The sinking of the Titanic was one of the greatest tragedies in history more than a 1,517 lives were lost to the frozen waters it was a tragedy that shook the world in 1912 and left a lasting impression on all those who heard of the loss of that day. Many films have been made in 1943 Werner Klinger used the events as Nazi propaganda to discredit British and American capitalist dealings and glorify the bravery and selflessness of Germanic men. Than in 1953 Jean Negulesco made a very flawed and inaccurate take on the sinking of the RMS Titanic that held up for almost 44 as the best retelling of that doomed voyage. However, it was not until 1997 when James Cameron, one of Hollywood's most prominent directors, took on the difficult task of constructing a film about the Titanic that no one had ever seen before. Cameron was looking to create and epic sized film that, while true to the story, had a fictional romance between two passengers that gave audiences a look at life on that beautiful ship and showed them a love that like no other, a love that transcends time.
James Cameron's epic romance "TITANIC" is a film that defies all expectations with it's breathtaking scenery, it's beautiful set designs and it's fierce dedication to the story of its characters and the tragedy that ensues. Cameron has crafted films that push the very boundaries of special effects and Titanic is one of his films that is groundbreaking while still remaining old fashioned and entertaining enough for mainstream audiences both young and old. What makes this film so enjoyable and endearing is the fact that it does not patronize you; it does not make you feel like you are ignorant of the facts like most dramas based on real life do. Instead Titanic gives you the facts through the eyes of two individuals a young artist named Jack Dawson and a former rich society girl Rose DeWitt Bukater. The romance between them is not instant but slowly and surely takes unfolds in front of audiences, like a little child opening a present on Christmas, it's magical in every sense of the word and the film spreads it's magic on the audience making us feel like were flying high above the clouds with the birds. James Cameron's "TITANIC" succeeds on every level as a poignant and heartbreaking look at the lives lost on that, as a romance that stands the test of time and as a film that set standards for other films to follow.
Leonardo DiCaprio gives one of his most passionate performances in this film, DiCaprio best for being subtle and even-tempered but here he is wild, crazy and free which is a rare treat for audiences. DiCaprio does not try to impress you that is not what he is there to do no, he tries to make you believe he the character he is playing and he succeeds for the most part. But DiCaprio is only part of the team that helps make this film such a treat his other half in this picture, Kate Winslet, is another reason the films works because the chemistry between them is so strong that you almost don't believe that there actors playing parts. Winslet is fantastic and all around just amazing to watch onscreen the way she moves, the way she talks and acts is just phenomenal you feel like she belongs in that era and to convince the audience of this is a feat far more complicated than it seems. Winslet pulls it off without a single problem making her a remarkable sight and a force to reckon with. The rest of the cast including Billy Zane, Jonathan Hyde, Gloria Stuart, Kathy Bates, Bill Paxton and Victor Garbor are one of the best supporting casts that you will ever see in a film of this magnitude. They give the film such a sense of realism, a sense of right and wrong, good and evil. You see so many sides of a human being just from these characters stuck in this terrible situation. They do not just deliver on every note they blow you away.
"TITANIC" is a film that has amazingly stood the test of time it's been working it's magic on audiences for the last 13 years and will continue to work it's magic so long as there is a copy of this film out there. It is not just a testament of love transcending time it's also a bold statement of how humans can treat one another or how sometimes one person can make a difference in someone else life. "TITANIC" succeeds weather as a romance or as a disaster film, or as a true-life story of the lives lost on April 15, 1912.
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Titanic is a fictional story of a rich woman and a poor man on the Titanic who meet on the unsinkable ship perfect optimizer. Featuring spectacular special effects set amidst the backdrop of one ofthe most tragic events of the 20th Century, James Cameron'saward-winning TITANIC stands as one of the greatest Hollywoodspectaculars of all time. Beginning with an undersea expedition in the1990s, in which scuba divers are searching the sunken ship for lostrelics, a painting of young Rose DeWitt Bukater (Kate Winslet) isfound. This triggers a flashback to the young woman's story as ithappened on the doomed Titanic. Rose is a daughter of privilege on herway to be married to an arrogant but wealthy young man (Billy Zane).Despairing, Rose finds herself falling in love with Jack Dawson(Leonardo DiCaprio), a carefree and poor young artist who is alsoaboard. When the great ship strikes an iceberg and begins to sink, Roseand Jack have only each other as their world falls apart around them.
After its releasethe film received 48 nominations, andcelebrated 76 various wins and 11 Academy Awardsin 1998 for ...
You don't see the actual documentary of the events making loads of sponsors in the History channel do you? It did touch upon the racism a bit bit the filmmakers were cowards. How many people died? so what makes this contrived love story special? are their loss of love more important than the ones caged in the lower levels so rich folks can get a life boat?
Box-office receipts and awards mean nothing and is not a reflection of a film's quality--Transformers and Twilight made box-office history and awards are inaccurate (but admittedly Winslet did a good job as well as Leo). Remember when Penn always shunned the Oscars?
I'd rather have a movie that stays with you, bolder in scope and brilliant in reality, than see one movie that fools me into thinking that the world is all roses and that romance and love supercedes all. Love, romance and heart break happens everyday. A real tragedy happens once or twice in a generation.
Sorry, you are in the majority, but it still doesn't matter in the end. Glad you liked it, but I hated it. This is Cameron's worst movie ever.This movie is dumb and an insult to anyone who really survived the ordeal--an insult to the real people who died, an insult even to the story that one death is made to appear more important than others. (don't even try to bring up the heroism of Leo's character) Yes, I'll stick to history, why do you think I tossed my dvd of this movie?
wonder why they never made a different story about the politics of the ship? think about it...since it won't make money, not enough for them to make their money back...or so they thought.
A top Academy Award winner "dumb" and an "insult?" Don't think so. Why don't you read my review of this film?
Thanks for the comments anyway.
Yes, there was plenty of death and that was the whole point...and this boy's death was the focus? seriously, ever thought of why? That was the insult right there--a love story is so redundant--the filmmakers had no ambition. Instead of going for costumes, set designs and EFX, they should have gone the distance. There was an older Titanic movie that I liked more since it dealt with the people involved before and after the tragedy.
I guess this is one movie I would never be able to explain to you why it was an insult since you will just find ways to justify how good it was--Rhodes' review was pretty spot on, but I would rate it 2-2.5. A definitive movie about titanic would be RATED R and it would focus on the ship, crew and the political situation and aristocracy at the time. .a real movie about this tragedy would show the dark side of human nature. That people liked feeling important and not care for the unfortunates.
Nope I haven't read your review but at this point we can just agree to disagree.
...at least it wasn't anything like this: