you mama and your bald headed daddy by Samantha gomez
The original Jaws used three mechanical sharks, which were all nicknamed Bruce (after Steven Spielberg's lawyer).The only real shark footage in the original film is the scene where Matt Hooper is attacked in the underwater shark cage. That was filmed with a real shark, off the coast of Australia. They used a miniature cage with a dwarf ("little person") actor, to make the shark look gigantic.I'm not sure how much, if any, real footage was used in the Jaws sequels. Although it is safe to say that the sequels mostly employed mechanical sharks, just like the original film did.
I laughed so hard my jaws ached. Have you gone back into the water since seeing the movie "Jaws"? Emergency personnel in America have a hydraulically-powered "reverse pliers" aptly nicknamed "The Jaws of Life", which they use to rescue accident victims by prying open crushed car doors.
they use their jaws to munch or grind their food up
They used mechanical sharks to make the Jaws movies. They used three models to make the original film. All of them were nicknamed "Bruce," after Steven Spielberg's lawyer. They probably did not use the same models for the sequels, since the models were notoriously unreliable and always breaking down.
no one will give you a real answer unless you give them a real question, like what for.
In the movie Jaws a guys torso washes up onto a beach. Unless it was a girl. -Nadia
They gave it food and trained it so they could use it for the money. JAWS is real Kellie!
Yes, curassows have jaws; it is how they are able to use their beaks.
In some form, sharks have been around for about 400 million years. Even before dinosaurs roamed the earth, sharks hunted through the oceans! They're such good survivors that they've had little need to evolve in the last 150 million years. These ancient predators fascinate adults and children alike. Scientific Information: Sharks belong to the class of fish, Chondrichthyes. Sharks have the most powerful jaws on the planet. Unlike most animals' jaws, both the sharks' upper and lower jaws move. Each type of shark has a different shaped tooth depending on their diet (the shark in the photo is a great white -- you can tell he's a carnivore just by looking at those sharp, pointy teeth!). A shark may grow and use over 20,000 teeth in its lifetime! Sharks never run out of teeth. If one is lost, another spins forward from the rows and rows of backup teeth.
Their jaws
YES!
press ctrl_shift_apostrophe to announce an Excel comment using JAWS