The Sinking of The RMS Titanic Real Time

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  • Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
  • The RMS Titanic met her fate and sank on the night of April 14, 1912 creating one of the most infamous tragedies in peacetime marine history. Watch the mighty liner sink in real time with a 4k animation based on survivor accounts utilizing animated characters to tell the story.
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    DISCLAIMER: This video and description contain affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and purchase a product, I'll receive a small compensation. This helps support the channel and allows me to continue to make content for you. Thank you for your support!
    #Titanic #Sinking #realtime
    Chapters:
    00:00 - Prologue
    00:30 - Start
    02:28 - Collision
    03:14 - Damage Explanation
    07:25 - Engines are stopped
    08:37 - Steam venting begins
    11:55 - 1st damage report
    13:08 - Water begins flooding the mail hold
    18:53 - Water floods the mail room
    20:42 - Captain Smith returns to the Bridge
    21:28 - Murdoch begins lifeboat preparations for loading
    25:24 - Crew evacuate the Bow
    27:43 - Water spotted in Squash Court
    37:19 - Smith orders the boats swung out
    40:27 - The Band begins playing
    47:30 - Thomas Andrews informs Smith the ship will sink
    48:01 - Order to load lifeboats
    49:07 - Wireless distress signals
    49:27 - Ship spotted on the horizon
    55:27 - Passengers begin entering lifeboats
    59:06 - Carpathia makes contact
    01:01:51 - Passenger confusion over lifeboats
    01:02:27 - Boat 7 is launched
    01:04:27 - Ismay interferes at Boat 5
    01:06:02 - Boat 5 is launched
    01:06:30 - Boxhall uses the morse lamp
    01:10:43 - 1st Distress Rocket
    01:15:50 - Carpathia confirms she is coming
    01:17:27 - Boat 3 is launched
    01:17:06 - Crowds begin to form around the Aft boats
    01:22:28 - Boat 8 is launched
    01:27:27 - Boat 1 is launched
    01:32:20 - Boat 6 is launched
    01:36:54 - Boat 6 is stopped
    01:39:36 - 3rd Class grows restless
    01:42:27 - Boat 16 is launched
    01:46:30 - Boat 14 is launched
    01:50:47 - Water climbs the E-deck Landing
    01:52:37 - Boat 12 is launched
    01:52:59 - Boat 9 is launched
    01:57:26 - Boat 11 is launched
    02:00:01 - Titanic's power slowly fails
    02:02:27 - Boat 13 is launched
    02:03:27 - Boat 15 is launched
    02:07:02 - Boat 4 loading starts & Boat 2 is launched
    02:12:33 - Boat 4 is launched
    02:15:17 - Boat 13 is nearly crushed by 15
    02:21:50 - Boat C is launched
    02:24:12 - Boxhall rounds the stern
    02:26:42 - Boat D is launched
    02:37:27 - Titanic plunges
    02:39:22 - Titanic breaks apart
    02:42:33 - End Credits
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Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @TitanicAnimations
    @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +746

    Watch in 4k to avoid compression artifacts. If the image is too dark, try not watching on phones or tablet devices. Thank you all for watching :)

    • @leonardobuzatto
      @leonardobuzatto Год назад +21

      Hey, Titanic Animations. I'm a great fan of your work, which I got to know a few months ago. Are you interested in having your narration translated into other languages? I'm from Brazil, and I'd love to translate it into Portuguese so more people can enjoy it. Can we talk?

    • @daniellea.8829
      @daniellea.8829 Год назад +9

      Looks great on the iPhone 13 Pro.

    • @happyjmc
      @happyjmc Год назад +6

      Im sorry I missed this when it came out! Watching now!!

    • @daniellea.8829
      @daniellea.8829 Год назад +3

      @@happyjmc Don’t worry. I haven’t even finished it yet myself. Life gets in the way.

    • @StainderFin
      @StainderFin Год назад +2

      unreal engine?

  • @TheSimMan
    @TheSimMan Год назад +3612

    It doesn’t matter how many times I see a Titanic sinking recreation, there’s always a tiny bit of me hoping the ship will make it.

  • @earlusmcdivett
    @earlusmcdivett Год назад +1803

    What we all have to remember is by watching this, we really have no full grasp of how horrifying this event really was. You have to close your eyes and imagine the horrible noises you'd hear. People screaming. Metal cracking and breaking under pressure. All while freezing and in complete darkness in the middle of the ocean.

    • @liftyswifty4125
      @liftyswifty4125 Год назад +127

      Yeah I completely agree, probably 10 times more horrifying than this description, imagine people who couldn't locate their children during the sinking, the men who watched their wives and children row away in the life boats, imagine the the women and children looking up at their husbands as they rowed away, imagine the horror the people left on the ship must have felt when they realised there wasn't any lifeboats left to get on.

    • @AbdulGabagool83
      @AbdulGabagool83 Год назад +53

      Don’t forget pieces of metal flying off the sinking ship and shooting upwards like bullets, who knows how many were hit by those

    • @jasonstephens7159
      @jasonstephens7159 Год назад +32

      I think there were some noises heard by passengers after the stern slipped below the surface, probably the stern imploding and tearing apart as she went down.

    • @KunjaBihariKrishna
      @KunjaBihariKrishna Год назад +16

      If it's anything like my nightmares it's probably pretty bad. I don't understand why I dream about drowning so often. It's like once a week at least

    • @2kpurp879
      @2kpurp879 Год назад +14

      I don’t think we’ll ever grasp the fear in that fr ,that’s another level of just helplessness. Being separated from your family and having to evacuate to who knows at that moment. Not even to mention the people that literally fell into the water smh

  • @KingTriton1837
    @KingTriton1837 8 месяцев назад +140

    Hearing the Morse code communication from Titanic as she was dying was literally like listening to the faint voice of someone who was minutes from passing away. Really, really sad.

    • @jaccusefashion
      @jaccusefashion 6 месяцев назад +14

      yes, Phillips really is a huge hero. Though had that been me, my patience with other wireless operators continually asking what is wrong over and over would have failed.

  • @dogman15
    @dogman15 Год назад +1053

    The moment Thomas Andrews had finished inspecting the ship and was rushing up the grand staircase with a terrified look on his face that other passengers noticed - that moment resonated with me. His terror, in that moment, being the only person on the ship who knew that the ship was doomed, and that hundreds of people would surely die that night. I wish one of the films had shown this moment of Andrews seeing the flooded compartments, and then his stair-climb of silent horror.

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +88

      You can see a bit of his inspection of the compartments flooding in 1958's "A Night To Remember", but I don't think any film has depicted him running up the Grand Staircase yet. :)

    • @matthewcromer5399
      @matthewcromer5399 Год назад +158

      So nobody saw James Cameron’s Titanic where Rose stopped Andrews as he claimed the stairs and said “I saw the iceberg and I can see it in your eyes”

    • @dogman15
      @dogman15 Год назад +19

      @@matthewcromer5399 Very close, but not exactly what I was envisioning.

    • @TheGreekPianist
      @TheGreekPianist Год назад +14

      @@matthewcromer5399 Exactly! Such a chilling scene

    • @kaseylisk5019
      @kaseylisk5019 Год назад +107

      It would be perfect if someone would make a new movie about the Titanic going through its sinking in real time. It could follow a single person and made to look as if it was all taken in a single shot similarly to 1917, or perhaps alternate between three main characters from different classes.

  • @KillerDragon117
    @KillerDragon117 Год назад +58

    "So, what did you do last night?"
    "Oh you know, watched the Titanic sink in real time."

  • @antarcticaresearchprogram8349
    @antarcticaresearchprogram8349 Год назад +300

    How terrifying it must have been, to see such a mighty ship disappear into the sea, as if it were never there to begin with.

    • @Michael-cz6ob
      @Michael-cz6ob Год назад +15

      All that spectacular luxury that went into that ship from the boilers to the kitchen plates.. all there for one minute and then gone the next forever that easy. Such a scary thought

    • @goaway152
      @goaway152 Год назад +5

      you would have had a hard time seeing anything. it was a moonless night.

    • @antarcticaresearchprogram8349
      @antarcticaresearchprogram8349 Год назад +9

      @@goaway152 if only there were lights on the ship or flares... you realize there were hundreds of eye-witness testimonies as to what happened?

    • @diogenesstudent5585
      @diogenesstudent5585 Год назад +2

      Spoilers!

  • @PINJ133
    @PINJ133 Год назад +138

    What really terrifies me is just how dark it must of been during the sinking of the ship, just the lights of the ship, once the electricity has gone, nothing, nothing but the night sky and the screams of the passengers...gives me the chills thinking about it.

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +35

      The actual event would have been far darker. I had to brighten the scene up because of RUclips's compression codecs. For an example of how dark it was that night, there are a few passenger accounts that stated when the boats began the first be lowered they couldn't see the ocean down below. When Titanic's lights were burning at their full brightness, before the power began to fade, they were equivalent to a modern 40w-60w bulb. Even with the ship fully lit (which it wasn't), it was still very dark outside on deck.

    • @shotty2164
      @shotty2164 Год назад +23

      I can tell you from personal experience, on a moonless night at sea, it’s like being in a void, like being in space only with no stars. It’s astonishing just how dark it is. I work on the ocean, I’m an engineer on a supply boat in the Gulf of Mexico oil field.
      I can’t imagine how terrifying it would be to be in complete pitch blackness and hearing the ship break apart… and the screams, because trust me when I tell you the only things they could have seen after the lights went out would have been the outline of the black titanic against the black stary sky.

    • @thatguy2535
      @thatguy2535 5 месяцев назад +2

      There were reports of northern lights. Missed opportunity for the movie

  • @toeray5864
    @toeray5864 Год назад +536

    I know they are all long deceased but God bless the captain and crew of Carpathia. Steaming at high speed through an ice field in the dead of night to save the lives of others was incredibly brave.
    I've always wondered what caused the sudden plunge near the end. The ship seemed pretty content to slowly grind its way down before that.

    • @jaredpatterson1701
      @jaredpatterson1701 Год назад +61

      The coal & engines counterbalanced the incoming water for a while, and actually helped keep the ship more or less level. It sank in about the best possible way

    • @GamePlayerZ1912
      @GamePlayerZ1912 Год назад +57

      Because at that point, Titanic had lost all the bouyancy it still had, and began to drop like a rock. This movement might have caused the list to even out, as it was a forward motion.

    • @MisoElEven
      @MisoElEven Год назад +13

      Well..the less buoyancy the ship has, the faster its going to sink.. so the sinking is pretty much accelerating over time - there are some portholes open, doors on the port side + some windows were probably shattering as the water rose up to them. The ship is just more open to the sea further down the sinking timeline so the sinking accelerates giving you a feeling of it just going down like a rock after a certain point in time.

    • @jackmorningstar24
      @jackmorningstar24 Год назад +12

      Isn't it a case of the air pressure slowly finding more and more exit points, until there are sufficient exits for the air to gush out at the same rate as the water flows in?

    • @CitizenMio
      @CitizenMio Год назад +36

      As a kid I used to try and re-enact the sinking. I eventually found a perfect plastic cookie box for it. It had a whole bunch of compartments (for the scientifically consumed cookies obviously) They didn't reach all the way to the top of the tray and the transparent cover simulated a nice flush superstructure of sorts.
      I would spread out a bunch of weights over the various compartments to get it to sit a proper depth.
      Then I'd use a pin to puncture several of them to determine the tipping point.
      I could then drain and repeat over and over again.
      They always sank slowly at first, tilting to the side where the water was entering. Then plunge forward with a short drop when water flowed over a bulkhead for the first time. Which would correct the tilt with a slight sway. Before speeding up the sinking. By the time the front of the "superstructure" submerged, things would start to shift around and it would start tipping over. Failing one after another in seconds and going down vertically.
      I found, that even such a limited practical approach really helped visualise some of the forces at play for me at the time.
      Also what kid doesn't like playing with water. ;)

  • @poggergen1937
    @poggergen1937 Год назад +254

    I recently went to a titanic museum where they had a pool of 23 degree water you could stick your hand in to feel what it was like for those on the titanic… You couldn’t hold your hand in that water for more than a few seconds before it stung so bad it was unbearable. It’s horrifying to think that all those people were swimming in water that cold.

    • @MonsterJuiced
      @MonsterJuiced Год назад +37

      you mean 23 Fahrenheit don't you

    • @sallyhoward2446
      @sallyhoward2446 Год назад +6

      I did that only it was a block of ice ,try sticking you hand in a bag of ice ,the pain is unbearable..

    • @teevee7678
      @teevee7678 Год назад +29

      not just titanic people, but imagine slaves during the Atlantic slave trade. its just horrible to think anyone falling into such cold depths of the ocean.

    • @captainmorgan240
      @captainmorgan240 Год назад +3

      ​@@MonsterJuicedIt's still degrees, celcius or Fahrenheit

    • @MonsterJuiced
      @MonsterJuiced Год назад +39

      @captainmorgan240 there's a massive difference between Celsius and Fahrenheit though. 23c would be a lovely temperature lol

  • @dariusclovis1374
    @dariusclovis1374 Год назад +140

    When the Titanic began to sink on April 15, 1912, Father Thomas Byles had two opportunities to board a lifeboat. But he forewent those opportunities, according to passengers aboard the sinking ocean liner, in order to hear confessions and offer consolation and prayers with those who were trapped aboard.

    • @michaelbujaki2462
      @michaelbujaki2462 11 месяцев назад +13

      A true Christian indeed.

    • @garygood6804
      @garygood6804 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@michaelbujaki2462 and thus his adherence to fake news religion took his life.

    • @allys744
      @allys744 3 месяца назад +2

      Good man of God.

    • @garygood6804
      @garygood6804 3 месяца назад

      Religion is fake news.

    • @BasePuma4007
      @BasePuma4007 2 месяца назад +3

      That whole generation, also the one that fought in the First World War, did things driven by values of virtue and honor that people today would never do.

  • @Official_Kezzie
    @Official_Kezzie Год назад +508

    This was definitely worth the wait. I love how you traced the positions of some notable survivors and victims, and animated them as such. You're also the first person (that I know of) to finally animate the third class passengers in the aft well deck - as opposed to the "below decks, behind gates" myth that has been spread for so long.
    I loved every second of this - great job TA!

    • @sorrenblitz805
      @sorrenblitz805 Год назад +35

      There are some locked gates down there, but it wasn't to trap people in. Pretty sure they were for blocking access to maintenance areas. Worth noting some of the people down there probably didn't speak English and didn't know that's what the gates were for and they probably had family who got trapped thinking those gates would open, which is where I think the myth originated from.

    • @salland12
      @salland12 Год назад +15

      @@sorrenblitz805 These locked gates could be easily lifted out from their doorframes/sliders. Everybody has this image form the 1997 movie that these gates were impregnable. This was really not the case. The location of the gates could be changed depending on how much accommodation they needed for the 3rd and 2nd class passengers. Allot of 2nd class cabins could be converted to 3rd class accommodation and vice versa.

    • @sorrenblitz805
      @sorrenblitz805 Год назад +6

      @@salland12 oh yeah no the gates weren't like super tonka tough or anything but it probably did trap a couple of people through unfortunate circumstances just not outright cruelty or criminal negligence as the myth often states.

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +31

      @@sorrenblitz805 Most of the "gates" in the lower section of the ship were actually a requirement of the American Immigration requirements. 3rd Class could not be allowed to mingle with 2nd and 1st, nor could the other classes be allowed to mingle with the others. The only difference in some of the gate locations were, 1st and 2nd class passengers didn't have direct access to critical ship function areas. 3rd Class passengers were able to directly access multiple areas of the ship where you, as a passenger, absolutely should not be in like; the Engine Room, the Boiler Rooms, the Cargo Holds. So, in some of these areas gates were erected in order to cordon the area off between the crew and 3rd Class.

    • @healingandgrowth-infp4677
      @healingandgrowth-infp4677 Год назад +1

      @@salland12 I hate the word impregnable it is very sexist

  • @oriontaylor
    @oriontaylor Год назад +252

    I've always found it remarkable how quickly Smith and others in charge realised that the situation was serious and both ordered reports on the ship's status and investigated it themselves. They were proactive and quick to get things ready to evacuate; no one expected they would have so much less time than Republic did.

    • @daniellea.8829
      @daniellea.8829 Год назад +17

      I commend Captain Smith as well. It’s just like life to give you a disaster right before you retire. I don’t blame him.

    • @jonathanp89
      @jonathanp89 Год назад +38

      @@Firemarioflower Slow as hell? Are you for real? Most passengers didn't even want to get into the boats until about 1:15am or so. To what timescale should the officers have operated in your mind? The boats were swung out at 00.20, forty minutes after collision and a thorough damage inspection. The first launched at 00.40. Do you realise how big a ship Titanic was? All boats bar one or two collapsibles were launched, mostly without panic. I consider that as successful an evacuation as it could have been, given the circumstances.

    • @taka2517
      @taka2517 Год назад +10

      @@jonathanp89 he is not completely wrong, after the Lusitania was hit and it was completely sunken under the surface were 18 minutes. 18 Minutes in wich nearly 800 people were evacuated into lifeboats. That said I don't consider the reaction of them bad or the evacuation generally unsuccesful

    • @Cleptro
      @Cleptro Год назад +31

      @@taka2517 Lusitania also took a f***ing TORPEDO to the side. No question of how bad the damage is when your ship is listing twenty-five degrees in as many seconds. The iceberg impact was gentle, most passengers barely noticed it, and the crew would have to check to see how bad the damage was. No doubt there was water coming in, but how much? Two compartments? Three? If so, Titanic would remain afloat and they could wait for help. But no, five compartments, actually six-ish, so the ship will sink. Then they have to prep the boats. Titanic's crew were LIGHTNING fast considering the indications they had.
      EDIT:
      Besides, Lusitania's boats had already been prepped the morning prior. They just had to be lowered. Who knows how bad that sinking could have been had the captain been a little less cautious.?

    • @Radiogirl1931
      @Radiogirl1931 Год назад +11

      @@Firemarioflower lol almost everyone died on Lusitania becuase they handled it so poorly. Tons of the boats broke, capsized or fell off the rigging

  • @s_.777
    @s_.777 Год назад +47

    20 people on a life boat with 40 seats is disgusting

    • @ghamandlupin
      @ghamandlupin 5 месяцев назад +5

      Some simply didn't want to get in a boat too. Also, if there were enough lifeboats, because they hesitated for so long and were unaware of the scale of the damage the iceberg did, they wouldn't have had time to save everyone on the ship.

    • @s_.777
      @s_.777 5 месяцев назад +11

      @@ghamandlupin plenty were itching to get on a lifeboat, for example, the lower class passengers. they weren’t allowed the chance even though the could’ve. how can you debate my comment? lol

    • @SudrianTales
      @SudrianTales 2 месяца назад

      ​@@s_.777
      That seems more to have been a failure to communicate to the stewards to let them up

    • @Jason1984dfg
      @Jason1984dfg Месяц назад +1

      @@s_.777not at the beginning, most people didn’t think there was anything wrong and were convinced the ship was unsinkable. All the lights were on and music was playing, the staff were calm, nobody thought the ship would actually sink until it started sinking.

    • @user-vh4dm9og1o
      @user-vh4dm9og1o 24 дня назад +1

      40 seat lifeboat is bullshit.

  • @ERGSEG
    @ERGSEG Год назад +47

    It’s so insane how many of the lifeboats were only half full. I saw something that said if all life boats had been filled to capacity, an extra 400 people would’ve survived.

    • @garygood6804
      @garygood6804 5 месяцев назад +2

      That is because you can't trust people. Especially the rich.

    • @plebtile3347
      @plebtile3347 5 месяцев назад +9

      @@garygood6804 How wealthy people were had nothing to do with why the life boats weren't full.

    • @SMarie-zk9oj
      @SMarie-zk9oj 3 месяца назад +2

      @@garygood6804 the people onboard thought it was a drill at first, so a lot of the life boats had far fewer passengers than they could’ve held

    • @SWEETHEAD1000
      @SWEETHEAD1000 2 месяца назад

      ​@@SMarie-zk9oj Given all the passengers knew, or thought they knew at the time, about the Titanic' being virtually unsinkable. The idea of stepping into a lifeboat in the dark, with a large drop between the deck and the boat. Being roused from the comfort of your bed, to spend however long in a packed lifeboat in the cold without your loved one as a precautionary exercise. I got to be honest, I wouldn't have took a lifeboat. Sadly, that must have been the experience of many, who having made the decision, had to experience the consequence of doing so.

    • @SudrianTales
      @SudrianTales 2 месяца назад

      ​@SWEETHEAD1000
      Plus lifeboats at the time weren't lifesaving, at least in the sense we think of, they were transporters

  • @NorthWestern1919
    @NorthWestern1919 Год назад +773

    I think it's safe to say that this is the best real-time Titanic sinking up to this point. Well done! It's been great to see all this finally come together!

    • @talkaboutwacky
      @talkaboutwacky Год назад +25

      I was thinking it was just another real-time sinking animation but holy smokes the commentary and information began. This is the best

    • @jyoung2574
      @jyoung2574 Год назад +5

      This couldn't be any more true

    • @fletcherhamilton3177
      @fletcherhamilton3177 Год назад +6

      I’m confident that one day they’re going to beat the special effects and realism of the ‘98 movie . . .

    • @1972scenic
      @1972scenic Год назад

      Why safe 😂😂

    • @NorthWestern1919
      @NorthWestern1919 Год назад +6

      @@1972scenic It's an expression in the English language.

  • @tomtalker2000
    @tomtalker2000 Год назад +63

    How utterly terrifying too be in the middle of a cold vast dark black ocean. And your completely helpless. Just incredible.

  • @heyodi3092
    @heyodi3092 Год назад +66

    I cannot get over how far down the ship had gone before the first life boat went out.

    • @louisedurell9612
      @louisedurell9612 Год назад +6

      Me too- there seemed like no sense of urgency at the beginning. And just think if they had filled every lifeboat 😢 really choked me up 😢

    • @michaeljarvis3687
      @michaeljarvis3687 Год назад +3

      Almost 30 minutes after hitting the berg is all it took for some of those compartments and mail rooms fully flooded. 😢

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, I think it was a good 1hr before it was lowered?

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 6 месяцев назад +2

      Also, I love that story about William Thompson Sloper, the man who allegedly "got off dressed as a woman." He never did. What actually happened, him, along with his party of three or four along with twenty-some other people, left the sinking ship on that first lifeboat, No. 7. That was still at a point where most everyone was taking the situation very lightly (involving, as it did, the mighty, "unsinkable Titanic"), so that First Officer Murdoch had trouble filling #7 at all. It was eventually lowered with 28 people, less than half its capacity. So, for him - or, for that matter, any male - there was no sensible reason to even think of dressing as a woman. Sloper was the first survivor to register in New York and the press knew that, so that the lobby of the Waldorf-Astoria was packed with reporters. His brother Harold and his dad, Andrew, kept telling reporters No but at one point they made a rush at his door and Harold then intervened quite forcefully. (I think he might have told them to get lost?) One of the reporters used the incident to teach the Slopers more respect for the press. His story stated that William Thompson Sloper left the sinking Titanic dressed as a woman.

    • @ghamandlupin
      @ghamandlupin 5 месяцев назад +3

      Even if there were enough lifeboats, even if there were more than enough, the hesitancy at the start meant they simply wouldn't have had time to save everyone. A lot of people hesitated to get in a boat too.

  • @XmalD73
    @XmalD73 Год назад +296

    What an amazing work! I've been a Titanic enthusiast for 40 years, and this is so well done. It's factual, respectful, detailed, and is the best rendition of the sinking I have seen. Your voiceover with the Marconi signals make for an edge of your seat watch. Thank you for your hard work on this.

    • @taka2517
      @taka2517 Год назад +2

      Whats an Titanic Enthustiast and why?

    • @XmalD73
      @XmalD73 Год назад +16

      @@taka2517 Someone who is very interested in the Titanic, and I can't tell you why. The story of the ship captured and fascinated me as a 10 year old boy.

    • @nigelparker5886
      @nigelparker5886 Год назад +4

      Apart from the fact that there shouldn’t have been a moon in the sky! That’s why they didn’t see the iceberg until it was too late!?

    • @ron3557
      @ron3557 Год назад

      ​@@nigelparker5886 it was a moonless night, yes.

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +12

      @@nigelparker5886 The night sky is actually a 16k satellite image I had commissioned of Titanic's wreck GPS coordinates on the night of her sinking. The "Moon" everyone always points out is actually the planet Jupiter. In reality, it wasn't as bright or large, as seen in the video but that is due to what I call a "willful error". When taking the image and using it for illumination in the 3d animation software it takes the brightness of the pixels. Black = no light, grey = a little light, white = full light. So the areas around the planet Jupiter that are grey will output a small amount of light. When you blow that up to cover 10 miles x 10 miles (the size of the ocean for the video) it makes the small planet of Jupiter look very large.
      I could fix this, of course, by turning down the emission settings of the sky but that affects the entire image; not just the singular light source of Jupiter. So, that was my problem: "Have Jupiter be big and bright, but have 1000s of stars shining brilliantly" or "Have Jupiter be smaller and dimmer, but have 100s less stars in the sky."

  • @kitsunemetal
    @kitsunemetal Год назад +122

    I love how the events of the sinking is told by telling how the crew responded to the incident and what they did that night to save as many as they could such realism and story telling.

  • @andrewmwells9606
    @andrewmwells9606 5 месяцев назад +12

    I think Jim Cameron said this in an interview. "Up close on the Titanic that night was a lot of energy, but looking at it from far away. it was just a small ship in a big ocean"

  • @scottbrandon6244
    @scottbrandon6244 Год назад +21

    There was a survivor interviewed for the 60th anniversary of the sinking. She and her mother used to talk about it a lot. The two remembered all the screaming people on the boat and in the water. And then there was no sounds around the same time since they either drowned or those with life jackets had frozen to death in the water.

  • @YouTubeisgettingworse.
    @YouTubeisgettingworse. Год назад +45

    The reflections of her lights in the sea makes her even more beautiful than she already was. Such a shame what happened to her. Good work.

  • @Paul-vg5lq
    @Paul-vg5lq Год назад +87

    This is by far the best sinking animation completed to date. I will absolutely be sharing this as the definitive version for the anniversary.

  • @Whos_That_GurL1
    @Whos_That_GurL1 Год назад +11

    As weird as this sounds…full screen shots of titanic…with all her lights a glow…she’s absolutely stunning to look at. RIP 🙏🏻

  • @miap.5622
    @miap.5622 Год назад +26

    The story of the titanic is a powerful example of how our actions and decisions affect others. No matter how many times I watch this my heart sinks in my chest at the thought of all the souls lost to the sea. I can’t even imagine how scary that must have been. 😢

  • @TeamRobsta
    @TeamRobsta Год назад +20

    One great detail about your video and the last one you did, Is how the Iceberg is so dark and hard to see. With no moonlight, no waves and the haze, this is what the Iceberg would have looked like. It's why the lookouts didn't see it until it was too late, I think you convey that better than the film does.

  • @dawsonls
    @dawsonls Год назад +58

    The fact that Phillip voiced over dialogue instead of typing it is fascinating. Obviously he didn’t talk all of the 2 hours, but still a great job. The amount of detail put into this is very impressive and of course, the break up was much more shown & put into perspective, alongside real evidence addressed by Titanic survivors on the lifeboats.
    Titanic may not have been recorded in any way, but this is definitely one of the closest times we’ve gotten to picture that happening.

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  6 месяцев назад +4

      I recorded most of the voice-over while recovering from COVID. I was coughing constantly and had to pause and splice sentences together. But I got it done!

  • @zlounberg6958
    @zlounberg6958 Год назад +63

    I noticed the detail of lights burning red towards the end, signaling that Titanic was very low on power at that stage. Very well put together!

  • @somethingtojenga
    @somethingtojenga Год назад +16

    You have to imagine all the little conversations, people asking if it'll sink, being reassured that it's just settling with the water inside, and will stay afloat until rescued. People just not knowing what was going on and not understanding the urgency of it...

  • @michaelmurray7199
    @michaelmurray7199 Год назад +165

    I will certainly say this. I said before that this would be well worth the wait, and I was right. This is a very significant improvement over the previous version. It's very clear that you put a very considerable amount of effort into this project, and it shows. Well done, good sir.

  • @suyen4999
    @suyen4999 Год назад +63

    This is such an incredible production. The minute by minute accounts provides context that I had never known before, and the final minute of the ship and 1500 souls disappearing beneath the waves is just so heartbreaking.

  • @Lvalid-lg5si
    @Lvalid-lg5si 6 месяцев назад +12

    Really makes you realise just how invisible the iceberg would have been to them on that night, I mean that is pitch black.

    • @srmills6139
      @srmills6139 3 месяца назад +1

      Definitely. I know for sure that lookout Fred Fleet described the iceberg as a black shape silhouetted against the stars. On this animation, it's impressive how the iceberg completely blends in with the dark ocean when it dips below the horizon.

  • @Purple_694
    @Purple_694 Год назад +9

    It’s been one hundred and eleven years. I get chills every time I watch anything titanic on this day. Rest in peace.

    • @zoeror
      @zoeror Год назад +2

      Yes it happened on the 15 April in the Atlantic Ocean

  • @lyssagames4311
    @lyssagames4311 Год назад +21

    The lights glittering off of the water is so mesmerising... you did a great job

  • @jackcarraway4707
    @jackcarraway4707 Год назад +16

    Imagine surviving this and getting pulled into WW1 just a couple of years later. The slow burn feel of this is what makes it so terrifying.

    • @MyMichelet
      @MyMichelet 3 месяца назад +2

      I read the man doing Morse code went into war and died at 23. So sad after surviving the sinking of the Titanic

  • @ShadowHawkProductions
    @ShadowHawkProductions Год назад +76

    This is without a doubt the best real-time sinking animation I have seen. I love everything about it, from the interior/exterior shots to the voiceovers, as well as the people. You have done a phenomenal job TA!

    • @random_an0n
      @random_an0n Год назад

      better than titanic honour and glory?

    • @CR7GOATofFootball
      @CR7GOATofFootball 4 месяца назад

      ​@@random_an0n That's the OG but is outdated now.

  • @levizilla9772
    @levizilla9772 Месяц назад +4

    Every year, to pay tribute, I like to stay up at 11:37-2:20 on April 14th and watch this. I highly recommend it, it gives you perspective on what really happened on that fateful night.

  • @stuff31
    @stuff31 Год назад +48

    a tragic masterpiece. the commitment you put into this deserves to be admired.

  • @user-dt3rj8qm3k
    @user-dt3rj8qm3k Год назад +23

    This is amazing. Watching this in bed and in the dark. Feels like I'm on board the Titanic. Well done to whoever created this.
    RIP to all who lost their lives

  • @RobRoss
    @RobRoss Год назад +32

    I liked how you incorporated the wireless messages. It really made it more emotional. I’m still looking for an animation that shows how the water filled up in the ship and the pattern of flooding through all the compartments and then up the rest of the decks. But I really enjoyed your video!

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +10

      This animation nearly killed me to do with all the people involved, I don't want to imagine trying to make a interior water diagram-type animation. I'd probably be either gray or bald when I'm through with it. There was a member, Alex, on my discord sever though who made one around the middle of last year that is quite impressive. Though, I don't think it's in real time.

    • @SoaringSuccubus
      @SoaringSuccubus 4 месяца назад

      @@TitanicAnimations Is Alex's animation available somewhere?

  • @rorschach2185
    @rorschach2185 Год назад +10

    1:18:48 was very much needed as it is so strangely heartwarming, the narrator's delivery of this is perfect, thank you.

  • @rdaws73
    @rdaws73 Год назад +11

    Heartbreaking with the wireless comms. More and more desperate as she sinks. Imagine being on the ships near by trying to get there as fast as possible, not being able to do anything. Damn.

  • @sunsetmeadows5729
    @sunsetmeadows5729 Год назад +38

    Watched this on the 111th anniversary of the sinking of the RMS Titanic. Rest In Peace to all those that lost their lives in the sinking ❤️Also, to all the crew that died, you went down as heroes ❤️⚓👼

  • @DollarDude
    @DollarDude Год назад +49

    I can't imagine how many hours of work this must have taken to put together. Awesome job!

  • @user-bu7jl6zy5d
    @user-bu7jl6zy5d Год назад +12

    This video is absolutely first rate. It is the best animation of the sinking of the RMS Titanic I have seen. I actually felt like I was there that tragic early morning. It doesn't get any better than this. I will watch this more than once. Thank you to all who contributed to the creation of this important animation. God bless those who perished, and their families, and the survivors who witnessed this never-to-be-forgotten event. The story of Titanic will never be forgotten.

  • @Cosmic_Espeon
    @Cosmic_Espeon Год назад +19

    The man who jumped from the boat deck into the boat was the ship's doctor, and he ended up breaking that poor woman's ribs. The irony. I can't imagine being in a boat, in the middle of the dark Atlantic ocean in the cold with four broken ribs because a desperate man decided to swan dive over the bulwark instead of sliding down a rope.

    • @daniellea.8829
      @daniellea.8829 Год назад +1

      A doctor that’s a coward. Wow that’s truly something.

    • @SQUAREHEADSAM1912
      @SQUAREHEADSAM1912 Год назад +4

      I thought doctor O’Laughlin died in the sinking? Unless you mean the assistant doctor, or other hospital staff.

    • @southpaw_from_southport1522
      @southpaw_from_southport1522 Год назад

      If I had the choice between jumping for it & landing on your ribs & dying in the freezing ocean, imma choose the ribs

    • @zoeror
      @zoeror Год назад

      @@SQUAREHEADSAM1912 yeah probably

  • @JustinsWorld4U
    @JustinsWorld4U Год назад +14

    It's incredible how it takes 2 hours to get the front to go underwater and only 20 minutes afterwards for the entire ship to fully sink.

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +4

      Buoyancy be crazy that way

    • @DANIELLE_BREANNA_LACY
      @DANIELLE_BREANNA_LACY 10 месяцев назад +3

      It actually took about 2 hours and 20 minutes for the front to go underwater before those final 20 minutes came and it was very lucky to have been able to stay float that long unlike some of the later ships like the RMS Lusitania which was almost the same size as the Titanic and just got hit by one torpedo then completely sank in only 18 minutes.

  • @Goldi3loxrox
    @Goldi3loxrox Год назад +8

    The messages between the Titanic and other boats was a really nice touch, and brought it to life

  • @karlkrump6634
    @karlkrump6634 Год назад +8

    Reading the morse code scripts through practically all of this is one intense and emotional ride. God bless those men.

  • @Andy-Augustine
    @Andy-Augustine Год назад +14

    Why am i so fascinated by the sinking of this ship!? I listen to this with my eyes close just trying to imagine it over and over. What is it about this story that captivates us?

    • @DANIELLE_BREANNA_LACY
      @DANIELLE_BREANNA_LACY 10 месяцев назад +1

      It’s one of the disasters this whole world will never forget. It had also taught lessons that changed the world in ways that still influence us today.

    • @andresgalindo1990
      @andresgalindo1990 4 месяца назад

      Maybe James Cameron with the movie, sparked high interest since it.

  • @imqxla67
    @imqxla67 Год назад +19

    This was so well done! The messages between boats was fascinating and makes me question how well they were trained to communicate in emergencies. But no matter what, hearing the music while Titanic is sinking still gets to me. This tragedy, no matter how it is portrayed is still so heartbreaking.

  • @voiding_
    @voiding_ Год назад +86

    This is a huge improvement. I really appreciate the narration and attention to detail, as well as how much better the animation looks. This is an excellent recreation.

  • @talkaboutwacky
    @talkaboutwacky Год назад +30

    It’s crazy to think as soon as the doomed passengers boarded whether it was the first or subsequent port of calls that their fate was already sealed. The titanic sailed towards it destiny. I think about stuff like that all the time, I feel for everyone who died or survived this event and their families. I couldn’t even imagine going through what they did. Well done vid btw

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield 5 месяцев назад +1

      The ones who stayed in France at the first stop survived.

  • @rickster100100
    @rickster100100 Год назад +25

    Bravo. We’ll done. I watched this April 14 from the Cape Race, Newfoundland time of 11:40 to 2:20 AM (April 15, 2023) following the exact time from collision with the iceberg to final vanishing below the north Atlantic waves. Absolutely the best. I’m glad to see that others at the same time we’re sharing this experience. I knew Edwina Troutt who was a passenger on board. And lived her life in Southern California. It was an honor to know her. To all the 1500 who perished that night. And the 705 survivors who are now all gone… I hope you’re all having a wonderful journey. You are honored and remembered. 💐💐 14-15 April 2023. The International Ice Patrol will be flying out to drop a wreath at the spot where the Titanic sank in remembrance of those who perished. Los Angeles.. signing off.

    • @user-ye6nf7lo7y
      @user-ye6nf7lo7y 5 месяцев назад +1

      Actually I was born April 14 so I’ve always since childhood wanted to know everything I could about the ship.

    • @crazyminions425
      @crazyminions425 3 месяца назад +2

      I’m doing that this year

  • @legendkiller0
    @legendkiller0 Год назад +61

    Everything about this is so well done, massive thanks for the time and effort you put into doing this

  • @silentgamer2434
    @silentgamer2434 Год назад +11

    111 years later we still remember the Titanic, R.I.P to all those who lost their lives that night.

  • @mariuszchile
    @mariuszchile Год назад +77

    It feels so scary. I'm so sad for all those poor passengers who didn't make it to survive. It also makes me so angry that they let those boats leave with so much empty room. They could have saved much more souls. The animation is amazing! Great job!!! I just love your work. A small detail... 13:15 The mailbags carry EIIR (Elizabeth II Regina) which is the royal cypher of Elizabeth II. As you certainly know she was born over a decade after The RMS Titanic disaster and became queen in 1952. Anyway. I'm looking forward to seeing your next videos.

    • @theexoticshorthair156
      @theexoticshorthair156 Год назад +1

      If I’m correct, I think it was meant for “Edward” possibly, who was King around the time of 1910! Of course, George V was King at the time, but I think Edward was probably a closer bet.

    • @dasrite
      @dasrite Год назад +2

      @@theexoticshorthair156 Edward's cypher was different, would've been EVIIIR for Edward VIII Rex, this one is Elizabeth's probably just easier to get as an asset, Edward also like you say wouldn't make sense in this time period, he was an 18 year old boy at the time, the correct Cypher at this time would've been that of George V

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield 5 месяцев назад

      Sssssh she's a time traveller

    • @MyMichelet
      @MyMichelet 3 месяца назад

      The ppl wouldn't get into the boats TO fill them!! Men weren't allowed in and they did 1st class 1st and those ppl were cold and went inside!!

  • @christo-chaney
    @christo-chaney Год назад +4

    Gave a sermon about this last Friday…since it was April 14th I couldn’t resist the opportunity.

  • @taras3702
    @taras3702 Год назад +8

    The engineers and electricians who stayed at their posts in the engine, generator and the boiler rooms to keep the ship''s power on were selfless heroes. They were released by Chief Engineer Joseph Bell, and yet they stayed knowing they will go down with Titanic. When the keel had all it could take, it bent upwards and shoved engines, boilers, coal bunkers and water tight bulkheads into the decks above. When that happened all of them were killed. By the time the poop deck went under, they were as much as a mile underwater along with the contents of the engine room.

  • @rvt2239
    @rvt2239 Год назад +69

    Fantastic work! The best real-time animation that I've seen. A decade ago, creating something like this would have been nearly impossible. It is amazing how technology can be used to transport us back in time. It is easy to imagine that eventually, something can be created that will be nearly indistinguishable from the real thing.

    • @STSGuitar16
      @STSGuitar16 Год назад +3

      Do you believe in the theory that we are living in a simulation?

    • @lapiz_
      @lapiz_ Год назад +1

      @@STSGuitar16 yes

    • @STSGuitar16
      @STSGuitar16 Год назад +2

      @@lapiz_ yeah, your comment kinda indicated that, but I felt like asking anyway lol. I personally don’t think it really matters if we are or aren’t in a simulation, it doesn’t make any difference or change the fact that I gotta get up and go throughout my life everyday, ya know? It’s “real life” to us regardless.

    • @lapiz_
      @lapiz_ Год назад +1

      @@STSGuitar16 yep, bang on. idc if we are or not ahaha . hope they enjoying my character

    • @STSGuitar16
      @STSGuitar16 Год назад +1

      @@lapiz_ jeez man, my player has been forced to watch me jerk it thousands of times at this point lmaooo. If you’re reading this, my player, I apologize 😂😂😂
      Also, I grew up a Christian, then kinda fell out of that idea of an omnipotent “God” before finally coming back around to believe that there absolutely is a God because of sim theory. I mean, if you believe sim theory, it basically confirms the idea of a creator or “God” for sure. I don’t really believe he is a guy with a big white beard up in the sky, but I do believe that there is _something_ out there that created us and the world we live in. Though I’m definitely not very studied in all things Christianity, I honestly think sim theory can live alongside the idea of Christianity as well without conflicting very much, if at all. It’s just a fundamental idea about what this thing we call “life” really is. Many people view Christians as being close-minded about stuff, but these days I really believe the staunch atheists are far more close-minded. They’re 100% certain there is no creator at all whatsoever, and I just think that’s quite a naive thing to believe that you know and understand everything about the universe to the point where you can 100% guarantee that there is no God. Like I said, I don’t think he’s necessarily the guy with a long white beard up in the sky, but he does exist in one form or another.

  • @darthmillennia
    @darthmillennia Месяц назад +1

    I think the most horrifying part of this is that this is brightened up so we can actually see it. It was extremely dark that night

  • @davidmedford1166
    @davidmedford1166 Год назад +10

    I would love to see an x ray version of this video so I could see the path of the water as titanic sunk.

  • @chickenpancake1614
    @chickenpancake1614 Год назад +21

    I really like the realistic approach of thing video. It is very different from other real time sinkings. It is like everything is according to survivor accounts and no artistic liberty are taken. Like with the sounds. In other videos, the sound is usually loud groans. In this video the ships groans sounds like thunder, which is what many survivors heard.

    • @GamePlayerZ1912
      @GamePlayerZ1912 Год назад +6

      The break-up sound was inaccurate though if we consider survivor accounts.
      Several survivors report hearing 2-4 explosion-like sounds coming from the ship as it broke. There are also reports of loud roaring and cracking sounds.
      The video, well, shows a single "boom" followed by groaning.

  • @pi-sx3mb
    @pi-sx3mb Год назад +7

    Really well done, but this was ABSOLUTELY BRUTAL to watch. What an unimaginably sad and terrifying nightmare. Those poor people.

  • @russellpuff1996
    @russellpuff1996 Год назад +10

    It's incredible how many seats were left open on the lifeboats. I understand why the crew went with volunteers at first. But they should have lifted the no-men rule to fill seats before lowering boats. Probably could have saved a few hundred more lives.

    • @SQUAREHEADSAM1912
      @SQUAREHEADSAM1912 Год назад +6

      Many people didn’t want to enter boats, believing they’d be safer on the ship, not knowing it was sinking.

    • @Pedro_Le_Chef
      @Pedro_Le_Chef Год назад +4

      @@SQUAREHEADSAM1912 That was not at all the case towards the end though, where the boats were still lowered at half capacity

    • @Statalyzer
      @Statalyzer 4 месяца назад

      Yep. Some of what happened was bad luck, but hundreds died needlessly to the basic human stupidity that pervades all existing.

  • @jeremyalmquist27
    @jeremyalmquist27 Год назад +26

    This really outlines the efforts of the crew. Specifically Lightollwer and Murdock. They deserve much more credit.

  • @rmsoceanic5720
    @rmsoceanic5720 Год назад +9

    That is undoubtedly the best real time sinking animation on RUclips. 2 hours and 44 minutes and I loved every second of it.

  • @0livita
    @0livita Год назад +13

    unbelievable work a million thank you’s!! as a history buff, titanic has always held a special place in my heart. this was unbelievably realistic from the opening image. you captured the increasing sense of isolation those on the ship experienced based off various testimonies (as well as how indescribably dark the night was vs how bright the stars were). you have given the ship and victims a voice

  • @MontoyaGamer1_Entertainment
    @MontoyaGamer1_Entertainment Год назад +11

    The 1st time anyone sees this video will feel like what the survivors went through that night.
    10/10

  • @Rayrard
    @Rayrard Год назад +26

    The appearance of the lights being red toward the end is such a big difference from the movies which all show the ship lit like a Christmas tree, but this is certainly more likely as the power failed and looks more ominous as the ship approaches sinking. I always wondered given electricity was still fairly new, if the power grid went down at different times as circuits shorted out from flooding or simply broke down due to the strain of the sinking. I wonder what the true percentage of portholes that were lit, given probably everyone left their lights on when they left their rooms and the crew probably lit every public space. The question of the emergency power is interesting given the emergency lights were probably dim and scattered and many people would not have noticed, but the wiring to this system was likely destroyed at the breakup. I think there was a light on the mainmast that was on until the end.

  • @jamesray9829
    @jamesray9829 Год назад +9

    Absolutely amazing! The animation is beyond beautiful and the views inside the ship are breathtaking. Watching this project come together after so long has been quite the reward.

  • @ToddCrispies
    @ToddCrispies Год назад +7

    Just the most terrifying setting for this to occur. That clear night sky accompanied by such still water. It's almost other worldly. Almost like it's a space ship being sucked into a black hole. I can only imagine the terror filling everyone's body as she submerged into the abyss. Then, after she's out of sight the desolate feeling of being in the middle of nowhere with no help near. These poor people went through something that can't be comparable to any other tragedy.

  • @hootax8980
    @hootax8980 Год назад +3

    I'm falling in love with these animations over and over every year. You keep the memory of this tragic event alive and hauntingly real.

  • @nightsofthefilms
    @nightsofthefilms Год назад +21

    This was a massive improvement from your original version! Such extraordinary detail, and that narration was so good!!! I know you guys poured your heart and soul into this, so I thank you for letting us see all that hard work! ❤❤❤

  • @Michael-cz6ob
    @Michael-cz6ob Год назад +6

    I love how you have shown more realistic darkness. Most peoples movies, animations ect always seem to show everything more detailed and bright when in real life it was a moonless calm night with no light so passengers would struggle to even see the ocean. This would explain why many passengers didnt even realise the danger titanic was in until maybe 20 minutes before she disappeared due to them not being able to see how far she was slumping down into the ocean

  • @katherynedarrah4245
    @katherynedarrah4245 Год назад +34

    Just finished. 3 comments:
    1. Totally worth the wait
    2. This is GORGEOUS, and you did this with only one good eye
    3. The streams were always fun to watch

    • @GalaxyYeaYea
      @GalaxyYeaYea Год назад +4

      The video is nearly 3 hours long.. at time of this comment it was released 17 minutes ago

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +8

      @MACR "I don't want to show anything of the final plunge and break, because most people just skip straight to that and ignore the rest of the video" - Me while working on this during streams. lol

    • @katherynedarrah4245
      @katherynedarrah4245 Год назад +2

      @@GalaxyYeaYea I sped it up. Having watched through the entire creation process, I'm fairly well versed in what happened. I watched it through an extension that allows up to 3x playback speed.

    • @GalaxyYeaYea
      @GalaxyYeaYea Год назад

      @@katherynedarrah4245 ok then

    • @dark_messenger
      @dark_messenger Год назад +1

      @@TitanicAnimations, I'll watch whole sinking process(with some breaks)

  • @personal9146
    @personal9146 Год назад +6

    On April 14, 1912. One Of the Most Unfortunate and Tragic Maritime disasters unfolded. 1496 Innocent people lost aboard what was supposed to be a Celebrated ocean liner. RMS Titanic.
    May we never forget, The Men Women and Children Lost on this day. May we also remember the many heroes who went down with the ship.
    2,208 Boarded. 1496 Perished. 712. Scarred for life. To her oldest passenger, To her youngest. May These Souls rest in peace. 111 Years Later.

  • @Napp28
    @Napp28 Год назад +24

    Watching this real time sinking portrays a sense of urgency in the situation which many other movies and reenactments do not. People were aware of the incoming water below .. even some of the passengers, I find this very interesting.
    I've always thought about the 5 deck well of the Grand Staircase and how when E deck started to flood passengers would've seen it.

  • @theduke5908
    @theduke5908 Год назад +14

    Huge fans of THG and Tom Lynskey's yearly streams, but this is straight up the most visually impressive sinking animation i've seen so far! The lights on the water and the darkness are gorgeous. Loving the narrating so far aswell, thanks for your hard work.

  • @kath1626
    @kath1626 Год назад +11

    All of the ships frantically calling back and forth is such a haunting detail, I've never seen/heard that before. As if it wasn't big enough of a tragedy already. 💔

    • @wholesale7386
      @wholesale7386 Год назад

      I didnt understand it, can u please explain

    • @AugustinTomasOBrienCaceres
      @AugustinTomasOBrienCaceres Год назад

      @@wholesale7386 me neither. It seems he's talking about the walkie talkie conversation with other ships

    • @robertmudrow8034
      @robertmudrow8034 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@AugustinTomasOBrienCaceres
      Marconi telegraphs using Morse code.
      Walkie talkie lol

    • @MyMichelet
      @MyMichelet 3 месяца назад

      ​@robertmudrow8034 SMDH rightttt LoL indeed!

  • @trilltron2885
    @trilltron2885 2 месяца назад +1

    Its wild how much effort was put into NOT causing a panic. Bro, the ship is sinking. Now is the time to panic.

  • @katierea5830
    @katierea5830 Год назад +6

    Extremely well done! I loved the previous real time video but this has blown it away! Thank you for spending so much time and skill making this new version! 😍

  • @141.airsoft
    @141.airsoft Год назад +3

    Literally the best and most accurate portrail of the sinking I’ve seen, amazing effort! Especially on the communications and actual animated people on the decks

  • @karlvuleta
    @karlvuleta Год назад +29

    Holy moly! I'm sure to you this probably felt like it took forever, but you pulled this off at an extraordinary speed and you should be proud 👍 👍. This is incredible, you've made the best real time sinking video to date.

  • @shipsability
    @shipsability Год назад +9

    This showed up in my recommendations and gave me flashbacks to my ocean liner history phase. I loved it and it got my into engineering (Still my passion to this day). I remember watching EVERY single details of these animations and checking for inaccuracies..

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +2

      There are a few inaccuracies here and there, but not very many. The most blatant one that pops out to me is Boat No.1 not stopping alongside the coaling wire on A-deck promenade but a few feet below it. There was an error in the keyframing there that I didn't catch until it was already rendered.

  • @HyperVegitoDBZ
    @HyperVegitoDBZ Год назад +13

    I can't fathom the amount of work this must have taken.

    • @TitanicAnimations
      @TitanicAnimations  Год назад +16

      Generally about 8-12 hours a day from March to August of this year. And about an hour or two per day since then. Thanks for watching

  • @fmyoung
    @fmyoung 12 дней назад +1

    At one point during the sinking it became obvious that Cpt Smith forgot about the glassed-in front half of the Titanic's 1st-class promenade deck; he ordered lifeboats filled from there. He mistook it for the the one on the Olympic which of course was open for all its length .

  • @Leonicles
    @Leonicles Год назад +2

    This is a masterpiece. I've watched many great Titanic (and other shipwreck) animations, but this one is the best. I also really liked that you narrated, rather than captioned. The artwork is simply beautiful. Thank you for putting so much into this

  • @LuisAngelSantos
    @LuisAngelSantos Год назад +4

    This is honestly the best early Christmas present I have ever gotten. Thank you Phil and Jordan! Can’t wait for Titanic: Death Of An Olympian

  • @talkaboutwacky
    @talkaboutwacky Год назад +1

    Well done with this! I’ve watched this probably 10 times since you’ve uploaded it. This is THE BEST real time Titanic sinking video I’ve ever seen. Well done again!

  • @etsfan1863
    @etsfan1863 Год назад +3

    I really appreciate the work and effort you put on this video. Never had I imagined there were so much information about the sinking of the Titanic. Thank you again.

  • @GabrielNeves-ne2zk
    @GabrielNeves-ne2zk 6 месяцев назад +6

    All interior shots:
    2:36 Boiler Room 6
    6:18 Reciprocating Engine Room
    9:04 Cargo Hold 1
    13:15 Mail Room
    13:42 Firemen's Passage
    14:28 Post Office
    18:04 Cargo Hold 1
    19:06 Post Office
    27:46 Squash Racquet Court

  • @guilhermesimoes9630
    @guilhermesimoes9630 Год назад +3

    Absolutely the best Real Time Titanic Sinking video out there, great job man!! Keep it up!!

  • @snofoxxx
    @snofoxxx Год назад +5

    That's insane. Good job man. That took a couple days of my attention and was a great way to learn about what happened. I couldn't even imagine the horror.

  • @theoauslodz14
    @theoauslodz14 Год назад +4

    Now that's an experience. Not a static view on the ship watching her sinking in 2 hours but different views and information, I personally even learned some new facts. Top work.

  • @galatheumbreon6862
    @galatheumbreon6862 Год назад +7

    A beautiful masterpiece, you and your team did well on this with the sheer amount of effort you guys put in this

  • @jedimaster6673
    @jedimaster6673 Год назад +12

    I love this video, the narration, animation, sounds of the passengers, crew and the ship, you did an amazing job 10/10 😎👍

  • @robertrazo4330
    @robertrazo4330 Год назад +9

    I understand that the people in the credits get the credits but more is due. This was so well put together that it feels as if I were a witness to it. Well done.

  • @michaelallen2063
    @michaelallen2063 Год назад +5

    A tiny detail, but the royal cipher on the mailbags is that of Elizabeth II (1952-2022). It should be George V's cipher (1910-1936) which used a similar typeface, bearing 'GvR'