The Jaws Pinball Machine Does Right by the Original Blockbuster

Stern announced the first official Jaws pinball machine early last month, and the Pro version of the game has already started popping up in public. If you’ve ever wanted to go shark hunting with Robert Shaw in a pinball game, now’s your chance; to find a machine on location near you, you can use Pinside’s pinball map.
I don’t typically write about individual pinball games here at Paste, despite playing pinball a lot, largely because I rarely log enough time on any specific game to feel like an authority on it. I’m not one of those guys who can somehow afford to buy every single new machine, stacking up plays in the basement before flipping them every few months for the next one off the assembly line. My time is limited to what games I can find on location at bars, restaurants, and the handful of pinball arcades around Atlanta, and however many plays I’m able to get on them. So don’t consider this an all-encompassing review; these are just my first, immediate impressions after a half-dozen or so plays on a Pro edition—the most basic of three models.
So, here goes: the Jaws pinball machine is pretty cool. Yep. I dig it. It’s got some balls, some flippers, some ramps, some Richard Dreyfuss—basically everything you need for pure pin satisfaction.
Okay, I can dig a little deeper than that. Jaws relies on a beloved, nostalgic property, but one that isn’t quite as overexposed or commercialized right now as the Star Wars and Marvel pins Stern often releases, and that makes it feel fresher than a lot of other recent pinball machines. Keith Elwin’s design, from the game’s various modes to the playfield layout, tries to reflect the movie in a way you don’t often see with these IP machines. Most pins based on movies use film footage, audio, and artwork from the source, and then slaps them on a game that doesn’t have any connection to the spirit and theme of the movie. Jaws doesn’t work that way, and that’s why it instantly seems more interesting than most new Sterns—after a very small number of plays, at least.