For Spielberg, the movie was the launching pad for the most extraordinary directorial career in modern movie history. Jaws inspired a bunch of thrillers and FX movies for example like the movies “Sharknado” and “Deep Blue Sea,” which were also big hit movies. “In addition to scaring the living daylights out of millions of movie-goers and putting a cramp in the revenue stream of nearly every North American beach resort, two significant developments can be attributed to Jaws. With its more than $250 million domestic theatrical gross (against a $12 million budget), this film laid out a blueprint for the summer blockbuster that has been followed ever since. Jaws was the first summer mega-hit, but, because Hollywood learns from its success stories, it has not been the last one. The picture also catapulted a lesser director by the name of Steven Spielberg out of relative obscurity and onto the A-list. Spielberg would quickly follow the success of Jaws with Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and E.T. (His only failure during that period was the World War II farce 1941.)” (Berardinelli, James. “Jaws | Reelviews Movie Reviews.” Reelviews Movie Reviews). Jaws has two villains. During the first half of the film, the enemy isn't the shark; it's the face of bureaucracy, as personified by the mayor. The mayor doesn’t want to close the beaches down because he wants the money over the shark attacks that are killing