)
		   Anti-shark cage.

				   QUINT
			   (smiles)
		   And you're inside that -- in the
		   water?

				   HOOPER
		   If necessary.

				   QUINT
			   (smiles, nodding)
		   You're in the water with the shark.

				   HOOPER
		   That's right.

	With an operatic gesture, Quint sings down to him in his best
	voice.

				   QUINT
			   (soulfully)
		   'Believe me, if all those endearing
		   young charms...
		   That I gaze on so fondly today....'

				   HOOPER
			   (glancing toward pier)
		   Let's go.

176	ANGLE - PIER							
	176

	Brody is walking down the pier, bundled in foul-weather
	clothes like a tenderfoot Sea Scout.  He carries a shopping
	bag and an overnight kit.  Quint can't help himself -- he
	guns the Orca's diesel engines to sound like a wolf whistle.

				   QUINT
		   Well...shiver me timbers!

	Brody is helped unsteadily into the boat by Salvatore, who then
	leaps lightly to the dock and casts off with style.  Even now
	Brody is beginning to look sick.  He holds onto the hatch
	handle.

				   QUINT
			   (to Brody)
		   Bow.  Stern.  Aft.  Forward --
		   Port -- Starboard.  Got it?...Good!
			   (yells over engine
			   noise to Salvatore)
		   Missing a great adventure, Sal!

	Salvatore waves and smiles as the boat pulls away.

				   SALVATORE
		   You bet, Mr. Quint! Bye!  Bye!

	The Orca chugs past the dock and out toward the narrow
	breakwater.

	(NOTE:  TO BE INSERTED -- THE BLUE SHARK FRENZY, PER BENCHLEY'S
	NOVEL, TO GET THE THIRD ACT UNDER WAY.)

177	EXT. THE OCEAN - AFTERNOON					
	177

	The Orca is drifting in neutral.  The ocean is like gelatin,
	the sun sucking heat waves from its surface.  Brody at the
	stern, handkerchief on his head to protect from further sun-
	burn, has been handed the slimiest job on a shark hunt:  the
	ladling out of chum.  Brody is reeling with nausea.  Hooper
	is up at the wheel on the flybridge.  He dons a baseball cap
	and aviator's sunglasses.  Quint is firmly situated in the
	fighting chair, reeling in the bait.  All three have the look
	of being on open water for the better part of the day, with
	no luck.

				   QUINT
			   (to himself)
		   That don't tempt him either, huh?

	He hauls in the bait.  Two mackerel, barely alive.

				   QUINT
		   We'll find him something.

	Hooper studies this man Quint as he flings aside the mackerel.
	Brody has stopped chumming and is retching over the side.

				   QUINT
			   (yelling at Brody)
		   Keep that chum going!  We got five
		   good miles, don't break it!

	Brody opens his overnight kit and takes out a handkerchief and
	some Old Spice after-shave.  He pours the after-shave into the
	cloth, presses it to his nose, and resumes ladling.

	Quint almost trips over Hooper's tanks as he walks to the chum
	barrels.  He roughly kicks them aside.

				   QUINT
		   Fancy goddam toys....

				   HOOPER
			   (jumping up)
		   Careful!  Compressed air -- you
		   crack that and it explodes like a
		   bomb!

				   QUINT
			   (mutters)
		   Cluttering up my deck ---

	Quint takes a wide red strip of whale meat and a gnarled squid
	from the garbage pail, and searches for a No. 2 hook rig.

				   HOOPER
			   (distaste)
		   That from a pilot whale too?

				   QUINT
			   (deftly slicing whale)
		   Can't you tell?  Here ---

	He holds up the strip of whale.  Quint has sculpted it into
	the outline of a whale.

				   QUINT
		   Cute, huh?
			   (to Brody)
		   The expert don't approve.

	Brody shades his eyes from the white sun as Quint baits up.

				   QUINT
		   Now, you swim down and...
			   (kisses the bait)
		   give a nice big kiss to Mr. White ---

				   BRODY
			   (croaky)
		   You still think it's all the way
		   out here?

				   QUINT
			   (snapping bait to
			   his leader)
		   I think like they do, Chief.

				   HOOPER
		   And they have brains the size of
		   a radish.

	Quint gets a big laugh out of this, and sits in the fighting
	chair.  He casts off, murmuring as the line feeds out.

				   QUINT
		   Now if he weren't around, we'd of
		   hooked something else by now,
		   wouldn't we?  But he scared 'em
		   all away.  Yeah, didn't you?  Yeah,
		   I know you, you poor lonesome son
		   of a bitch...come to pappa, you ---

	The line whizzes off the reel.  Brody jumps up.  Quint puts
	his hand on the drag and addresses the situation softly.

				   QUINT
		   Atta baby -- he'll gulp it down
		   now...
			   (making gulping noises)
		   Hoooooo!

	Quint tightens drag and strikes.  The line goes whizzing out.
	Brody runs to Quint's side.

				   BRODY
		   You got it?

				   QUINT
			   (turning with the pull)
		   Get behind me, dummy!
			   (shouts to Hooper
		   Reverse her and turn -- he's taking
		   too much line!
			   (to Brody)
		   Wet my reel, quick!

	Brody pours water on the screaming reel, nearly unspooled now.
	Hooper is turning the boat around and the line changes direc-	
	tion.

				   QUINT
			   (straining, muscles
			   popping
		   Starboard, for Chris'sake ---

	Hooper steers it sharply.

				   QUINT
			   (to Hooper)
		   Half-speed there....

	Again the line changes direction, down this time.

				   QUINT
			   (to Hooper)
		   Neutral!
			   (to the sea)
		   Where the hell is he going?

	Quint reeling in like mad.

				   QUINT
		   Oh, this ain't foolin' me --
			   (rod arcs down
			   with a surge)
		   Sure -- try it!

	The line rushes out and now there is less tension.  Quint is
	horsing up and down, reeling in.

				   QUINT
		   Makin' believe it's easy now.

	The line is almost vertical now, and Quint shows a hint of
	bafflement.  He reels in suspiciously.

				   QUINT
		   Gettin' ready to run again -- no?
		   No?
			   (suspicious)
		   What's he playin' here?
			   (reels in furiously,
			   to Hooper)
		   Put the gloves on!
			   (to fish)
		   Let's see who's gonna tease who now!
			   (to Hooper)
		   Down here!  Do like I told you!

	Hooper is rushing down.

				   HOOPER
		   Can't bring him up so quick ---

				   QUINT
			   (bathed in sweat;
			   hauling, reeling)
		   How do you know!  How do I know!

	The leader shows above the water line.  Brody is wide-eyed,
	waiting for that first look.

				   BRODY
		   He's nearly up ---

				   QUINT
			   (to Brody)
		   Unbuckle me -- fast!
			   (to Hooper)
		   Grab the leader.  He ain't normal,
		   this one...they never --
			   (to Hooper)
		   Snap it on, jerk!

	Hooper snaps the rope onto the leader and holds on.

				   QUINT
		   Watch your hands --
			   (suddenly to Brody)
		   Grab onto this!

	Before he realizes what's happening, Brody is clumsily clutch-
	ing at the big rod, appalled.  Quint skips away for a harpoon.
	He picks one from a row of twelve, turns....

	That's when the leader lashes free, sending Hooper crashing
	backward in a serious fall, and the rod whips at Brody's
	forehead, drawing blood.  Quint snatches up the rod and
	reels in.  The wires have been bitten through.

				   QUINT
			   (addressing the ocean)
		   Sure...you're havin' a ball!
			   (to Hooper, still
			   sprawled on deck)
		   Get back up here!

				   BRODY
		   He's hurt....

				   HOOPER
			   (stunned)
		   I'm okay....

				   BRODY
		   What's the point with hooks and
		   lines ---

				   QUINT
		   Don't tell me my business!
			   (to Hooper, points)
		   Quarter-mile, that way.  Full
		   throttle.

	Hooper shakes off his dizziness and obeys.  Brody watches
	Quint rig up a new leader, hook up the same bait.

				   BRODY
			   (nursing forehead,
			   gesturing at rod
			   and reel)
		   I don't understand though...How you
		   expect to ---

				   QUINT
		   This tricks him to the surface, got
		   that?  Then I can jab him, under-
		   stand?
			   (goes to flybridge,
			   muttering)
		   Think I'm gonna haul it in like a
		   catfish?

	Brody begins to apply cream to his sunburned nose.

178	ON BRIDGE - HOOPER AND QUINT					
	178

				   QUINT
			   (suddenly, pointing)
		   Over there!

				   HOOPER
		   Why over there?

				   QUINT
			   (still looking)
		   At least you handle the boat all
		   right.

				   HOOPER
		   I can do more than that.  Look,
		   Quint, I brought along a ---

				   QUINT
		   Stop.  Here...Cut the engine.

	Hooper cuts the engines as Quint swings nimbly down.  He stands
	stock still on the main deck, motioning Brody to be silent.
	Then picking up the newly rigged rod, Quint softshoes it over
	to the chair.  About to sit down, he freezes.

179	CLOSE - QUINT							
	179

	looking stunned.

180	CLOSE - BRODY							
	180

	moving back, eyes wide.

181	CLOSE - HOOPER							
	181

	moving closer, aghast.

182	COMBINED POINT OF VIEW						
	182

	We see the shark.  First the jet-black fin...then the head
	and upper jaws, twenty yards off.  It finally submerges, veer-
	ing off to one side with a neat slap of its tail.

183	ANGLE - QUINT							
	183

	He puts the rod away.

				   QUINT
		   Jesus.  I heard they got that big....

				   HOOPER
		   Closer to thirty feet....

				   QUINT
			   (knowingly)
		   Twenty-five.  And three tons of
		   him there.

				   HOOPER
			   (to himself)
		   What's the formula...?
			   (calculates
			   in his head)
		   Girth, say 150 inches.  Squared
		   and...divide by 800 -- that's six
		   one, five...6150 by 2000 --
			   (stops, wryly)
		   Just over three tons.

	Quint snorts and dumps the chum overboard.  Flings in the
	two mackerel.

				   BRODY
		   Where'd it go?

	Hooper is rummaging in his gear.  Brody watches him locate a
	small waterproof signal light.  He starts to attach it to
	the first barrel.  Quint, who has been scanning the sea, spins
	around.

				   QUINT
		   Don't monkey with none of my gear!

				   HOOPER
			   (trying to be patient)
		   Your harpoons are attached to
		   these. right?
			   (indicates barrels)
		   They pop up and drag on him, drag
		   on him till he's through -- isn't
		   that the idea?

				   QUINT
		   You can't improve on it!

	Hooper switches on the signal light.  It pulses a glow that
	hurts the eyes even in broad daylight.

				   HOOPER
		   What if we have to follow him?

	Quint breathes in smoke until his tongue catches fire.

				   QUINT
		   Sonny -- take that, and your
		   formulas, and your cage -- take
		   your whole halfass hardware store
		   here and ---

	A whale of a thump jolts the Orca.  Quint grabs for a harpoon.
	Brody pulls his snub-nose special from his shopping bag.
	Hooper sees the panic on Brody's face and reaches a hand out
	to him.

				   HOOPER
		   Put that away!

	Quint, on the pulpit, harpoon poised.

				   QUINT
		   Once more...once more!

	WHUMP!  Quint almost takes a tumble into the water.  We see
	the glistening back and fin below him.  HE PLANTS THE HARPOON.
	The Great White slaps the transom with its tail and sounds.

184	INSERT - COILED ROPE AND BARREL					
	184

	The rope reels out in a blur, and Hooper pins Brody out of
	the way of the spinning coils -- just in time.  The barrel
	with flasher attached literally somersaults out of the boat,
	missing both men's faces by seven inches.

	Quint is already poised, feet planted, with harpoon number
	two.

185	ANGLE - OCEAN							
	185

	The barrel skips like a flat rock over the surface of the
	water, then unexpectedly vanishes under the water.

				   QUINT
			   (poised)
		   He can't stay down, swimmin' with
		   that on!  Wait till I stick him
		   with two!  That'll worry him!  Come
		   on, upstairs!  What's he waitin' for?!
		   He can't keep down this long!

	Brody and Hooper enter the shot behind him.  The sun is low-
	slung over the horizon.

				   BRODY
		   Why don't we go in?  Have a crack
		   tomorrow....?

				   QUINT
			   (doesn't turn)
		   We are stayin' out here till I
		   got him!

186	ANGLE - HOOPER AND BRODY					
	186

	They exchange looks.  "He's nuts."

187	EXT. ORCA - ON OPEN SEA - NIGHT - CLOSE - BRODY			
	187

	asleep on deck.  The day has taken its toll.  Brody is riding
	the crest of some bad dreams, on the verge of waking at any
	moment.

188	ANGLE - QUINT AND HOOPER					
	188

	Both sit on the transom.  Hooper takes a long pull from a
	bottle of Quint's home brew.  Quint is railing at him, both
	a little smacko.

				   QUINT
		   Close call, my ass.  A baby dogfish
		   in a laboratory?  See this thumb?

	Quint flaunts his thumb, a checkerboard of scar tissue.

				   HOOPER
			   (handing back the
 				   bottle)
		   You've got the monopoly, huh?  Here!

	Hooper rolls up his trouser leg boasting a crescent scar on
	his calf.

				   HOOPER
		   Look at this one.

				   QUINT
			   (snorts)
		   Beauty mark.

	Quint starts to pull up his own pant leg.

				   HOOPER
		   Bull-shark scraped me.  I was down
		   getting samples, and he ---

				   QUINT
			   (puts his leg on
			   Hooper's lap)
		   Mako!  Match that!

	A slow mischievous grin stains Hooper's soggy face.  He slowly
	unbuttons his shirt, knowing an ace beats the three of club.
	An S-shaped white scar on his side says "gin."

				   HOOPER
		   Eight-foot moray eel -- right
		   through the suit, buddy....

	Quint staggers to his feet, begins undoing his belt, undoes
	his zipper.

				   QUINT
		   You're in one piece, ain't you?
		   Here me lovely!

	Quint pulls down one side of his pants to his hip.  It looks
	like a small piece of him was cored out.

				   HOOPER
		   Minor League.  Where's it from?

				   QUINT
		   Tillie Schwab -- Newark, New Jersey.

	Both laugh, as Hooper pull his shirt down over his left
	shoulder.

				   HOOPER
		   Right!  You want to play dirty -- ?
			   (displays tiny scar)
		   Standing in line for The Exorcist!

	More laughter.  Quint takes off his shoe.

				   QUINT
		   I got a toe that'll wipe the floor
		   with you ---

	Hooper, laughing, undoes his belt.

				   HOOPER
		   A what?  You got a what?

189	ANGLE - QUINT							
	189

	Something catches his eye and sobers him.

				   QUINT
		   He's up again.

190	ANGLE - SEA							
	190

	The stroboscopic signal-light surfaces at the horizon.

				   QUINT
			   (grudgingly)
		   Very handy light, I'll say that.

				   HOOPER
			   (feeling macho)
		   Let's move in on him.

				   QUINT
			   (shakes head)
		   Not till I can see him good.
			   (a long look,
			   a hint of worry)
		   Even the one'll keep pullin' him up.
		   But he'll need three, maybe four.
		   Most I ever used was two.
			   (swigs from bottle)
		   Bastard ran me halfway to Liverpool.

				   HOOPER
		   You kill him?

				   QUINT
			   (still staring)
		   Always do, once I stick a barrel on
		   'em.
			   (back to Hooper)
		   No more objections?

	Hooper doesn't replay, Quint needles him.

				   QUINT
		   Jaws two foot wide.  Real Prestige
		   item.

	Hooper shrugs.  Quint hands him the bottle.  Hooper cocks
	his head, noticing a scar patch on Quint's right forearm.

				   HOOPER
		   How'd you get that one?

	Quint, staring out to sea, doesn't seem to hear Hooper.
	The signal light disappears.

				   QUINT
		   Down again.

				   HOOPER
			   (persisting)
		   The scar on your arm.

				   QUINT
			   (detached)
		   Had a tattoo there.

				   HOOPER
			   (jocular)
		   Changed your mind about somebody?

				   QUINT
			   (shaking his head)
		   It said 'U.S.S. Indianapolis.'

191	CLOSE - HOOPER							
	191

	His face falls as he hears this.  Quint looks at him ironi-
	cally.

				   QUINT
		   Guess you experts know about that.

	Once again Quint turns his eyes to the sea.

				   HOOPER
			   (gravely)
		   You were on her?  June '45?

				   QUINT
			   (flat and quiet)
		   On her and torpedoed right off her.
		   Into the drink with 900 other clowns
		   ...Started with 900 anyway...floating
		   in that big warm Pacific.
			   (the light surfaces again)
		   Must have been like a dinner bell
		   in there...Explosions, and half
		   the guys bleeding.  Soon as the
		   sharks came homing in on us, we
		   went by the Manual, of course...
		   Kept trying to float in groups...
		   doin' what if said, splash at 'em,
		   yell at 'em, hit 'em on the nose,
		   they won't bother you...all that.
		   They tore apart about a hundred
		   men, the first night.  And pretty
		   soon, when they stepped it up, and
		   you'd feel 'em bump you, and guys'd
		   get pulled down a couple of yards
		   away, and it got to two days...and
		   three...Well, some fellas couldn't
		   take it no more, just peeled off
		   their life-jackets, got it over with
		   ...We were in the water 110 hours.
		   Sharks averaged six men an hour.
			   (nails Hooper
			   a hard look)
		   They're all experts.
			   (spits in the ocean)

				   HOOPER
			   (weakened by the story)
		   Jesus, Quint!  You can't blame ---

	Hooper is interrupted by the boom and banshee cries of
	a distant whale.

192	ANGLE - BRODY							
	192

	springs out of his shallow sleep.

				   BRODY
		   What --  What the hell --- ?

				   HOOPER
			   (depressed)
		   A whale's out there.

	Quint sits in the fighting chair.

				   QUINT
		   So is he.

193	ANGLE - SEA							
	193

	The light has surfaced a quarter of a mile away.

				   QUINT
		   Go on and sleep, the two of you.

	Brody sinks back, half awake and panting from his burst of
	fright.  Hooper looks at Quint a long time, suddenly a
	stranger again, then beds himself down in the balmy night
	air.  Quint starts to doze, massaging his missing tattoo.

							CUT TO

194	EXT. THE OCEAN - NIGHT						
	194

	The Orca sits on unruffled waters.  A planetarium of star-
	life overhead with shooting stars, every now and again
	making incisions into the heavens and leaving green trails
	behind.  All is quiet, not a breath of wind.

	The barrel's strobe light pops into foreground, CLOSE.  It
	heads toward the Orca, carving neon blue phosphorescence
	into the water.  The massive dorsal fin surfaces in the
	night and circles the Orca, leaving phosphorescence in its
	broad wake.  The night skies, the silent waters are now
	alive in dancing light.

195	ANGLES - THE MEN						
	195

	as the sleep.  A SOUND is heard.  A low protracted scraping.
	No one wakes.  The sound returns.  Another SCRAPE.  A SCRATCH-
	ING noise...almost sounds like CHEWING.  Then a gentle BUMP
	at the stern.  Quint stirs.  Brody turns over.  Hooper is
	sleeping soundly.  Then....

	A seizure of violent shaking.  A horrible splintering and
	popping noise.  Quint half falls, half springs, out of the
	chair.  Hooper is on his feet, but loses his footing.  The
	Orca is again bumped from underneath.  Brody holds on, his
	gun in hand.  Quint pulls out his M-1.

				   QUINT
		   Start the engine!

	Hooper is on the flybridge in six bounds.  Quint fires sea-
	ward over the transom.  The engine starts, but something in
	it sounds wrong.

				   QUINT
		   Cut it!  Cut it!

	Quint cranes to look down and around, but no light can be
	found.

				   QUINT
		   I don't know where he is!  Ripped
		   something loose -- shaft or some-
		   thin'.

	He hefts up a deckboard, pokes his small flashlight into
	the cavity.

				   HOOPER
		   I told you I have things to kill it
		   with...take over up there, I can --
		   Quint!

				   QUINT
			   (slams down board)
		   Start the pump, goddammit!

	Quint can't hide his fear now.

				   BRODY
		   Are we leaking?

	Sound -- pumps starting.

				   QUINT
		   We'll stay afloat.  Watch for
		   the barrel ---

				   BRODY
		   Can't I bail or something?

	Quint takes Brody by the arm and sits him down, pointing
	to starboard.

				   QUINT
		   Keep your eyes open, that's all --
		   out there!
			   (to Hooper)
		   And you keep looking that way,
		   killer!

	Quint takes up the opposite position and loads his M-1.
	Brody checks his gun.  Hooper looks with binoculars.

				   QUINT
		   And nobody sleeps.  Nobody!

196	ANGLE - ORCA							
	196

	The three men standing sentinel.  Stars...quiet seas...
	phosphorescence lighting up the water.  HEAR the whale cry-
	ing from far away.

197	EXT. THE ORCA - DAWN						
	197

	Brody leans against the windshield on the flybridge.  His
	arms hoist binoculars to his eyes.  Visible without binoculars
	is the signal-light and barrel, not moving, two hundred yards
	astern.  An angry racket filters up from below deck -- Quint
	is effecting engine repairs the only way he knows how.  Brody
	has learned a neat sailor's trick and nimbly slides down the
	hand piping, his feet avoiding the steps.  He sidles next to
	Hooper, who is struggling into his full wet suit.

				   QUINT (o.s.)
		   It moving?

				   BRODY
			   (loud and off)
		   No -- still there!

	Hooper is busy attaching the cage to the ginpole.  He is full
	of purpose, his hands working against the clock, short glances
	to the hatch from where Quint can be heard, cursing and wrench-
	ing.

				   BRODY
		   Please, Matt, don't get him sore.
		   He's loony enough.

	Hooper tests the rope, inspects his gear, selects a steel
	pole and opens a tiny green felt case.

				   BRODY
		   Put all that stuff away before he
		   finds out.

198	INSERT - GREEN FELT CASE					
	198

	Hooper opens it, removing a deadly-looking syringe head.

				   HOOPER
			   (grim)
		   He had a turn, now I'll have a turn.
			   (mounting it
			   on steel pole)
		   Maybe you should have a turn, too.

	Brody tries to reason, when:

199	ANGLE - QUINT							
	199

	emerges dirty, red-eyed and haggard, pauses to take it all
	in.

				   QUINT
		   What is this?

				   HOOPER
			   (without looking up)
		   Strychnine nitrate, 20 CC's.

				   QUINT
		   Wear all the Batman costumes you
		   want, sport.  But don't you inter-
		   fere with me.

	Quint starts to climb the bridge.

				   HOOPER
			   (to Quint)
		   All you need to do is lower me in ---

				   QUINT
			   (muttering
 				   to himself)
		   I need a transom that don't leak
		   every time that --
			   (starts engine)
		   -- shaft goes around --
			   (an uneven sputter)
		   -- Bent!  Seams splitting open
		   there -- !

	Quint finesses the Orca "slow ahead" toward the barrel.  The
	engine sounds like a hamster treadmill.  Hooper climbs up
	beside him.

				   HOOPER
		   You know he'll go for the cage ---

				   QUINT
		   Not today, doc.  No injections.

				   HOOPER
		   I can finish him in sixty seconds.

				   QUINT
			   (listening
			   to engine)
		   Whole goddam housing's loose!  'He'
		   can hear it, too.

				   HOOPER
		   Can't you stop this Moby Dick crap?!

				   QUINT
		   We do this the way I know how.

	Quint cuts the engine once alongside the barrel.  Hooper
	barely controls himself.  Climbs down.

	Quint follows after him, putting a cautioning hand on Hooper's
	shoulder to walk softly, then motions Brody to stay on the
	flybridge and keep his eyes peeled.

200	QUINT - HOOPER							
	200

	Tiptoe to the stern, Quint intercepting a harpoon along the
	way.  Hooper leans way out over the transom and poles the
	barrel closer.  It bobs around easily, arousing Quint's sus-
	picions.

				   QUINT
			   (softly)
		   Playin' possum....

	Hooper poles up the slick nylon rope, leaving the barrel
	untouched in the water.

				   QUINT
		   Pull up easy -- only want to goose
		   him up.  Second you feel he's run-
		   ning, drop it...If you want any
		   hands left.

	Hooper starts hand-reeling in.  Surprisingly, there is no
	resistance.  Both men share perplexed looks.  Then Quint
	reaches over, his whole body leaning over the side, putting
	down his harpoon.

				   QUINT
		   Here -- gimme.  I don't get what
		   he's....

201	WATER - ANGLE							
	201

	Both men are draped over the side, their chins almost touching
	the water on the aft side.  From the opposite starboard
	direction, fully unfastened from the barrel, comes the Great
	White.  First the fin, then the conical nose and the upper
	border of wide, grinning teeth.  It knifes through the water
	in absolute silence, propelling itself with tremendous speed
	toward the unsuspecting men.

202	CLOSE - BRODY							
	202

	His instincts shine -- as does his newly-acquired sense of
	direction.

				   BRODY
			   (top of his lungs)
		   Shark!  Starboard!  It's under
		   you -- !

203	CLOSE - HOOPER AND QUINT					
	203

	They turn just in time, and a long spine-stretch saves them
	from instant decapitation.  The Great White passes the
	transom, the harpoon still in its side and trailing five feet
	of chewed off cable.  The monster rolls on its side and looks
	at them as it passes.  Then, with a great sweep of its tail,
	it lashes the side of the boat, ripping the rope from Quint's
	hand and shearing off five square yards of paint like a lathe.
	It makes a wide arc out to sea, only the fin showing now, and
	begins to circle around the boat.  Quint notices his hand,
	palm cut and bleeding, realizes he came that close to losing
	his whole hand.  He has never been more dangerous.

				   QUINT
			   (to Brody)
		   Haul in that rope -- it can foul
		   us!
			   (screaming
			   to Hooper)
		   Start the engine -- !

	Brody and Hooper exchange places.  The engine starts with a
	terrible grinding.

				   QUINT
			   (roaring)
		   Easy!  It'll tear right out!

				   BRODY
			   (next to him,
			   hauling in rope)
		   We can't do it ourselves....

				   QUINT
			   (seeing red)
		   Shut up!

				   BRODY
		   He chewed through this, he cracked
		   your boat -- radio in for help ---

				   QUINT
			   (to Hooper)
		   Pump her out a little...!

				   BRODY
		   I mean it!  Send out an S.O.S.!

				   QUINT
			   (spitting)
		   Don't make me laugh when I'm working.

				   BRODY
			   (sudden resolve)
		   I'll do it.

	Brody heads off for the cabin.

204	QUINT - CLOSE							
	204

	A perfectly terrible look comes over him.  He raises up and
	starts after Brody.  Brody disappears into the cabin.  Quint
	pauses outside and sees:

205	INSERT - QUINT'S LEAD-CENTERED BASEBALL BAT			
	205

	his calloused hand grabs it up fiercely.

206	INT. RADIO SHACK						
	206

	Brody picks up the radio, flicking on knobs and lights on the
	complex console.

				   QUINT (o.s.)
		   Beg your pardon ---

207	ANGLE - DOORWAY							
	207

	Quint appears, silhouetted in the hot light of the door,
	raising his bat.

				   QUINT
		   Duty first and pleasure after ---

208	CLOSE - BRODY							
	208

	looking up in horror.

209	CLOSE - QUINT							
	209

	Quint brings down the bat with all the strength he can muster.

	Crash!

	Sparks fly, lights blink and go out, plastic and sections of
	metal ricochet all over the cabin as Quint demolishes the ship-
	to-shore radio.

	Quint takes a happy breath, winks at Brody and hands him
	the bat.

				   QUINT
			   (leaving the cabin)
		   Excuse me!

	If he were ten years older, Brody would be on the floor with
	heart failure.

210	CLOSE - HOOPER							
	210

	urgently pointing.

				   HOOPER
		   Coming right to us!

	Quint grabs up his harpoon.

				   QUINT
		   No -- comin' at us!  Slow ahead
		   he'll slam us, head on --
			   (the engine
			   clanks)
		   Slower!  Throttle back ---

211	ANGLE - OVER THE BOW						
	211

	The shark is closing the gap, faster.

				   QUINT
			   (raising harpoon)
		   Hard to port!

	Hooper pulls the boat into a tight turn and Quint has a shot
	at the upward rolling flank.  He sinks it with careful pre-
	cision.

				   QUINT
		   Try shakin' that out!

	Brody emerges from the cabin as the rope zips overboard, and
	the barrel, changing over, catapults into the air before
	plunging into the ocean in a cloudy splash.

				   BRODY
			   (shouting to Hooper)
		   This won't kill it!

				   QUINT
			   (to Hooper)
		   Swing around!  After him!

212	ON THE FLYBRIDGE						
	212

	Hooper can see the fin racing ahead of the barrel.  Diving
	down.  Up again -- Quint prepares another iron.

				   QUINT
		   More gas...go to half!  Get me
		   right alongside him ---

	The engine thuds and knocks.

				   HOOPER
			   (shouting down)
		   We can't rev it up this high ---

	Suddenly the barrel gongs into the side of the Orca.

				   QUINT
		   Watch it!

	Hooper skillfully avoids the speeding rope.

				   QUINT
		   Atta boy!

	Quint leans to one side, harpoon over his head.  The
	Great White breaks water and....

				   QUINT
		   Take two, they're small!

	He sinks it deep.  We hear shots.  As the new rope whips out,
	Brody can be seen standing on the gunwale, clutching the
	steel cage with one hand, firing his pistol at the shark
	with the other.

	Quint shakes his head in amused disbelief at this, as the
	barrel goes over.

				   HOOPER
			   (shouting at Brody)
		   Don't shoot him any more!  He's
		   crazy on his own blood already!

				   BRODY
		   I can't stand here doing nothing!

				   QUINT
		   Order in the court!

213	WATER LEVEL ANGLE						
	213

	He has seen the two barrels pop to the surface.

				   QUINT
			   (racing over)
		   Three'll do it!  He's havin'
		   trouble with two!

	He yells to Hooper and Brody as he swings behind the controls.

				   QUINT
		   Grab yourselves a couple of poles!

	Quint steers "Slow Ahead," engine protesting, as he maneuvers
	toward the moving barrels.  Quint peers down, steering closer
	and closer.

				   QUINT
		   Get ready!  Now snag 'em!

	Together Brody and Hooper hook a barrel-rope and hold on for
	dear life as the shark changes course.

				   QUINT
		   Pull in the ropes and tie 'em onto
		   the transom -- free ride.

	Brody and Hooper pull in with all they are worth as Quint
	helps out by wheeling in a circle.  He laughs to himself,
	enjoying the spectacle.

214	CLOSE - HOOPER							
	214

	securing the rope to a cleat but allowing the barrel to hang
	overboard.  He helps Brody with his chore on a second
	adjacent cleat.

215	WIDE ANGLE - ORCA						
	215

	The boat is jarred violently from side to side as the under-
	water force of the Great White jerks and heaves them to and
	fro, up and down, side to side....

216	ANGLE - HOOPER AND BRODY					
	216

	are both torn off their feet as the boat is thrust forward.

217	FLYBRIDGE - QUINT						
	217

	sees the fin ahead.  It is pulling the boat.

				   QUINT
		   Get tired!  That's the idea!
		   Here's a little reverse for you!

	The shark leaps partially out of the water, and the sight is
	both horrifying and awesome.  Its jaws break water, snapping
	at the ropes that have him snarled and frustrated.

	Quint throws the Orca into neutral and shouts down:

				   QUINT
		   Haul in -- watch the prop!

	At that, Quint slides down to the prow, grabs up an iron.
	It is too light.  He grabs another, finding satisfaction in
	its heft and balance.  The shark can be seen directly ahead,
	threshing closer.

				   QUINT
		   Now!  Untie 'em!  Quick -- Now!

	He sinks the iron, and the shark veers downward in a gushing
	shower of spray.

218	HOOPER AND BRODY						
	218

	They are trying to untie from the cleats, but both ropes are
	stretched too taut.  They jump out of the way as the ropes
	stretch down the side and behind the boat, knocking over
	objects as it skeeters across the deck.  A tight jerking
	motion, and the Orca is dragged through the water -- backwards.
	And much too fast.  Water is splashing up over the transom
	in its backward wake.

				   QUINT
		   I said untie them ---

	Wrenched to one side, Quint is knocked from his feet.

219	CLOSE - THE TWO CLEATS						
	219

	A moment of slackness, and then a great surge of raw strength.

	The rope snaps the cleats off, screws and splintered wood
	spraying -- and the barrels fly into the water.  They dis-
	appear beneath the turbulent grey surface.

	The three men, breathing heavily, bruised and pouring sweat,
	look out at the blank water.

220	ANGLE - OCEAN							
	220

	Pop -- pop -- pop.  One, two, three, the barrels surface --
	ready for more.

				   QUINT
		   He can't go deep now, or far,
		   either.  Not with those.  Not for
		   long.

	Brody looks down at his feet.  There is salt water up to their
	shoe tops.

				   BRODY
		   What about us?

				   QUINT
			   (mentally assessing
			   the damage)
		   Have to pump her steady, s'all.

	The barrels start a wide circle, each cuts through the water,
	pushing a wave before it and leaving a wake behind.

				   QUINT
			   (to Hooper)
		   Follow him --
			   (to Brody)
		   You start pumpin' out here.

	Quint tosses Brody the hand pump, then picks up his 30.06,
	checks the load.

				   QUINT
		   Maybe a brain shot...one lucky
		   hit....

				   HOOPER (o.s.)
			   (on bridge)
		   He's heading under -- !

				   QUINT
			   (incredulously)
		   No way!  He can't!

221	ANGLE - OCEAN							
	221

	The barrels approaching the Orca dip below the surface, one
	-- two -- three.

				   BRODY
		   Where'd he go?

	Brody looks around.  Hooper on the flying bridge searching
	in all directions.  Quint is looking more appalled every
	second.

				   QUINT
			   (helplessly)
		   He can't stay down with three
		   barrels on him!  What are we
		   dealing with here?!  Where is he?!

				   BRODY
		   Have you ever had one do this?

				   QUINT
			   (and he means this)
		   No!

	BOOMING THUD at the keel.  Brody slides on the wet deck and
	Quint loses his footing, falling into Brody's arms.

222	HOOPER - FLY BRIDGE						
	222

	With him we watch the barrels pop up ahead of the bow then
	veer briskly to the left and plunk down again.

				   QUINT
		   Follow him!

				   HOOPER
		   I can't see him!

223	CLOSE - BRODY							
	223

	Panic-ridden, barely in control.

				   BRODY
		   There -- !

	The barrels have surfaced and we see the lengthy shadow passing
	underneath the Orca.  It is incredibly huge, there's always
	more of it.  There is a SCRAPING NOISE.  Quint looks down as
	two of the barrels drag along the sides of the boat.

				   BRODY
		   He's trying to sink us!

				   QUINT
			   (to Hooper)
		   Dead astern!  Zig-zag!

	There is something different about Quint.  He's quieter now,
	more icily calm.  The colorful cockiness has left him.  Brody
	senses that Quint knows he's in a fight for his life.

	The Orca taking evasive action.  But the three barrels are
	steadily closing the gap.  The engine makes SLOSHING NOISES
	now...missing and backfiring.

				   BRODY
		   He's chasing us...I don't believe
		   it.

				   QUINT
		   Full throttle -- to port!

224	HOOPER								
	224

	He gooses the throttle but the engine only screeches and
	pounds erratically.  The three barrels pass beyond the boat,
	negotiating a tight circle and plowing mercilessly toward
	the Orca.  The tip of the fin aims for the stern.  Quint
	is ready with his rifle.

	The shark breaks water and rises like a rocket, snout, jaw
	and pectoral fins shooting straight up.  We see the smoke-
	white belly, the pelvic fin, as it clears the surface and
	falls sideways drenching Quint, who fires six times.

	The Orca shudders from side to side.  From Hooper's point of
	view we can just discern what is happening.  The shark has
	the lower transom in its jaws and is shaking the boat with
	each jolt of its head.  Quint shoots until spent.  Brody
	seizes a gaff and drives it down at the conical nose again
	and again.

				   QUINT
		   Throttle back -- !

	When they next peer out, the dorsal fin can be seen gliding
	away, beginning a long circle around the Orca.

	Right about now the Orca's engine breathes its final fumes
	and fails.

225	CLOSE - BRODY AND QUINT						
	225

	Utter dismay.  Hooper turns the key, the motor wheezes...but
	the engine is dead.

226	ANGLE - QUINT							
	226

	His eyes flick from Hooper to the transom.  It is cracked!
	Then out at the barrels...they don't seem to be moving.

				   BRODY
			   (noting this)
		   Maybe we killed it?

				   QUINT
			   (don't I wish)
		   We didn't kill it.

	In rebuttal the barrels begin to move again, closer, in
	tighter concentric circles.

							CUT TO

227	ON DECK - HOOPER						
	227

	slipping into his weight-belt, strapping on his compressed
	air tanks.  Nobody wants to stop him this time...even Quint
	helps him on with things.

				   HOOPER
		   Your pumps are out too.  Drop me
		   down to twenty feet or so, okay?

	Hooper walks over to the cage.  Opens the steel doors and
	closes himself in.

				   HOOPER
			   (to Quint)
		   Try and keep him off me till I'm
		   down.

	Quint nods grimly and Hooper brandishes the pole with affixed
	syringe.  He give him a thumbs up and Hooper absently returns
	it.  Quint circles the deck, eye on the barrels.

228	HOOPER AND BRODY						
	228

	on opposite sides of the bars.

				   HOOPER
			   (with a reassuring
			   smile)
		   Lower away, Chief.

	He pops his mouthpiece between teeth and lowers the face
	mask.  Unsure, Brody manages to undo the knot that starts the
	cage into the ocean.  He and Hooper stare at one another as
	their faces pass, Hooper's moving down, down into the slate-
	grey sea.  Brody curls the rope around his forearm for a
	stronger hold.

				   QUINT
		   That's the way Chief.

				   BRODY
		   Live and learn.

229	UNDERWATER - CAGE						
	229

	HOOPER'S POINT OF VIEW

	Submerging.  The sky, horizon, water line, clean fresh sea
	air then...the magnificent innerspace, with bubbles sparkling
	in front of us.

230	ANGLE - HOOPER IN THE CAGE					
	230

	as he floats to twenty feet Hooper never stops looking around
	360 degrees.  He removes the rubber guard from the needle and
	waits.

231	EXT. THE SURFACE - BRODY AND QUINT				
	231

	Their turning heads tell us that the barrels are still
	circling.  Suddenly, both heads stop turning.

232	THE SEA								
	232

	The barrels have come to a stop.  Delicately, they change
	course and meander toward the lowered cage.

233	UNDERWATER - HOOPER						
	233

	His back is to us.  He is just now completing a visual sweep
	and turns, eyes front into closeup and:  fixes wildly on
	something monstrous...and fascinating.

234	HOOPER'S POINT OF VIEW						
	234

	The water is clear and shafts of sunlight streak downward
	in the blue.  From the deep gloom -- diving slowly, smoothly
	-- comes the shark.  It move with no apparent effort, sinuous
	beyond comparison.  As it nears the cage, it turns, and its
	ghastly length passes right in front of him:  first the snout,
	then the jaw, slack and smiling, then the black eye.

	Hooper tentatively reaches out.  It is too far for the
	strychnine pole.  The vinyl flesh is pocked with bullet holes,
	iron scars, gaffing hooks and strange open wounds that tinge
	the passing currents with pink.

235	SURFACE								
	235

	The trailing barrels GONG and SCRATCH the keel of the Orca
	above.  Brody and Quint leap back.

236	HOOPER - CLOSE							
	236

	The shark has vanished into a cloud of rising silt.  Hooper,
	expecting the shark to attack out of that same general
	direction, braces himself, pole extended through the bars,
	breathing faster, straining his eyes into the gloom and...we
	see that the shark attacking from behind him.

	The cage is sent careening.  Hooper grabs the bars for dear
	life.  The shark has grabbed the steel struts in its brutal
	jaws, shaking the cage relentlessly from side to side, bending
	the bars like clothes hangers.  Hooper can't turn the point-
	end of the pole around, his body jammed as far away from the
	non-rational attacker as possible.

	Hooper is trapped.

	The shark withdraws to get some running room then charges again.
	The bleeding snout thrust deeper into the yawing bars, the
	jaws snapping and twisting, two feet from Hooper's torso, the
	tail thrusting it forward.  Hooper drops the strychnine pole
	between the bars and it tumbles slowly toward rapture depth.

	All the shark needs is one more good thrust before separating
	Hooper at the waistline.  Through frantic bubbles Hooper
	fumbles with the overhead hatch cover, kicking up and out
	of the cage.  The shark backpedals with its tail, but the
	broad head won't shake loose.

	Hooper rushes downwards, after the strychnine pole.

238	ANGLE - SHARK							
	238

	As spirals of harmless bullets bead the water, the shark twists
	free of the cage and arrows downward after Hooper.

	Hooper nearly recovers the pole.  Again it slips from his
	frightened grasp and this time disappears into a narrow
	abyss.  Hooper turns and looks up.

	The Great White is lunging at him, twenty feet above.

239	SURFACE								
	239

	One of the barrel ropes snakes around the cage rope and pulls
	taut.

240	HOOPER - DEEP							
	240

	Turning to meet the monster which -- though held back for a
	moment by the snarled rope -- now surges forward.

241	SURFACE - BRODY AND QUINT					
	241

	The Orca is listing dangerously aft, the ginpole bent almost
	to the breaking point.  Brody is in a frenzy trying to haul
	up the cage.  Quint attaches the end of Brody's rope to a
	hand-winch.  The GINPOLE IS SPLITTING!

				   QUINT
		   Let go of it!

	The pole gives way, the rope whipping down on the gunwale....
	the pulling of the tonnage below is tipping the Orca, dragging
	it, but Quint won't give up the winch.  Brody hauls on the
	rope barehanded.

242	UNDERWATER - HOOPER						
	242

	maneuvering downward, away from the jaws...Suddenly the crazed
	shark veers upward for the surface.

243	SURFACE - QUINT							
	243

	The winch is working faster now, Quint demonically winding
	it in.  The crushed cage bangs against the hull then breaks
	water.

	Brody is horrified.  THE CAGE IS EMPTY!

				   QUINT
			   (a horrible scream)
		   He's comin' up --- !

244	MASTER ANGLE							
	244

	The shark breaks water right beside the Orca, rising with a
	great whooshing noise.  It rises vertically, towering over-
	head, blocking out the sun.  The pectoral fins seem to reach
	forward.  The shark, in all of its monstrous glory, falls onto
	the stern of the boat with a shattering crash, narrowly
	missing Quint and Brody.  It drives the stern underwater,
	the ocean pours in over the transom.  The jaws snap from side
	to side.  Brody flounders backwards away from it.  Quint
	gropes for his rifle and fires.  The shark heaves its terrible
	girth and Quint flies backwards onto his harpoon display.

245	CLOSE - QUINT							
	245

	Skewered by a Number Twelve iron, Quint gulps blood and
	pitches into the onrushing sea.

246	NIGHTMARE ANGLE - BRODY						
	246

	The Orca is tipping backwards, sinking stern first, tipping
	Brody toward the gaping thrusting jaws.  Deck chairs, irons,
	spent cartridges, thermos, beer cans all pour into the
	vacuum of the open gagging jaws.  It wants Brody now, its
	tail keeping him into position.

	Brody is sliding toward it with the rest of the debris as
	the bow raises thirty degrees.  He intercepts one of Hooper's
	compressed air tanks and just as he and everything else pours
	toward the whirlpool and into the jaws, Brody braces himself
	and shoves the tanks at the bottomless pit.  They jam between
	the upper and lower jaws and stick fast.

	The shark twists backward in the water and turns away.  Hooper,
	rising, is peering around for Brody and Quint.  The shark is
	spinning in crazed circles, the head-thrusts indicating that
	it can neither dislodge nor swallow the silver tanks.  It
	bites down at fifteen tons pressure per square inch. The
	TANKS EXPLODE!

247	SURFACE - EXPLOSION						
	247

	A thirty-foot geyser of bright red water touches the black
	sky, spreading everywhere, missing nothing.

248	UNDERWATER							
	248

	Clouds of blood -- shark's suspended carcass.  Another cloud
	-- Quint suspended.

249	SURFACE - THE ORCA						
	249

	sinks with a rumble.

250	CLOSE - HOOPER ON SURFACE					
	250

	Raising his mask from the water, he kicks toward Brody.

251	UNDERWATER							
	251

	The steel-grey body of the shark is falling away, an apparition
	evanescing into the darkness -- sinking in a slow, graceful
	spiral, stopped by the bobbing barrels.

252	SURFACE - BRODY AND HOOPER					
	252

	Brody is holding onto a cushion, barely afloat, in shock.

				   BRODY
		   Quint...Quint...is he dead?

	Hooper crosses Brody's chest with his left arm, keeping him
	up in the water.

				   HOOPER
		   Don't talk.  We've got a long way.

253	HIGH SHOT							
	253

	The two tiny, miserable heroes, swimming from the debris.

							FADE OUT

				   THE END


Special help by SergeiK