SO SAD and BEAUTIFUL 😭 Titanic (1997) REACTION

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @doubleswords
    @doubleswords Před rokem +269

    I was a cruel first date...I took a blind date to see Titanic. She held tightly on to me for the movie and bugged me for making her cry. She has now been my wife of (almost) 25 years, and this past year we enjoyed watching the band from steerage, Gaelic Storm, performing locally.

    • @Chris-vk2zw
      @Chris-vk2zw Před rokem +3

      I am going to the Titanic Conference in Las Vegas in August. Some of the side cast will be there. Ironically, PH Nargeolet, the submersible pilot that lost his life in the Titan submersible, was going to speak on the 1998 expedition where the largest piece of Titanic was recovered.

    • @niallragnarsson
      @niallragnarsson Před rokem +2

      They’re an actual band??

    • @doubleswords
      @doubleswords Před rokem +5

      @@niallragnarsson Yes. Gaelic Storm is quite popular now, in part due to this movie. They sing traditional Celtic songs as well as more modern Irish drinking songs. The music played in steerage is partly recorded as a song, "The Titanic Set". Also, "Irish Party in third class."

    • @MiArcangel
      @MiArcangel Před 8 měsíci +3

      Dam... I was born in 1997😅

    • @elahodelaho
      @elahodelaho Před 7 měsíci +2

      This Is beautiful

  • @liamisaac1152
    @liamisaac1152 Před rokem +543

    That old couple you see in the bed were based on a real life couple, Ida and Isidor Strauss. They were the owners of Macys. Their story is so beautiful yet tragic. There’s a deleted scene where he is trying to get Ida on the boat but she refuses to live without her husband.
    In real life, she gave up her spot on the boat to one of their maids and gave her fur coat too. Isidor refused to get on the boats until every last woman and child were safely on a lifeboat. The last time they were seen was by the deck and the last words spoken by his wife were “where you go, I go” if that ain’t true love then I don’t know what is 🥹

    • @GTARanger1992
      @GTARanger1992 Před rokem +48

      Their descendant married the recently passed CEO of oceangate Stockton rush

    • @shawnwacek6791
      @shawnwacek6791 Před rokem +11

      Yeah it's an awesome tragic story but beautifully did for the older couple there is a deleted scene showing that and in the real life the story is true

    • @justinedse3314
      @justinedse3314 Před rokem +13

      @@GTARanger1992 Holy crap!

    • @imagiraffe2848
      @imagiraffe2848 Před rokem +12

      ​@@GTARanger1992crazy how small the world is. I wonder if the descendant of Strauss started this obsession with the Titanic for Stockton Rush. Not that she wanted him to go down there and die but i wonder if she told him stories and that's when he became fascinated with the ship

    • @GTARanger1992
      @GTARanger1992 Před rokem +12

      @@imagiraffe2848 whats even more odd is that today the guy who played Isidor Strauss in Titanic 1997 passed away

  • @birdseyefr
    @birdseyefr Před rokem +669

    The submarine footage is real and the technology is real. James Cameron made the Titanic movie just so the studios would finance his dives to the Titanic wreck. He went there 33 times.

    • @kyleenglot9184
      @kyleenglot9184 Před rokem +12

      Did Rob Ballard not use a submersible when he discovered the Titanic in 1985? So submersible tech had been around nearly 20 years ahead of the film.

    • @williambryan3346
      @williambryan3346 Před rokem +46

      ⁠@@kyleenglot9184 Nobody said anything about the technology being new or recent, just that James Cameron used it.

    • @ChromeOfTheFuture
      @ChromeOfTheFuture Před rokem +8

      Some yes but for the most part they are models, especially the beginning.

    • @Robertz1986
      @Robertz1986 Před rokem +6

      In the 90s they had submarines that could safely get down to Titanic. Somewhat less so now it seems.

    • @t.c.thompson2359
      @t.c.thompson2359 Před rokem +17

      James Cameron has been on the Titanic for longer than Captain Smith was.

  • @BubblyRainbows
    @BubblyRainbows Před rokem +163

    The first time I saw this was during a movie night with my dad, my aunts, and my cousins. Before the movie even started, I said something like "I wonder how far into the movie the ship sinks." My aunt Susan and my cousin Nate both got pissed off, yelled at me about spoilers, and refused to watch the movie because I "ruined it." I spoiled that the Titanic sinks... I still have no words when I think about it. 🤦‍♀

    • @whicked_stone7566
      @whicked_stone7566 Před rokem +10

      thats hilarious

    • @shure81
      @shure81 Před rokem +26

      So inconsiderate! It's ONLY been 85 years!!! SPOILER ALERT!

    • @BubblyRainbows
      @BubblyRainbows Před rokem +8

      @@shure81 I know... I ruined everything! 🤣

    • @billiesparks8911
      @billiesparks8911 Před rokem +2

      Don't worry love we all first time watchers cry I remember crying a river the first time I saw it in the theater,Titanic is a great movie sad piece of history😢

    • @CatBreadOfficial
      @CatBreadOfficial Před rokem +10

      I’m sorry, i don’t mean to be rude but does your aunt and cousin live under a rock? Like bro, the Titanic is gonna sink anyways, it’s not like it’s gonna have a happy life after the sinking 😂 how do they not know ABOUT The actual Titanic from 1912 like…. Dude 😂😂😂

  • @warrenpowers108
    @warrenpowers108 Před rokem +50

    "Make it count. Meet me at the clock." Wasn't just about that night. It was about her whole life. She made it count, and she met him at the clock 😭❤️

    • @floristfindspeace
      @floristfindspeace Před 8 měsíci +4

      OH MY GOD STOP I DIDNT REALIZE

    • @PowerRangerfan
      @PowerRangerfan Před 7 měsíci +6

      Did you also notice the time on the clock? 2:20 AM. The exact time the real Titanic sank.

  • @19nzinga
    @19nzinga Před rokem +384

    I think that this movie hits everybody that hard. Extremely well written and acting. Coupled with the fact that it’s based on an actual tragedy.

    • @LilPeeper420
      @LilPeeper420 Před rokem +15

      I’m a pretty heartless person. And this story not only touched me; but fascinates me; like a mystery that still needs solved.

    • @chaelmarcial428
      @chaelmarcial428 Před rokem +11

      Also the movie production, I really appreciate how much effort and money they have spend to make the movie.

    • @brooklynbutter5357
      @brooklynbutter5357 Před rokem +5

      I wouldn’t say it’s well written. The dialogue is not the most complex. I mean, there’s a reason he has never won for screenwriting.
      But he’s definitely a bigger picture genius, a tech genius and knows how to put on a show

    • @jgunner94
      @jgunner94 Před rokem +6

      @@brooklynbutter5357Something can be incredibly well written without having the most complex dialogue. It can be about how dots connect, how organic it is and if it genuinely feels like it comes from the heart which I’ve found Cameron excels in all those areas in writing. Like how Jack mentions about teaching Rose to horse ride on the beach in Santa Monica and they show a picture of her in the end on horseback on that beach, that’s just really nice details that are heartfelt. Visual direction can add upon dialogue so it gives those words more importance. That gives writing more quality.

    • @rosscorlett4592
      @rosscorlett4592 Před rokem +4

      im willing to admit as a guy, first time watching years ago, itll make a grown man get choked up. its an all time classic that will live on for decades.

  • @unicornphantrashxd9349
    @unicornphantrashxd9349 Před rokem +74

    The titanic sank on a moonless night.
    Due to needing a certain amount of lighting for the film making process there were a lot of artistic liberties that has to be taken so that viewers would be able to see everything happen. It’s an incredibly done film showing the tragic end for the ship. I love that it makes each person feel real rather than just a number because every person who lost their lives had a story, loved ones, hopes and dreams.

    • @MXMXNTOMORI
      @MXMXNTOMORI Před rokem +7

      I came here to say the first words of what you did, the survivors said it was so pitch black that they couldn't see the person sitting next to them in lifeboats, absolutely terrifying

    • @thomasvlaskampiii6850
      @thomasvlaskampiii6850 Před rokem +6

      I personally don't mind the godlight. It doesn't take anything away from what's happening. We still get the full gravity of the situation

    • @richardpetty9159
      @richardpetty9159 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I have been in places that are far away from city lights (e.g.: on the lake in the middle of Canada). The stars are much brighter and more of them are visible than any of us are used to seeing. Once your eyes adapt, this seems about right.

    • @derbydriver
      @derbydriver Před 2 měsíci +1

      Oceanliner Designs on CZcams did a great video showing just how dark it really was.

  • @jimmygreer2140
    @jimmygreer2140 Před rokem +103

    My favorite story about the Titanic, and I really wish James Cameron had acknowledged this person, is about Violet Jessop. She was employed on the Olympic, the first of the 3 ships they were building, when it crashed into another ship. She then went onto working on the Titanic & survived. Apparently she had even carried a baby onto the lifeboat. But the absolute crazy thing about Violet was that she was working as a nurse during WWI on the other sister ship of the Titanic, the Brittanic, when it was struck by a sea mine and also sunk and survived that one as well!!!
    There's a lot made about Margaret Brown being the "Unsinkable Molly Brown" but Violet was the real unsinkable one.

    • @michaelceraso1977
      @michaelceraso1977 Před rokem +6

      dam THATS an amazing story of a great lady, Now I must do some research on her and see if theres an extended bio on her life, wow!

    • @jimmygreer2140
      @jimmygreer2140 Před rokem +1

      @@michaelceraso1977 I believe there's a book about her. She told a story of getting a phone call of a woman asking if she had saved a baby on the Titanic, she said yes. They said it was her, laughed & hung up. The biographer said it sounded like a prank call but she said she had told no one until him about the baby.
      She was quite attractive as well. But I do wish Cameron had given her character a mention. He did a pretty excellent job with the rest of the crew. And he did try his best to make it very accurate.
      The door holding both of them is a bit questionable. But even during the directors cut he had reached out to Neil DeGrasse Tyson to make the night sky match that of the night it sank because NDT teased him about that. I mean we did learn where & when it sank so it would be possible to match it up.

    • @Chris-vk2zw
      @Chris-vk2zw Před rokem +1

      And she continued to serve on ships.

    • @CharlieFBarassi
      @CharlieFBarassi Před rokem +2

      That's true.. she was an argentinian too.

    • @lsilvaeditor
      @lsilvaeditor Před rokem +3

      While not fully represented in the film by name, she was the inspiration for the Lucy Violet Snape character, the young stewardess whom Mr. Andrews stops while the ship is sinking and asks her to put on her life jacket and be 'a good example for the other passengers'. But I did read Violet's book and she did indeed have a fascinating life, in fact Titanic is only 30 pages out of the 200 page book.

  • @spjunkies
    @spjunkies Před rokem +64

    Never fails to prove why it's one of the best movies ever made. Amazing reaction, Blue!

  • @guyswing
    @guyswing Před rokem +91

    You would be happy to know that the lady, Molly Brown, who gave Jack her son's tuxedo to wear was a real life person and really did survive the sinking of the Titanic. There was a musical made based on her life, "The Unsinkable Molly Brown".

    • @stephaniemccracken1324
      @stephaniemccracken1324 Před rokem +2

      Debbie Reynolds plays Mollie.

    • @TheAsianReacts
      @TheAsianReacts Před 4 měsíci

      @@stephaniemccracken1324in the musical? Cuz in the titanic movie, it’s Kathy Bates

    • @aerocap
      @aerocap Před 3 měsíci

      Definitely an awesome lady!

    • @derbydriver
      @derbydriver Před 2 měsíci

      Worth noting that on real life, Margaret Brown actually tried to throw the crewman off the lifeboat but the other passengers stopped her. She was MUCH more assertive about rescuing people than the movie shows.

  • @chloemilburn8482
    @chloemilburn8482 Před rokem +59

    Fun fact: James Cameron wife is actually the person who plays rose granddaughter
    - James Cameron has been to titanic 33 times overall, he loved the history
    - James Cameron did the actual drawing that looks like jack was doing
    - the first scene Kate and Leo did was the naked scene so when he said “on the bed, the couch” it wasn’t in the script but they kept it in
    - most of characters rose was around the did exist
    - the old couple owned Macy’s and she refused to leave him they died together
    - the violin did play till the end
    - rose does die at the end, if you see time it’s time titanic sank and everyone in room was dead
    - when she said il never let go she means her promise to jack which she kept she did everything they said they will do
    - James Cameron said jack had to die as the full meaning of “making each day count “ would have been for nothing
    -rose spitting in cals face wasn’t meant to happen, it was meant to be a hairpin but made sense as he taught her
    - the water was so cold on set they ended up poorly
    - the scene below deck James just asked them to improvise and have fun same as spitting scene
    - a lot of people don’t realise she chooses his surname in the end and did everything her and jack said they was gunna do

    • @Malok45213
      @Malok45213 Před rokem

      Rose's granddaughter's name is "Suzy amis"

    • @chloemilburn8482
      @chloemilburn8482 Před rokem

      @@Malok45213 that is correct but when you actually look her up she goes by her married name Suzy amis Cameron - they met filming the titanic, they did not marry till 2000, titanic came out in 1997. They have been together ever since and have 3 children and according to Wikipedia in 2020 they became legal guardians for one of their daughters teenage friends. You see it was complicated because James married Linda Hamilton in 1997 and divorced her in 1999…small world. But they are still together

    • @Malok45213
      @Malok45213 Před rokem

      @@chloemilburn8482 you're right

    • @ShatteredDreams90
      @ShatteredDreams90 Před 6 měsíci

      Cal and Ruth do not appear at the end when they welcome Rose's soul back on Titanic, only all the good people she knew appear to welcome her

  • @StargliderGaming
    @StargliderGaming Před rokem +77

    Some interesting things about the sinking. It took 2 hours 40 minutes to sink. Andrews was right that it would normally take about an hour, but certain factors helped keep the ship afloat for longer (one primary thing was the movement of hundreds of tonnes of coal from starboard to port earlier in the trip due to a fire). There was in fact very little suction when the ship went down and survivors spoke of being able to 'step off' the ship as it went down and not get sucked down. Average survival time in the water was around 15 minutes.

    • @connorredshaw7994
      @connorredshaw7994 Před rokem +14

      Thomas Andrews really underestimated how well he built this ship the fact that the titanic lasted almost double the time he thought it would is incredible also the sacrifices of those brave souls in the engine and boiler rooms may never be forgotten.

    • @fangirlalliecat
      @fangirlalliecat Před rokem +10

      I also read somewhere that the workers on the ship did everything they could to keep the lights on for as long as possible.

    • @RCassinello
      @RCassinello Před rokem +2

      Andrews made his two hour prediction 40 minutes after they hit the iceberg. He was correct almost to the second.

    • @RCassinello
      @RCassinello Před rokem +1

      @@connorredshaw7994 Andrews predicted the ship had two hours remaining after two inspections of the ship and performing the calculations. By then it was 40 minutes after the collision. He was correct almost to the second.

    • @divinefemale
      @divinefemale Před rokem +2

      Also, in the titanic movie the amount of film time spent in 1912 is the exact amount of time it took for the titanic to sink

  • @liam89th
    @liam89th Před rokem +85

    Fabrizio and Tommy's deaths always were the most impactful for me. Really likeable supporting characters.

    • @bendy_rabbit
      @bendy_rabbit Před rokem +8

      The deleted scenes even have a whole romantic subplot for Fabrizio that is great. I would love for an extended version to be released where I don't have to watch those scenes as bonus features

    • @TheProphegy
      @TheProphegy Před rokem +7

      Fabrizio’s reaction when his friend is shot is always so emotionally well done imo such a genuine reaction it always hits me when I see it.

    • @CharlieFBarassi
      @CharlieFBarassi Před rokem +2

      And the little girl cora..but they delate the scene ..is was so horrible that part

    • @K9TheFirst1
      @K9TheFirst1 Před rokem

      Fabrizio really should have survived. Tommy... Eh, I felt he was a bit unlikable. Him screaming racial slurs at the officers for literally doing their job of making sure *somebody* survived really did not help the situation

    • @romantic_hippie
      @romantic_hippie Před rokem

      I like how we don't know anything about them and yet we care so much 😭

  • @marib.52380
    @marib.52380 Před rokem +20

    You had me crying right along with you!! 😢 The part that always gets me is the ending when she goes back and sees Jack again and everybody’s there to greet her. Makes me think of my parents reuniting together in heaven one day.

  • @jessemoore7081
    @jessemoore7081 Před rokem +163

    I know the ending is a bit ambiguous, but I feel like symbolically and impactfully her drifting into "dream" was actually her passing away in her sleep and reuniting with Jack. Just seems her sleeping and dreaming wouldn't have much of a meaningful or poetic impact.
    Some things aren't spelled out for the viewer, but that was always my takeaway from that ending. She finally got to tell her story about Jack, those pictures leading to her passing showed a promise fulfilled, and her journey beyond is a beautiful welcome to the one she loved most. Spiritually, she never let go.

    • @Riggswolfe
      @Riggswolfe Před rokem +34

      I've never questioned once that it was anything other than her finally dying and going to join those who were waiting for her all those years.

    • @Shalnn
      @Shalnn Před rokem +14

      @@Riggswolfe Same. It never crossed my mind that there could be other interpretations

    • @jackthomas6952
      @jackthomas6952 Před rokem +1

      My thoughts exactly

    • @kylederry5031
      @kylederry5031 Před rokem +18

      The clock behind them is stuck at 2:40 am
      The time the titanic disappeared

    • @forsagebone
      @forsagebone Před rokem +23

      She died an old lady, warm in her bed, just like she promised.

  • @stephernoodle
    @stephernoodle Před rokem +17

    I just read a book about the stories of 1st class passengers. Even as the ship was tilting and visibly sinking people continued to think that they didn’t need to get on the lifeboats and they would be towed into port by another ship (after all the ship was unsinkable!). The actual iceberg strike was only a minor vibration for most (some didn’t even feel it) so they assumed the damage wasn’t bad. People were playing with the ice on deck. A lot of the crew told them they were loading lifeboats just as a precaution. The lifeboats were kind of scary (imagine being hoisted by rope like 8-10 stories down) so only a few initially got on. Once it became clear the ship was going down it was too late- no lifeboats left (some were ordered to return but did not). They could have saved so many more people- at every turn it was handled poorly.

  • @blinkt3um3
    @blinkt3um3 Před rokem +102

    this movie was sold out in theaters for two months straight - took me like 10-12 weeks to be able to get a ticket and see it with my little sister. So weird that a group of kids wanted to see this so bad - but four of us did and we cried our eyes out.

    •  Před rokem +12

      The waiting lines were insane, around three hours and I am talking it in its fifth week.

    • @SeanBlader
      @SeanBlader Před rokem +8

      Titanic redefined what a blockbuster movie was and solidified James Cameron as one of the top storytellers of our time. Before this he had done 2 Terminator movies, Aliens, The Abyss, and True Lies. The biggest box office movie of all time before Titanic in 1997 was 20 years earlier in 1977's Star Wars. Titanic was the first movie to break a billion dollars at the box office. The movie absolutely dominated at the awards shows for the year. He made so much money from Titanic that he didn't really ever need to work again, and took a decade to run and fund expeditions to actually visit and study the wreck of the Titanic. When he finally came back, technology had finally caught up to his vision and he was able to do performance capture and cross the uncanny valley for the first time in history to beat the previous box office record he set. In comparison, for Marvel to beat out Titanic with Avengers: End Game, they had to have a story setup with 21 prior movies.

    • @ben1ben2ben1
      @ben1ben2ben1 Před rokem +1

      @@SeanBlader I guess you have no clue what inflation is lol. Gone With the Wind is BY FAR the biggest movie ever made when adjusted for inflation. Endgame is like 6th biggest ever

    • @Cosmo-Kramer
      @Cosmo-Kramer Před rokem +3

      @ The film did not have a big opening week haul. What made it so successful was its legs, churning out $25M week after week after week after week, on the strength of word of mouth and most significantly, young girls seeing the picture 5, 10, 20 times.

    • @silviachiorean3480
      @silviachiorean3480 Před rokem +4

      I saw this with my sister in theater back in '97. I was 12, my sister was 10. Our parents let us see it because I was fascinated with the ocean liner ever since I first heard about it, somewhere around '94 or '95 - it was mentioned in passing by our teacher at school. And boy, oh boy! The theater was full and everyone, I mean everyone was crying by the end of it. I remember arriving home hiccuping and still crying even 30 min after we exited the theater. It wasn't about Jack and Rose, that's not what marked and made me love the movie. It was about hubris, futility, inevitability, courage, sense of duty and yes, even stupidity and ignorance in the face of such an impossible situation. There are so many things to love in this movie although by all rights there are so many things to hate as well (they did such an injustice to William McMaster Murdoch although Ewan Stewart acted his socks off). And no matter how much technology has improved, no mater how many movies I saw since, I still consider this experience the best one I ever had... And so many years down the line I remain fascinated with Titanic and continue to view the movie with the same awe and trepidation as I did then...

  • @TheNumber01Man
    @TheNumber01Man Před rokem +75

    This film is a masterpiece of filmmaking; excellent acting, great and powerful writing, brilliant direction and not a penny of the enormous budget was spared. More modern blockbusters need to look back at how much care and effort James Cameron put into this film.

    • @jgunner94
      @jgunner94 Před rokem +8

      Watched it again recently and it’s aged really well in all those aspects you listed. Really good attention to detail and there’s layers to the characters, there’s interesting symbolism I think in Jack’s design possibly too him being an angel sent to save Rose. James Cameron has had those themes in Terminator 1 and 2 with Sarah and John Connor’s guardians so I wonder if there’s some evolution there. This must have been one of the first films or maybe the first to achieve that modern crispness films have now. In the mid to early 90’s and everything before, you could see that more older retro look to films in the quality, visual quality near peaked with this film.

    • @ben1ben2ben1
      @ben1ben2ben1 Před rokem

      The writing was ok, nothing special

    • @barah15
      @barah15 Před rokem +1

      ​@@ben1ben2ben1best love story ever written imo

    • @lucianaromulus1408
      @lucianaromulus1408 Před rokem

      ​@@barah15that was the weakest part of this movie. The actors were PHENOMENAL but....Rose remarried and told her husband to kick rocks in the afterlife to go be with Jack instead...it's kinda gross.

    • @milannesic5718
      @milannesic5718 Před rokem

      Watch again and listen to her. Let me remind you: "An axe that was nowhere to be seen on the walls earlier", "Doors that could be easily ripped apart". And many more things. Clearly not a perfect writing

  • @SliderFury1
    @SliderFury1 Před rokem +40

    People can say what they want about the love story but the ship sinking is one of the most visually intense and uttelry convincing things in any movie ever.
    Also, note that it was actually Mr. Andrews that saved Rose's life. He gave her his life jacket. She would have either drowned before jack found her, or on her swim to the whitsle without it.

    • @goral9693
      @goral9693 Před 8 měsíci

      Why would you drown swimming 5 meters on calm waters?

    • @stephensturges5711
      @stephensturges5711 Před 7 měsíci +2

      she barely made it with a jacket. You fail to understand the effects of hyperthermia on the human body ​@goral9693

  • @cassidywest5539
    @cassidywest5539 Před rokem +12

    Paper has been known to survive inside luggage of Titanic's passengers. There's tickets, letters, postcards, dollar bills etc.

  • @The_Dudester
    @The_Dudester Před rokem +80

    According to the book "Shadows of the Titanic", within 10 years, of the 700 survivors of the Titanic, half were dead, either from PTSD induced suicides or freak accidents (a piano was dropped on one of them).

    • @paleofolk
      @paleofolk Před rokem +3

      so that explains the falling piano gag

    • @The_Dudester
      @The_Dudester Před rokem +10

      @@paleofolk Back in the day, 100 or more years ago, there were no real elevators. Staircases were too narrow and too flimsily built to handle 500+ pounds, so, a makeshift crane would be built on the roof, then workers would use ropes to try and lift a piano into a 2nd or 3rd floor window. A LOT of accidents happened.

    • @paleofolk
      @paleofolk Před rokem +1

      @@The_Dudester i can tell

    • @Aml-dr5oz
      @Aml-dr5oz Před rokem +5

      final destination thing?

    • @ciberdude611
      @ciberdude611 Před rokem +9

      Survivor guilt. People who missed or changed their flights on 9/11 developed the same kind of PTSD.

  • @ronfehr7899
    @ronfehr7899 Před rokem +33

    The incident happened in 1912, so all the survivors are gone by now.
    Jack and Rose were fictional characters of course. Their characters were used in order that the audience could have an emotional connection to the tragedy.

    • @susanb4213
      @susanb4213 Před rokem

      Amazing story, my husband's grandmother was 14 years old and her family had arranged for her to join other family members in America, via the SECOND voyage of the Titanic.. Obviously, she didn't make that particular journey. She came over a bit later on another ship. Thank goodness for my daughters she wasn't on that first voyage, because she would have been in steerage. She died in 2000 at the age of 102!

    • @azazello1784
      @azazello1784 Před rokem

      Yeah except that Jack was a poor doofus.

    • @Criswlog
      @Criswlog Před měsícem

      It is true that Jack and Rose were fictional but that does not mean that many women lost their boyfriends, perhaps similar to Jack and Rouse.

  • @stefanfeyle1096
    @stefanfeyle1096 Před rokem +88

    At the time of the shooting of TITANIC, there where only 4 submarines that could dive deep enough. And the Russian exploration ship Keldysh, that's shown in the movie was the only one that had two on board. So they could film one from the other one. Whenever you see both submarines, it's a miniature shot in the studio.

    • @RCassinello
      @RCassinello Před rokem +1

      An even simpler trick to spot real from model footage is the colour. The model shots are all blue, but the real wreck shots are all green.

  • @redbaron779
    @redbaron779 Před rokem +7

    46:49 she was not going back one last time. She was going home; because she died in her sleep. Since all of the people she saw near the stairwell were those who died in its sinking.

  • @pureserenity524
    @pureserenity524 Před rokem +15

    19:43 Kate Winslet, (the actress who played Rose), was 20 and 21 during the nine months of filming. Leo was a year older. So, they were both older than 18 for this scene.

  • @April-lp7pp
    @April-lp7pp Před rokem +4

    😂 Exactly what my mom screamed in the theater,
    "She closed her eyes?!"

  • @TrippingHawk
    @TrippingHawk Před rokem +15

    I saw this movie opening night and about 6-7 times in its theatrical run. Bought the VHS, DVD, Blu Ray, caught every theatrical re-release and I STILL CRY EVERY GODDAMN TIME 😂

  • @Shawn_Dark_Heart
    @Shawn_Dark_Heart Před rokem +55

    Titanic THIS MOVIE IS AMAZING!!! I love watching it! Jack and Rose, even though they are not real people and never were, feel so realistic and the effects and clothing and decoration they used in this movie makes it feel like I’m actually on the titanic with them! The flooding and sinking scenes were AMAZING and for a 1997 movie, I thought I was watching something from the future. This movie is a must-watch, and there is no wonder why it won so many awards, because it is most definitely the best movie this world has ever known. I also cannot think of anyone else to play Jack and Rose than Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet. They both did an absolutely awesome job and fit in very well with their roles, and the directors picked their entire cast very wisely. ❤

    • @christopherazzato7680
      @christopherazzato7680 Před rokem +3

      I couldnt imagine being on the ship out in the ocean when the lights went out

    • @Shawn_Dark_Heart
      @Shawn_Dark_Heart Před rokem +4

      @@christopherazzato7680 word me to bro this is why I don't do cruises because anything can happen

    • @realsies9387
      @realsies9387 Před rokem +1

      I wouldn’t go as far as saying it’s the best movie this world has seen but it’s pretty good.

    • @AL-fl4jk
      @AL-fl4jk Před rokem +2

      @@Shawn_Dark_HeartTHIS

    • @user-gs3yf7dv8r
      @user-gs3yf7dv8r Před rokem

      Just because it is popular to call this movie best for people without their opinion

  • @leosarmiento4823
    @leosarmiento4823 Před rokem +34

    The technology existed, and was used, to send a team to visit the Titanic, and subsequently film scenes for the movie. So, the remains of the Titanic, and the submersibles utilized, are the real deal.

    • @saschatrumper
      @saschatrumper Před rokem +1

      Not all scenes. The safe recovery was staged for example

  • @saschatrumper
    @saschatrumper Před rokem +46

    Some clarification:
    In the early 1900s safety measures were way different. It was believed the north atlantic routes were busy by traffic. So in case of emergency lifeboats were supposed to transfer people from one ship to another, that came to rescue. Lifeboats were not meant to harbor all passengers at the same time. So there was a list of required lifeboat capacity by ship size. But titanic already was 4 times bigger than the biggest ship size on that list, which was long not updated.
    So in a sense titanic had even more than enough lifeboats than required.
    Modern measures to accomandate enough space for every passenger in lifeboats is just because of titanic in the first place. Safety measures were intensively reformed after that incident.
    The captain knew of the dangers of ice in april. So he extended the route further south. There was no need to slow down. And even at full speed titanic was comparatively slow to their competitors.
    To the straight head on collision theory: yeah, titanic might have been afloat on a head on collision. But it would have meant certain death of crew located in the bow. And big damage and revenue loss. It was simply no sensible option, just by the fact no one could have ever imagined the sinking after trying to avoid a collision. Even you - i guess you would try every time to avoid a car crash.
    The Titanic disaster is very complex. And sure enough it is a chain of unlucky circumstances.
    No one really did anything wrong. All they did was to their best knowledge. The rules and routines simply had to be rewritten. To our standpoint the actions then seem very bold. But to them it was all they had learned to do.
    The boats were empty simply because the passengers didnt want to leave the warm, lit, safe ship. And if they had waited to fill the boats, they couldnt even had lowered all of them. Even as they did in the night the last boat hadnt been properly deployed.
    It is all a matter of perspective.
    Greetz

    • @Alte.Kameraden
      @Alte.Kameraden Před rokem +7

      Thanks, a lot of people have major misconceptions about Titanic. There has been a lot of Classist, and anti Capitalist Propaganda weaved into the Narrative. Tropes which are sadly deeply ingrained into people's psyche that they don't even realize it. I mean how many times do you hear "It isn't personal it's just business." A trope so deeply ingrained no one questions it despite being Hollywood's longest running trope. Titanic it started generations ago. Some of it was part of a massive smear campaign against the White Star Line and Bruce Ismay personally. Which perpetuated into myths.

    • @IndependentConversations
      @IndependentConversations Před rokem

      I respectfully disagree. They're was a golden rule to have lifeboats for the number of passengers. However, titanic makers purposely only filled the boat with the bare minimum amount because they didn't want the image clattered with lifeboats.
      Also, the other fatal flaw of titanic was that the crew was not trained on evacuation for this ship. How else do you explain why some boats had 12 people when they were built literally for 70 men weight each.

    • @saschatrumper
      @saschatrumper Před rokem +2

      @IndependentConversations they fulfilled legal regulations. They didn't need to take more boats, so they chose not to. It's that simple. Despite they actually did take more boats than required. It's a matter of what is "enough". Certainly not enough to evacuate every person at the same time. But that wasn't the interpretation back then.
      Why the boats weren't full I fully described in my last paragraph.

    • @Alte.Kameraden
      @Alte.Kameraden Před rokem +5

      @@IndependentConversations You basically just repeating Titanic Myths as "fact." Just about every Titanic Historian would vomit in your general direction.
      I bet you believe that they locked passengers deep inside the ship as well. *Winks*
      That being said the Titanic actually had more than the bare minimum Life Boats.... so... you're quite wrong there.
      Secondly, Life boats were considered a last resort historically. There are a number of horrific disasters involving life boats in which boats were mashed up against coastal reefs with large loses of life, most notably White Star Line's first major maritime disaster the sinking of the Atlantic which saw a percentage lose of life even higher than Titanic, she ran a ground in rough seas and all attempts to send out life boats ended up in the deaths of all those on board the boats.
      Policies at the time dictated Life Boats were for ferrying passengers from one ship to another, or to shore, not to be a safe haven for all those on board. There were few ships at the time that had enough life boats for all on board. Even today, most cruise ships do not, substituting most of their life boats for inflatables, which take far longer to deploy than loading on boats.
      In most cases even today the 'ship' itself is the life boat and avoiding disasters all together, being the most reliable means of safety.
      About the crew, most of the crew were experienced White Star Line personnel, many of which had already served on the Olympic, and other larger White Star ships like the Big Four, which were very similar in design ships. So I'd say that argument doesn't hold that much water. For the boats not being loaded to capacity, it has more to do with passengers not wanting to get on the boats. There are plenty of accounts from crew early on that they couldn't get people to willingly go onto the life boats. For the sake of time many boats were launched not to capacity so they could at least get those who were willing off the ship, not until it became more obvious the ship was sinking did passengers start to realize the danger. This is why the boats early on were so lightly filled but later on were quite full. Even then the crew didn't get all the boats off the ship. The two collapsible didn't make it for example, with one of them being overturned and the other floating right off the deck as the ship sank out from underneath it. This also implies even if the Titanic had more life boats it wouldn't of made a difference at all. Definitely for how much Titanic was listing.
      Historically sinking's like Titanic saw large loses of life. Titanic isn't even the highest death toll. Even after the Titanic. It has little to do with LIFE BOATS, or TRAINING more so than circumstance. Though there have been some embarrassing crews in the past, sometimes fleeing abandoning passengers in a very unprofessional manner, but not Titanic... I know a shock. A lot of them even battles in the depths of the hull with the pumps trying to slow down the sinking as much as possible. The performance was excellent in short when compared to many historical examples.

    • @PowerDiva
      @PowerDiva Před rokem +2

      Hitting the iceberg head on might have kept it from sinking.... key word might. That is a theory and it may or may not have worked. But the automatic instinct then and probably in most cases now.... would be to avoid it all together if you can. That is what they were trained to do so that is what they tried to do. Unfortunately, they were not able to.

  • @diisomoto
    @diisomoto Před rokem +23

    There's great significance in Rose having the Heart of the Ocean at the end and then deciding to throw it into the water. Remember, when Rose reaches America, she's without the financial support of her fiance, without her mother, and without Jack. She had the necklace all those years but never needed to exploit it for its riches. In seeing the photos at the end, she managed to survive and live a fulfilled life the way she wanted to. Therefore, in throwing it into the ocean, she's honoring the memory of Jack because she realizes that the greatest gift she possesses is the life that Jack helped her achieve and it was never about the necklace or the wealth.

    • @demetriusreynolds8178
      @demetriusreynolds8178 Před rokem +3

      Although that may have been the point, couldn’t she have given it to her kids or granddaughter because her being on the ship in the ocean above titanic was a coincidence that she didn’t plan for so that ruins that scene for me.
      Plus I found rose and her mom to be just as much as a villain as the iceberg. Everyone hates cal but he did watch his fiancé spend 2 days with a guy she just met partying, drawing her naked and sleeping with him. Cal was humiliated, embarrassed and hurt
      Rose didn’t love cal and only agreed to marriage to save her mom but Cal didn’t know any of this so that makes him a victim regardless of his personality

    • @JoshuaBloom01
      @JoshuaBloom01 Před rokem +9

      ​@@demetriusreynolds8178The Heart of the Ocean would have been way too famous for Rose or her family to ever sell, so keeping it served no purpose. Throwing it away was symbolic of letting go of the pain and trauma of the sinking. As for Call being innocent, to an extent I can see your point, but he was an awful human being and a coward, his death by his own hand proved that. He also was very much a product of the times; a businessman with a trophy wife. I agree that Rose's mother was evil too, she set her daughter up just so she could keep living a certain lifestyle, but Rose was just a pawn in her mothers game. Through the movie, we learn that Rose was only going along with it because age felt that she had no other option. It wasn't until she met Jack with his carefree, do anything he wants way of life that so intoxicated Rose because that's all she wanted in her life.

    • @kishuarishadi1211
      @kishuarishadi1211 Před rokem +2

      She said it whenever i intend to sail it i thought about cal and somehow i always manage tp survive it without sailing it(his help)

    • @sujugothkitten
      @sujugothkitten Před rokem +4

      ​@@demetriusreynolds8178are you really defending an abuser?

    • @demetriusreynolds8178
      @demetriusreynolds8178 Před rokem

      @@sujugothkitten are you really defending a liar, manipulator and cheater. I’m not saying what cal did was right but rose did was worse. She needs to be held accountable for her actions just like he does but let me guess, it’s always the man’s fault

  • @GoddessOfWhatnot
    @GoddessOfWhatnot Před rokem +31

    You’re so right about how dark it must have been. Apparently there was no moon light that night, and the one life boat that came back didn’t actually have flashlights/torches like the movie depicts… they had to search for survivors mainly by sound 🤯

    • @Chris-vk2zw
      @Chris-vk2zw Před rokem

      Not just that, passengers couldn't see from front to rear because of the minute deck illumination. That may explain why some boat stations were crowded with passengers while others were sparse. Then if you looked over the side, you couldn't see the water level. To the passengers, it probably looked like everything was at even keel until the last 10 minutes.

    • @RCassinello
      @RCassinello Před rokem +1

      Even before the lights went out, Titanic would have been much darker. Cameron used artistic liberty to add lighting to parts of the ship that was never there, and also had a policy of "all windows lit" as if at 11:40pm every single light on the ship was switched on and stayed on.
      In reality, only about 30% of the ship would have been lit at a fairly bright yellow colour, and as steam dwindled during the sinking, the lights that still worked gradually faded to a dull red before going off completely.

  • @bbtank3000
    @bbtank3000 Před rokem +20

    It's one of those movies that leaves you feeling empty inside when it ends....like you need to drop all responsibilities and just live life. I was a little shocked when you were wondering why she dropped the diamond in the ocean. Sure, she could've setup her granddaughter with immeasurable wealth, but in the context of this story, it was basically "blood money". The diamond, while beautiful and valuable, was a ball and chain meant to lock her into a marriage that she didn't want.

    • @mem1701movies
      @mem1701movies Před rokem +2

      Still..it was stupid

    • @bonniebarlow4939
      @bonniebarlow4939 Před rokem +2

      All the young reactors I've seen react to this movie are perplexed as to why someone would throw away the diamond, with it being so valuable. A difference in generations, I think. Older folks get that it had symbolic value, but even though she had it all along, the point is that life is best lived through effort and perseverance and accomplishing things on one's own - a diamond is a "rock" we put value on. Rose could have used it any time, but chose to live her life with integrity and sought adventure.

    • @bbtank3000
      @bbtank3000 Před rokem

      @@bonniebarlow4939 Exactly. Well said. I didn't want to come out and say it, but it seems to be a generational divide.

  • @imthewolf1
    @imthewolf1 Před rokem +5

    My ex wife's grandmother(when she was 5yrs old) and her mother was supposed to go on the Titanic, but missed the boat. Thankfully

  • @dcemerald70
    @dcemerald70 Před rokem +9

    Eight to nine years ago, I was a part of the cast of Titanic the musical. As we rehearsed and got really into our characters, we not only could understand them, but feel the traumatic emotion that they felt. I guarantee you that there was so much emotional moments that we the cast and the audience could not help but feel the empathy of everyone involved in this historical and tragical story. Now every time I watch this film, my heart sinks as I watch tragically the sinking of Titanic.
    👩🏻‍🦰👱🏻‍♂️🚢🌊💙💔😭

  • @TechnologicallyTechnical
    @TechnologicallyTechnical Před rokem +24

    A few fact checks: Titanic wasn't going full speed when she struck the berg, she was going at her regular cruising speed of 21 knots (her max speed was 23 knots). The conversation between Captain Smith and Ismay about making headlines, while loosely based on a conversation overhead by a passenger, was largely fabricated to heighten the drama. Titanic wasn't the fastest ship at the time, nor was she designed to be. The Lusitania, built 5 years earlier, had a maximum speed of 25 knots, and White Star had no intention of beating that record, so instead they focused on size and luxury for Titanic. There were no speed records that Titanic could break.
    The reason many boats weren't loaded was because, for a while, many passengers weren't convinced that the problem was serious and felt safer on the ship than on small boats out in the cold, and so the officers had difficulty convincing passengers to enter the boats, particularly during the earlier stages of the sinking. Time was of the essence and they had to go ahead with lowering the boats.
    The scene with the officer who shoots two passengers and then himself is also based on unconfirmed rumors. That officer (William Murdoch) was responsible for loading about 300 of the 705 survivors onto boats, so although the film depicts him in a relatively negative light, he was arguably the biggest hero of the night (the family of the officer was also very upset with the depiction and director James Cameron made a public apology for the portrayal).
    The suction of the ship apparently wasn't very strong, according to the Chief Baker who rode the back of the ship as it went down "like an elevator". According to him, he didn't even get his hair wet (he was also incredibly drunk, so 🤷‍♂)

    • @sirwalterii_2nd
      @sirwalterii_2nd Před rokem

      Actually the 2nd officer Charles Lightoller (the highest ranking officer to survive) was sucked down but the only reason he lived. is because a boiler exploded underwater which forced him to the surface. But to be fair the 3rd officer has stated he doesn't know how boilers would have exploded because he does not think there would have been any steam generated by then. But he thinks the gunshors that were heard we not gunshots but boilers exploding. But this is Lightollers account. It appears the suction was strong when the entire ship was submerged and Lightoller was trying to swim away from Tiranic when he was sucked down. EDIT: Lightoller is the officer who brandished a an empty revolver when he order a bunch of male passengers and some crewmen out of a lifeboat.

    • @sirwalterii_2nd
      @sirwalterii_2nd Před rokem

      I forgot to mention James Cameron did a special 25 years after Titanic was in theaters and did new analysis about the sinking. The scene where the back of the ship is in the air and falls back down crushing people now seems inaccurate. In their tests you had the stern went full verticle and sink without crashing back down into the water and they have tests where the stern did come out of the water and crash back down but the stern was not completely vertical. They never had the stern going full verticle and crashing back down during an entire sequence like the movie depicted.
      czcams.com/video/1jXHFEy-ibc/video.html

    • @TechnologicallyTechnical
      @TechnologicallyTechnical Před rokem +1

      @@sirwalterii_2nd Yes, Lightoller was pushed against the grating to a ventilation shaft as water started pouring down it, and a moment later was pushed away by a rush of air from the same shaft. That's a very unique instance, though, and is unrelated to the suction of the stern section as it lowered into the water.

    • @sirwalterii_2nd
      @sirwalterii_2nd Před rokem

      @@TechnologicallyTechnical from what I've heard he was on board helping passengers. He was sucked down. These are his words. And as I said he was in the water, trying to swim away and couldn't. If I remember correctly he jumped into the water because he thought he had better odds at survival than trying to deal with other people.

    • @TechnologicallyTechnical
      @TechnologicallyTechnical Před rokem +1

      @@sirwalterii_2nd I know exactly where he was. He was on the roof of the navigating bridge, which was directly in front of a large ventilation trunk, which is what he got stuck against as water began pouring down it. This is toward the front of the ship.

  • @joevaldez6457
    @joevaldez6457 Před rokem +20

    Terrific video, Blue. Sandra Bullock played a single mom in a movie called _Hope Floats_ and the nine-year-old who played her daughter had to cry on cue. Bullock was so impressed that she asked the kid, Mae Whitman, how she did it. Whitman told Bullock that she thought about the musicians playing on the deck of the _Titanic_ in this movie. Your waterworks reminded me of that.

  • @coldflamebluedragon196
    @coldflamebluedragon196 Před rokem +46

    The soundtrack of this movie is wonderful. It was James Cameron who drew the picture of Rose

  • @cornsyrup5041
    @cornsyrup5041 Před rokem +4

    Fun fact: The Titanic took about 2 hr and 45 mins to sink and when the ship goes completely underwater the time stamp of the movie is 2hr45min. Idk if that was intentional but even if not just a cool little detail. Also one of my fav. Movies!

  • @mcbeezee2120
    @mcbeezee2120 Před rokem +9

    Her trip back to the Titanic in the final moments of the film, are perhaps the most fulfilling ending to a movie.

  • @JoePlett
    @JoePlett Před rokem +23

    James Cameron is a MASTER storyteller. And he really is into oceanography..... but if you don't like the ocean, you DEFINITELY don't want to watch The Abyss! 😁

    • @QuayNemSorr
      @QuayNemSorr Před rokem +4

      The Abyss is great. Directors cut is mandatory though!

  • @blackpowder99
    @blackpowder99 Před rokem +18

    Jack and Rose might not have been based on real people, but there were fifteen hundred real people who had an infinite amount of stories left untold❤🙏

    • @Criswlog
      @Criswlog Před měsícem

      It's true, like Rouse, many women lost the love of their life on the Titanic:(

  • @stevenmoralesjr5785
    @stevenmoralesjr5785 Před rokem +5

    The best three hour film in cinematic history🎥🎬🚢

    • @joshuacampbell7493
      @joshuacampbell7493 Před rokem +1

      Actually it's a four hour movie.

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Před rokem +1

      Disagree… it was a well made film. James Cameron did a great job on it, but there are other films that are 3 hours long that are better

    • @stevenmoralesjr5785
      @stevenmoralesjr5785 Před rokem +1

      @@joshuacampbell7493it makes sense with a coda, Yes, you absolutely right😊

    • @stevenmoralesjr5785
      @stevenmoralesjr5785 Před rokem

      @@nsasupporter7557 yup, soon next month Oppenheimer another 3 hour movie i’m really excited about!

    • @warrengday
      @warrengday Před rokem +1

      @@joshuacampbell7493 3 hrs plus 1/4 hr of credits

  • @patrickcromwell7554
    @patrickcromwell7554 Před rokem +10

    Except that He's NOT WRONG. Once the hundreds of people SEE that ONE boat, they'll swarm it and bring it down. He's being a coward, yes. But he's NOT WRONG. We already saw one person so hysterical that he was drowning rose rather than try to stay afloat with her help. Imagine what hundreds of people would do to one tiny life boat.

    • @Lady-Seashell-Bikini
      @Lady-Seashell-Bikini Před rokem

      He's not necessarily being a coward. He is an officer in charge of the lives on that lifeboat. Now, if he could get together with another lifeboat with room, he could have done like that other officer and coordinated a rescue, but we have no idea what the situation was.
      Also, she was wrong about swimming to the boats and Jack and Rose "taking turns". You cannot take turns keeping dry, and if they had, they would have been repeatedly soaked in freezing water and exposed to freezing air, killing them BOTH. That's not even mentioning the energy they would have wasted by lifting themselves on the panel multiple times.
      Sorry, but this is a peeve of mine. They weren't using the panel to float, but to keep out of the water.

    • @patrickcromwell7554
      @patrickcromwell7554 Před rokem

      @@Lady-Seashell-Bikini What exactly do you mean "we have no idea what the situation was."?? The situation is extremely clear. The lifeboats left at half and in some cases less than half capacity. The boat with the women had ample room to accomodate several more people. As stated the life boats held up to 20 or 30 people each. The one in question barely had a dozen women and the one officer. So, yes, he was being a coward. Also the other life boats were floating nearby. That's just standard procedure in order to be rescued as easily as possible. He could very easily have talked to one of the other life boats and coordinated a rescue by transferring people into one boat and then getting several others to pick up people in the water. THAT was the situation. Panic turned them into cowards and idiots. Also your peeve about swimming to the boats??? How long have you been wanting to get that off your chest. I didn't mention it once yet you include it in response to me.

  • @digitaladventurer2142
    @digitaladventurer2142 Před rokem +3

    "That was so much potential fortune for your daughter" which is exactly why she dropped it. Rose knew money in large amounts is more trouble than it's worth. One of the big things about this movie is it shows that just because you have money doesn't mean your gonna be happy.

  • @shelbyvillerules9962
    @shelbyvillerules9962 Před rokem +5

    James Cameron and a team of experts actually came to the conclusion that had there been more lifeboats on board they’d have probably been more of a hinderance than anything else, considering how long each one took to prep and how fast the ship sank.

  • @BDRmongoose
    @BDRmongoose Před rokem +2

    "SO SAD and BEAUTIFUL" I agree. Thanks for sharing yourself with all of us.

  • @brayantrejo5595
    @brayantrejo5595 Před rokem +1

    Thank you so much for reacting to this, and crying just as much as I did. I always felt like people judged me because I was so emotional when I first watched this movie with my friends !! I believe I cried the worst when the old couple, and the single mother of 2 accepted their fate on screen. 🥺

  • @ronfehr7899
    @ronfehr7899 Před rokem +9

    I guess certain exceptions had to be made for the sake of being able to make the movie. There needed to be some kind if lighting available so that the audience could see the events taking place.
    The lights in the ship actually stayed on for quite a long time, as those working down below struggled to keep them on. None of the crew from that area of the ship survived.

  • @jordantiegs1673
    @jordantiegs1673 Před rokem +4

    i’ve studied this shipwreck and the stories that go with it for nearly 20 years and seen this movie countless times and this reaction video brought me right back to the first time i ever saw it. captures the emotion i felt when i first saw it perfectly. the final scene when her spirit goes back to titanic to be with the one she loves still gets me. great job on this video and thanks for uploading!

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 Před rokem +6

    My best friend and I took our girlfriends to see this in theaters...the night before we went on a cruise. YEP, can't make that up. Needless to say we paid VERY close attention to the emergency drills. In light of the recent incident regarding the Titanic, the irony is painfully...deep. There are so many documentaries and movies, there's no need to go down and see. Rest in Peace.

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Před rokem +3

      I was 10 when it first came out in 1997 and I’ll never forget how big it was. It came out in December of that year so it was during winter break when we were off from school. But when we got back to school, everybody was talking about it especially the girls… they were saying “did you see it?! Did you see it?!”

  • @patrickcromwell7554
    @patrickcromwell7554 Před rokem +12

    I actually bought this on VHS back in 1998 and it was quite possibly the first movie ever that I bought without ever having seen it first. Normally I would only ever buy movies I would have been SURE to want to watch more than once. But this one I just picked up, went home and watched the two VHS tapes. When DVD's became common, I never switched over like I did for many of my other tapes.

  • @ganjaman42018
    @ganjaman42018 Před rokem +3

    As man/human this gets me so sad every time. Than you for reacting to this movie . You have gained a subscriber 👍🏻

  • @farteater7639
    @farteater7639 Před rokem +2

    I'm Japanese, but this movie is one of the most heartwarming movies I've ever seen...maybe number one or number two. I think it's because I've experienced such a passionate and life-long love.
    However, Titanic is a wonderful film that moves everyone, although there may be differences in the degree of excitement. I've seen it several times myself, but I try to leave at least three years between viewings, because I don't want the impression to fade away.
    Also, I tend to cry a lot when I see other people crying, so if you are as tearful as Trixy Blue, I cried a lot too. I think values are important.There are people who react with laughter during emotional scenes (probably to hide their embarrassment), but it makes me not want to continue watching the quintessence.

  •  Před rokem +7

    Trixy's reaction is exactly what happened in the theater the two times I watched this movie on full packed matinnes on the biggest of cinema auditoriums, but the effect was way more amplified since one girl's crying would chain affect the other girls crying in the neighboring seats. 😂

  • @jebcalp5703
    @jebcalp5703 Před rokem +9

    Have you ever heard the saying that, "Truth is Stranger than Fiction?" Well the most striking premonition about the TItanic is a novel written in 1898 by Morgan Robertson, it is called, "Futility," in it an imaginary ship called the Titan sets sail from England to New York when it hits an iceberg and sinks. The Titan's dimensions, top speed, the number of lifeboats are almost identical to the Titanic, Futility even predicts exactly where the iceberg would hit.

    • @RenaissanceEarCandy
      @RenaissanceEarCandy Před rokem +1

      What strikes me about that is Robertson lived until 1915 - he lived to see his novella eerily made real.

  • @tnays17
    @tnays17 Před rokem +3

    Leonardo DiCaprio was forever fine and I’ll be forever pissed to know he never got Oscar nominated for Titanic but jokes on them cuz he collected a total of $40 million dollars off the backend. Also your reaction video is how I felt my whole life when watching Titanic.

  • @Auburndale-g4s
    @Auburndale-g4s Před rokem +2

    The last titanic survivor was only a few months old when the titanic went down. Her name was Millvena Dean and she was such a sweet person and she passed away like in 2011 I believe but I might be wrong about that.

  • @martinbraun1211
    @martinbraun1211 Před rokem +6

    I don't know what to think of the timing!? 🤔

  • @Texy88
    @Texy88 Před rokem +8

    I caught this in IMAX 3D back in February 2023 when it was given a cinematic re-release to commemorate the film's twenty-fifth anniversary. That was an unforgettable experience.

  • @CaprinaLive
    @CaprinaLive Před rokem +6

    The guy who looks at Rose as they are holding onto the back of the ship is actually nod a real survivor who did exactly that. His name was Charles Joughin, his Titanic story is amazing and we'll worth looking up.

  • @rocketgroot4311
    @rocketgroot4311 Před rokem +2

    *this movie's pacing is immaculate*
    *The chaos slowly ensues after the iceberg hits*
    *And Little by little you see how "distinguished" passengers ravel into anarchy in an attempt to live*
    *Guards who go from respectfully treating the higher class from threatening to shoot anyone outta line*

  • @petrinajc
    @petrinajc Před rokem +3

    One survivor said they could never attend a sports event afterwards because the crowd noise reminded them of the people in the water crying for help. So you can image how loud it was.

  • @hinahanta
    @hinahanta Před rokem +10

    17:02, this scene is very good, he improvised this scene, Kate Winslet did not know this was about to happen, the fear on her face was real.

  • @asteven8
    @asteven8 Před rokem +3

    I was 13 when I saw this in the theater. What got to me then and still does is that reportedly, the lower sections of the Titanic were like a maze. So there were some third class passengers, especially when in a panicked state, who never stood a chance of getting successfully above deck and on a lifeboat. In one of the scenes, in the background, you see an Asian couple trying to quickly translate a sign written in English.
    And you're the first person to point out how dark it would've been as all this happened. I never thought of the darkness. Sitting in a lifeboat, listening to hundreds of people cry out for help and then those voices begin dying off. Gives me chills just thinking about it.

  • @gokulgopan4397
    @gokulgopan4397 Před rokem +2

    A few fact checks:
    The 3rd class weren't locked as portrayed.
    The number of lifeboats were based on the ship's size. Board of Trade regulations weren't updated. Legally Titanic had 4 additional.
    The ship wasn't on her top speed. She was on her regular cruising speed that night.
    Ismay-Smith conversation was overly dramatic and based of one of the myths spread. The convo did happen but context was different. He was excited about Titanic's perfomance and wanted to have a speed test to see if Titanic could outperform Olympic. Titanic was already doing better than Olympic and he found from the perfomance reports that Titanic would reach New York earlier than planned. The Olympic class of ships was Ismay's idea. He knew they can't compete on speed, so he wanted luxury. So it's a contradiction.
    Also Ismay didn't sneak into a lifeboat. He helped in evacuation and when no one where left, Murdoch let him in. Murdoch let men in if no women or children were left.
    Murdoch's portrayal was wrong. Made him in a negative light. He was an actual hero that night. Helped load a lot of people. James Cameron later apologized to his family.
    Sinking was accurate based on the theories at the time. But new studies proved Titanic sank a bit differently. She wasn't that much slanted and the breakup was gradual, not violent.
    And of course the lighting. It was really dark. It's more of a creative decision.

    • @The1Music2MyEars
      @The1Music2MyEars Před rokem +1

      There were a few locked gates, but not all and only because they were never unlocked once the emergency started. Even so, having a few locked gates forced third class passengers to even less exits and that chokehold would only delay them arriving on deck, by which most of the lifeboats were sadly gone.

  • @jarekgunther
    @jarekgunther Před rokem +7

    Honestly though, the ship splitting is one of the most visually stunning moments in cinema. The music, the visuals, the tension; it's perfect.

  • @brandibastian4193
    @brandibastian4193 Před rokem +1

    as Sansa said on GoT she knew Joffrey would make it back from the battle of the black water 'the worst ones always survive'

  • @joshuakruty6967
    @joshuakruty6967 Před rokem +3

    Milvina dean was 6 month's old and passed away in 2009. Idk why younger people think things are only possible in their time. They have no idea how effective practical effects are in combination with digital. Delamination of the carbon fiber pressure chamber is common sense. Operated with a game controller isn't a problem. The pressure chamber is everything. Designing it to carry 5 people not making it spherical. 6 year's old dozens of dives it was only a matter of time. There's a reason alvin from the 60s is still in use today.

  • @davidsanches9714
    @davidsanches9714 Před rokem +2

    I watched Titanic in 1997. This is the most legendary film in the history of cinema!

  • @jozupiwa883
    @jozupiwa883 Před rokem +6

    In fact, the submersible that went to see the wreckage of the Titanic imploded with a huge force that disintegrated the bodies instantly and they didn't even realize they were about to die. It wasn't death by asphyxiation. They didn't even feel it.

  • @LITTLEJET
    @LITTLEJET Před rokem +2

    37:03 Me and my dad laughed because we didn't know how bad it actually was until now I CANNOT stop crying at it!

  • @ronfehr7899
    @ronfehr7899 Před rokem +12

    I liked the way you approached certain events early on in the movie. Other reactors seemed to get so invested in the story right away, but you looked at things differently, knowing what they were going to face.
    My favorite example of this was when you felt sorrow for Jack winning the tickets in the poker game. You referred to it as the saddest victory you ever saw, or something to that effect.
    By the way, their getting on the boat at the last moment could never have happened. Passengers needed to be on the ship well in advance of it setting sail. And I don't think there was an actual tavern near where the ship was docked.

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 Před rokem +2

    Winner of 11 Oscars including Best Picture!
    Its one of the highest grossing movie of all time, $2.2 billion dollars.

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Před rokem +1

      Yes, but it lost out to best actor and actress to “As Good as it Gets.” Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt both won best actor and actress for that movie

  • @veggiesarefruits
    @veggiesarefruits Před rokem +4

    People are so stupid about the door thing. It wasn't about ROOM, it was about BUOYANCY! The door would've sunk with two people on it.

  • @anniesmolkin7685
    @anniesmolkin7685 Před rokem +1

    There is no answer to "Why" people do the things they do in a situation like this its a true account of how people don't think rationally when faced with this kind of horrific situation some may want to believe that they need their luggage for who knows why and others will jump out because they just can't face things the sheer mental exhaustion they must have had to endure . Thank you for reaction :)

  • @EduardoGarcia386
    @EduardoGarcia386 Před rokem +5

    James Cameron doesn't do what James Cameron does for James Cameron. James Cameron does what James Cameron does because James Cameron is James Cameron!

  • @user-nt6qb5cm7c
    @user-nt6qb5cm7c Před rokem +1

    Jack said "no caviar" because in deleted scene Rose had said that she hadn't liked it ever.

  • @Endlesshadowsxoxo
    @Endlesshadowsxoxo Před rokem +6

    This movie never fails to make me sob like a baby 😭

  • @MARS0l
    @MARS0l Před rokem +2

    Had to subscribe. You reacted to three of my fav movies of all time. The Little Mermaid, Batman Returns and now Titanic. ❤️

  • @jezzluck
    @jezzluck Před rokem +3

    James Cameron, the director of the movie, started a professional expedition to the Titanic in order to capture footage of the wreck and learn about it's histories. Most of the wreck footage, even the ones showing the subs at the beginning are real as far as i read. It's save to say Cameron did his research and the film is quite accurate historic wise, beside the lovestory writen for the movie.

  • @Vixsufil
    @Vixsufil Před rokem +2

    The shots of the titanic in the beginning is actual footage of the real titanic

  • @DarthLoki
    @DarthLoki Před rokem +6

    So many tragic stories surround this ship. The captain, who incidentally looked exactly like the man who played him here, was making his final voyage. He had never allowed anything or anyone to change his mind in regards to how to run his ship ... until this time when he was convinced of making headlines for the speed. It is scarily painful just how much of this movie was actually based in reality. And even sadder when we can look back now and see just how much of it was preventable.
    This is your best reaction video yet! I hope you will make plans to react to A Man Called Otto with Tom Hanks.

  • @chloexelyse
    @chloexelyse Před 27 dny

    "She's not gonna jump is she? It's her favourite." DEADDD.

  • @blackpowder99
    @blackpowder99 Před rokem +5

    I was born in '71, and when I was in school Titanic fit in between the Abominable Snowman and Bigfoot in the library, until it was found '84 I think? So it was like discovering a UFO... Until I saw this movie...like Bill Paxton's character said "I finally got it"! I have plenty of tears left to shed😢❤

  • @Yngvarfo
    @Yngvarfo Před rokem +1

    33:38: He used a bench as a battering ram earlier, and there were several people helping him. Here it's just him and Rose, and they're not just fighting the door but the rushing water.

  • @tonyhaspra9416
    @tonyhaspra9416 Před rokem +6

    I really enjoyed watching this reaction. Actually some historical facts: Titanic was sinking 2 hours 40 minutes, and you mentioned the light during that night. Actually, there was no moonlight that night. There was just darkness and sky full of stars but no moonlight, so it was much darker than it's showed in the movie.

  • @WaffleCzar
    @WaffleCzar Před rokem +1

    The water temperature that night was -2C or 28F (seawater has a lower freezing point). These temperatures will cause cold shock the instant someone jumps in and incapacitation. If someone doesn’t die from hyperventilating, then in 1-2 minutes extremities go numb and in 10 minutes your own muscles will not respond to your will as body fluids congeal. Experienced swimmers will drown because you cannot move arms or legs enough to keep your head afloat. Life jackets at the time did not keep the heads of unconscious persons above water so losing consciousness almost always meant death. If one remained conscious, 20 minutes in hypothermia sets in and swimmers will be very confused and disoriented. 10-30 minutes after this, you slip unconscious.

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 Před rokem +3

    What a lot of people don't know is, while Jack is making his sketches. It's actually the director James Cameron hands himself doing them.

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Před rokem

      Thank you, I was just about to say that. James Cameron actually drew all of those pictures, not Leo. He already drew them before the movie started filming

  • @Jupiterblitz
    @Jupiterblitz Před rokem +1

    13:49 is one of the most astonishing things I've seen in the past years.
    Really incredible if I wouldn't have seen it with my own eyes.

  • @whattha_huh
    @whattha_huh Před rokem +8

    Imagine being the guy she married after the Titanic, you live your whole life and you die believing that you were happily married and loved. Only to find out your wife was actually thinking about the guy who had been dead for 84 years.

    • @Kayoss13212
      @Kayoss13212 Před rokem

      Unless they divorced 🤷🏻‍♂️ but I don’t remember if she did mention if she’s still married, divorced, or a widow.

    • @liamisaac1152
      @liamisaac1152 Před rokem +1

      There’s a tik tok of Rose’s “husband” waiting to meet her in the after life & then he sees that last scene and he’s just so shocked 😂😂 But also like what’s up the the servants still having to be servants in the afterlife? Lmao. My buddy and I were joking around asking why they still gotta work after death or were they just chilling in the afterlife but had to clock back in as soon as Rose died to open the door for her 😂😂😂

    • @rakdar1714
      @rakdar1714 Před rokem

      Maybe he was a widower. I hope so, at least

  • @blackbirdfilms1966
    @blackbirdfilms1966 Před rokem +1

    The reason it was bright during the lights out scene is so we the audience could see what was going on

  • @Buc2013
    @Buc2013 Před rokem +7

    Great Reaction!
    No lie, when you read all the stories from the lifeboats, there was indeed some passengers criticize for refusing to return to the site to pick up any survivors minutes after Titanic went under.
    Your actually right in a way about Titanic being cursed. A book was released 14 years before Titanic disaster mirroring some events. Days to hours before Titanic voyage several people express uneasiness like something wasn't right about it. Moments after her begining voyage and Titanic had a near collision with a steamer named New York. Years later, Titanic's older sister Olympic shook in the Atlantic, it was reported a underwater earthquake occurred. Olympic was several miles south from Titanic wreck.

  • @Dino-god69
    @Dino-god69 Před rokem +1

    Mr. Andrews is always the one that gets me. True hero.

  • @dravenheissel
    @dravenheissel Před rokem +4

    I saw the movie at the theater in 1998 (it was released in Spain in January 1998). And I saw it again at the theater on the night of April 14 to 15, 2012, on the 25th anniversary of the premiere, in the last session... and just coinciding with the centenary of the sinking, that is, I could say that I saw the sinking in real time 100 years later.

  • @DylRicho
    @DylRicho Před rokem +1

    37:30
    Right! There was no moon that night (it was only visible in the southern hemisphere), so the only light they had was from Titanic itself and any flashlights that people had. James Cameron decided to make the movie a little brighter so that people could see what was happening rather than have it historically accurate in terms of lighting conditions.

  • @Swissswoosher
    @Swissswoosher Před rokem +5

    I WAS WAITING FOR THIS!
    What an emotional rollercoaster

  • @ronfehr7899
    @ronfehr7899 Před rokem +2

    It was satisfying to see Rose make use of learning to "spit like a man."

  • @9709Nick
    @9709Nick Před rokem +4

    tbf, James Cameron is not only a movie director, he's a expert deep ocean explorer and an engineer. Man created and madehis own submarine to explore the depths ofthe sea, he knows a lot more of the ocean than many. That's why Avatr 2 was his ambition.

  • @Elixear
    @Elixear Před 9 měsíci +2

    Vous êtes bouleversante. Vous me faites fondre le coeur. Ca fait de la peine de vous voir ainsi souffrir avec les personnages aussi intensément. Mais en même temps, c'est adorable et tellement gratifiant de voir qu'il existe de vrais êtres humains si sensibles à la douleur des autres, même quand c'est du cinéma. Sachez-le, votre réaction à fleur de peau est très rare sur les réactions YT.