Remakes or reboots don’t have to stick to their predecessors’ storylines or bring back old characters. Jordan Peele proved it when he “remade” Jaws – well, not exactly. His 2022 film Nope is arguably a spiritual successor to Steven Spielberg's masterpiece, even though it isn’t set in the same world and doesn’t feature a single shark or beach.

Next year, Jaws will celebrate its 50th anniversary, and the thriller about hunting down the killer great white shark is still as terrifying as ever. While the film may not be considered outright horror, the tension and fear it creates in the audience remain unmatched. Many filmmakers have borrowed tropes from Jaws, but no one has done it quite like Peele's cosmic horror homage, Nope.

Jean Jacket chases OJ in Nope
Jordan Peele's Nope Ending, Explained

Director Jordan Peele wowed audiences with his sci-fi horror movie Nope and left them begging for more. Was the ending really just that good?

Jaws And Nope Are Connected From The Start

The parallels between Jaws and Nope are noticeable right from the premise. Both films center on a group of 3–4 people trying to stop a mysterious, man-eating threat. Jaws takes a more realistic approach with a shark as the force of evil, while Nope’s Jean Jacket is a large UFO that’s eventually revealed to be a massive predatory organism. This also evokes Spielberg's alien-focused thriller Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which makes sense, given that Nope's director Jordan Peele is a self-professed Spielberg fan.

Character Connections Between Nope and Jaws

A story is often defined more by its characters than its plot, which makes sense as to why critics call Nope, “Space Jaws.” The Haywood siblings, OJ (Daniel Kaluuya) and Em (Keke Palmer), are like split versions of Jaws’ Chief Brody, all it upon themselves to stop a deadly threat from destroying their ranch or town. While Brody relied on marine expert Hooper, OJ and Em seek help from Angel Torres, an electronics store worker who helps them by setting up cameras and becomes their ally. Both Hooper and Torres risk their lives by offering themselves as bait — one in a steel cage underwater, the other wrapped in barbed wire as literal food for the creature.

But the most obvious character parallel to Jaws is Quint, who is essentially Nope’s Antlers Holst. The veteran nature documentary cinematographer’s gravelly voice and haunting storytelling style is almost identical to the seasoned shark hunter from Jaws. Another clear character influence comes with Amity Island’s Mayor Larry Vaughn, who is quite similar to Jupe in Nope. Steven Yeun’s character tries to profit from the UFO and turn it into a spectacle. Similarly, the mayor in Jaws is more concerned about his town's image and losing revenue from closing the beaches, despite the threat of a man-eating shark.

How Jordan Peele Borrows Suspense Tropes From Jaws

It’s easy for a film to copy plot points or simply imitate characters from a classic like Jaws, as seen in the countless ripoffs that followed the original summer blockbuster. However, the reason Nope feels more like a Jaws sequel/remake than films like Meg or Deep Blue Sea lies in how Jordan Peele effectively uses the film’s tropes to create horror and suspense. Steven Spielberg is considered a master for his creative choice to not show the shark for most of the runtime. Peele replicates this technique by never revealing Nope's real monster in its marketing. Instead, the movie shows a cloud that later becomes a UFO, which is ultimately shown to be a jellyfish-like organism floating in the sky. By withholding the monsters, both films generate a sense of dread in the audience by evoking a fear of the unknown.

Jaws fans can spot many homages hidden in plain sight in Nope. In fact, both films tease their monsters at the start in almost identical fashion. Jaws’ iconic opening scene is from the POV of the shark swimming underwater, which Peele mimics in Nope from inside the alien’s throat. Both films begin with deaths without revealing who or what caused them. Another clever reference occurs when Jupe’s kids prank OJ in alien costumes, similar to how two kids cause panic on the beach with plastic shark fins in Jaws. Furthermore, the shark is tagged with bright yellow floating barrels to track its movement, and Nope does something similar with the colorful flags attached to the horse mannequin that the alien consumes.

Nope Is More Than Just References And Homages

The “Spielberg-isms” don’t stop with Jaws or Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Nope also features clear nods to Jurassic Park and E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial. The film draws inspiration from even more classics like M. Night Shyamalan’s Signs, the original 1933 King Kong, The Wizard of Oz, and Neon Genesis Evangelion. And of course, who can forget the homage to The Shining in the scene where blood rains down on the ranch house?

However, the director of Get Out proves his originality by going beyond homages and tropes. His film conveys a broader theme about humanity’s relentless pursuit of spectacle and the role exploitation plays in this. He even adds an extra narrative layer with the horrific Gordy the Chimp incident that takes place in an SNL-like setting.

The bottom line is that Nope’s Jean Jacket is Jaws shark in the open skies. Peele makes no attempt at subtlety as the supposed UFO unveils its sentient, monstrous form, complete with a gaping mouth and a set of…jaws. And as one last parallel, it’s these jaws that are blown apart to bring about the monsters’ ends in both classics — one with a compressed air tank, and the other with a helium balloon.

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Nope
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Horror
Sci-Fi
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9 /10
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Release Date
July 22, 2022
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Cast
Steven Yeun, Michael Wincott, Daniel Kaluuya, Brandon Perea, Keke Palmer, Barbie Ferreira
Director
Jordan Peele
Writers
Jordan Peele
Budget
68million
Studio(s)
Universal Pictures
Distributor(s)
Universal Pictures