The story of Jack and his friend, Rose, her mother, her fiance and his bodyguard were the only fictional parts of the movie. They are there to help you feel the loss of what happened. The other people you see and hear from around the ship are real, from the owner of the ship to Molly Brown (the unsinkable Molly Brown, as she was called after this incident). The images at the very beginning were real. That really was the titanic under the water. There IS footage of the Titanic leaving, but it wasn't nearly as good a quality as what you saw at the beginning. I watched long "making of" video explaining why they did this and that and where the historical information came from. A LOT of research was done to make this movie to try to make the events leading up to and during the sinking of the Titanic as true to life as possible (excluding the story-line of the fictional characters of Jack and Rose). That includes that opening shot of the ship leaving. There is a real image of the Titanic before she left the dock of the people on the deck waving. They took that image, cleaned it up so they could see faces and clothing, then recreated the look of the people on the deck and where they were standing, then filmed it. There was incredible attention to detail ♥. Edit: Those words you say are unused or least used were not uncommon at the time. The upper class were taught very well. While they aren't really used as much now, they WERE then. Molly Brown, the lady helping him, wasn't born rich. Her husband struck gold and she became rich over night. No matter how fancy she dressed, she still was a very down to earth person...a prospector's wife. It's what made her so lovable :D Edit 2: They actually did play music on deck as the ship was beginning to sink. Most of the scenes you see come from the eyewitness accounts of survivors. As I said, they paid extreme attention to detail with every moment of the voyage and sinking. Staff were actually telling off people for destroying parts of the ship in an attempt to get above deck! The steerage people WERE locked below deck so they could load the first class passengers in the boat first. And they did finally break free. Bribes WERE made by upper class men to get on the boats with the women and children. The part with the crew man firing into the air, then at a passenger and finally at himself actually happened. Edit 3: I like to think that ending scene was her dying and joining him. She was very very old after all. And it's a nice sort of completion. She lived a full life and finally joined him at the end. :)
The last scene was “Titanic Heaven”. Everyone who died on the ship was there and Jack had been waiting for her there by the clock until she died an old lady, in her bed. Also, if you look at the pictures on her desk it showed that she did all of the things that they said that they would do together.
Yes. True. She died right after her mission got fulfilled: telling a story of her and Jack and returning the diamond where it belonged. Then she died in a bed just like how she promised to Jack to never “ LET GO “. After more than 100 years of living, she finally reunited with the people on Titanic. The very memory that rooted in her heart, always. The ending is not fictional though. James Cameron gave us the Happy Ending everyone wishes for. Finally, she returned to Jack in the afterworld: not exactly heaven but the spiritual world that was waiting for Rose to finally returned.
The 100th anniversary of the disaster saw the release of a ton of Titanic documentaries and shit. Twitter was FULL of people being amazed that the Titanic was actually a real thing. They thought it had just been a movie. It was one of the saddest things I've ever seen on the internet.
SquigglyP it’s sad cause this was one of my favorite movies when I was little and I used to watch it all the time and idk how I knew it was a true story probably from one of my parents but I just assumed this was something everyone knew 😂
Also want to point out that everyone waving as the ship leaves port, that still happens on cruise ships regularly to this day, granted not everyone takes part, but it is a well established tradition. My mum used to sell cruises so I went on them regularly during my teens, probably been on 15 ish ships all over the world.
This movie really is the only movie that will make me cry EVERY time. Even watching you watch it and not seeing the full scenes, I started getting tears in my eyes and a lump in my throat. Theres just something about how the music, the shots, everything that makes me so incredibly emotional
fun fact: jack had to die or else it would’ve ruined the whole point of the movie which is to live your life and make each day count. he died for her and she lived for him. also in the ending scene rose dies and goes to heaven.
Yeah if he did not die, the ending scene would not be as good, I don’t actually mind his death, at least she reunited with him in the afterlife, her true love and who knows maybe Calvert also lost his true love and is with her in his own heaven, so it does not matter about her Calvert life what matters is that she is with her one true love
Billy Zane did such a magnificent job being a colossal prick. Honestly: he in large part makes the movie. Without his character/performance, Jack's and Rose's story would be diminished.
The only thing this movie needed to add was giving him a moustache to twirl evilly. When I watch the movie I like to imagine he's doing that every time he talks to Jack.
@@BrandonLikesMovies my favorite performance from Billy Zane would be Tales From The Crypt Demon Knight" he plays the central villain like here, but he's very fun in the role. If you've never seen it, fun dumb movie lol. Not asking for a reaction, just Billy Zane related.
The ending is left open for interpretation. I personally think old Rose is just dreaming. There's some clues through the movie. First of all old Rose seems to be a healthy energetic centenarian. She doesn't seem sick or near death. When we first see her at the beginning of the movie she's doing some pottery meaning that she's active. Also the first lyrics of the song ''My Heart Will Go On'' say ''Every night in my dreams, I see you, I feel you''. I don't think these lyrics are an accident. I think they're a clue or a give away. Also after old Rose drops the necklace into she ocean she gives a face of relief. The necklance was her last painful reminder of the Titanic and so she comes back to the ocean to drop it in the water and finally put the Titanic behind her. At the end of the movie she dreams with Jack because she spend a whole day telling her story on the Titanic. All her memories and emotions came back. And so she has this dream with Jack on the Titanic because even though she was put the Titanic behind her Jack and his memory still lives within her and she dreams with him because a part of her still loves him.
I tilt to the opposite. She has fulfilled all the tasks and activities Jack charged her with during her life (depicted by her photographs & earlier dialogue) and so the telling of her story, their history, closes the circle. Here, above the titanic, the nexus where her soulmate departed, she can finally be with him once more. And so we see her ‘dying and old lady, warm, asleep in her bed’ and her soul reuniting.
This is my first video of yours! Here’s a couple fun facts about the movie: • The band really did play until the end and sink with the ship. • The chef you see next to Rose on the back of the sinking ship, was a real person, and had been seen throwing chairs off the boat throughout the night for people to hold on to. He got so drunk leading up to the ship going down, that the alcohol in his blood kept him from freezing and the water and he was rescued. • Unsinkable Molly Brown (Kathy Bates) did really try to make her life boat turn back, even picking up an oar to start rowing herself, but she was unsuccessful and was threatened.
Also John Jacob Astor, the richest man on the ship, helped his wife on the lifeboat and went back for his dog. He let other dogs out of their crates while looking for his dog so they could still have a chance to live. They show the dogs running loose on the deck in a deleted scene.
In real life, it was actually Molly Brown who threatened to throw the officer overboard if he didn’t make an attempt to go back and rescue the passengers in the water.
“Toss this guy over the deck right now!” Bro! With your soft spoken, velvet voice of yours sounding as aggressive as I’ve heard, I legit laughed my ass off hearing that.
It would be a good addition to Shawshank and Green Mile for the Steven King movie trifecta. And yes the book is one of my favorites but her portrayal of the character is perfection.
When Titanic came out, I was 12 years old. Because the big sister of my best friend wanted to see this movie and she didn't want to go alone, her sister (my best friend) went with her. And because I was supposed to sleep over at their house this night, I went with them. I wasn't interested in this movie at all so my expectations were pretty small. I didn't even care at this point. LET ME TELL YOU - I couldn't sleep that night. I cried my eyes out the whole night. I couldn't get over the fact that so many people lost their lives in this tragic way and many people of them were poor and good people and were treated so badly. It ate me up. Alongside with this music, it broke my heart. The music still haunts me today and I get teary immediately.
Same for me after I saw it for the first time in theaters and I was 13. I still ball like a baby everytime I rewatch, which is why even though it's one of my favorite movies I can only handle watching it once, or twice, a year.
Yeah, me too. Mom took me to see it when I was 8. As a boy I was more interested in the mechanics of the ship but nowadays I get the whole story and it makes me cry like a baby.
I saw it in theaters on New Year’s Day. Past family tradition. Sat near the front because it was so popular those were the only seats left. Don’t remember crying while in theater, but ever since then, the ending where she goes back to titanic makes me cry every time.
I feel you. I've watched it hundreds of times seen every documentary but every time I see the kids, the mother and the baby, the final scene, it kills me
Some sad little facts: the real musicians in the Titanic actually stayed on board and played as long as they can during the evacuation of the Titanic to calm the passengers, they perished along with the ship. Another fact is that the owner of Macy’s department store we’re one of the passengers that died during the sinking.
Just to make it worse, the musicians families received bills for the cost of their uniforms (not from White Star, but from the agency that had the contract to provide musicians to White Stars ships).
At the end they played 'plus près de toi mon dieu' which means 'closer to the, my lord' like they actually did in 1912. It's the music playing during the showing of the couple in bed, the mother with children, de rich man in his seat under the dome. That being the positions how rests of People were found on the ocean floor.
Actually, the musicians were FORCED by the White Starline company to stay. And then yes their family got billed for their uniforms. White Starline deserved what they got.
Brandon: “I bet they’re actually filming underwater” Me: LOL dude that’s the actual Titanic, not even a model. That’s the real ship at the bottom of the ocean.
Yes... and no The drone footages are all real footages taken by Cameron's team on site (they did 12 dives). They almost lost one when its cable had been stuck in the boat structure Some wide shots (the ones with the submarines visible) are models filmed on a set full of smoke (dry for wet technique)
@@axlm.808 Right, some was filmed in a tank. A lot of the shots were to convince 20th Century Fox to make the movie. James Cameron's brother also helped engineer the lighting rig to get more exposure.
@@valentinafangirling A lot of people say that the movie is an inaccurate portrayal. However, any inaccuracies are because of new information that has came out since the movie. It was very accurate to the information at the time. There were things that were left out of the movie that add to the accuracy. Those are in the deleted scenes. Not everything was depicted. In fact, when the real Titanic left the dock, another one of the docked ships, SS New York, started drifting toward Titanic's stern (rear end) from the suction generated from Titanic's propellers. SS New York was more than half as long as Titanic and it was a near collision. Titanic passengers could hear the steel cables snapping from the SS New York as it got closer. Captain Smith had the engines stopped and reversed one of the propellers. Meanwhile, a nearby tugboat dragged the SS New York away. Captain Smith was able to outmaneuver the Titanic to avoid collision. Had Titanic collided, it could have delayed the maiden voyage indefinitely. Cameron declined to show this because it would take out the grandeur of the departure.
Great reaction. One thing, Titanic wasn't a cruise ship, it was a passenger liner, it wasn't used for vacations it was used as a means of transportation from Europe to America and vice versa. Ocean liners were the only way to travel abroad before planes.
Technically desgin wise it would still be considered an ocean liner. The Queen Mary 2 is the only ship today considered an ocean liner by desgin, she has a deeper draft and sharper bow to tackle the rough swells of the North Atlantic, traits alot of cruise ships dont have, Queen Mary port to port cruises, shes big enough for it no doubt but can do Trans Atlantic travels, my first time traveling to England was on the Queen
The fact that this movie started out being popular, went through the "too popular for its own good and people can't stand it anymore" phase and came out the other end of that still being popular and is still considered a great (and now a classic) movie 23 years later is remarkable.
@@sarahxo2317 I remember back when it came out and a lot of people (including me) started to hate it because it was everywhere to the point of being honestly obnoxious. It stayed in theaters for months on end, the theme song got constant airplay on the radio and MTV, and its fans talked non-stop about it. Back then we weren't used to this level of saturation. It wouldn't even register these days, where you have a lot of content on demand and can avoid whatever you don't want to see. Back then, you were stuck with it regardless of whether you liked it or not.
I was in college when it came out and watched it 5x in the theater. It was highly regarded at the time. It wasn’t until later than ppl started hating it cuz some ppl get something out of hating popular things (and Titanic was the ultimate in popular things- breaking box office records and staying on top for many many years, only to be supplanted by Cameron’s Avatar). Glad to see that good entertainment will be recognized as such past the initial hype/hate phase.
I saw this on release day, junior year of high school, with another guy and 2 girls who were friends. It was weird that everybody was shocked that Jack died, because all 4 of us picked up on it at the very beginning (I can't remember exact wording) but when the grandchildren have no idea who Jack was and that she never even told her love story of him pretty directly tells you that he doesn't survive. If he did survive, they'd have known him. I mean, she has this love story, then just gets married to some other guy and it never even gets brought up? Made no sense that everybody was always surprised that he dies. I didn't realize until later that almost nobody put that 2 and 2 together at the beginning. But all 4 of us thought that the love story was super cheesy and were kind of laughing through plenty of parts because of how cheesy it got. The action and the effects and the sinking were all top notch, but the love story that surrounds it is pretty bad.
He was getting revenge for Kate spitting in his face earlier, which was also unscripted and a genuine shock for Billy. So he discussed with James before filming the table flip and said he was gonna scare her.
I respect that you acknowledged the symbolism of her throwing the diamond in the ocean. My dad absolutely hates this movie because of mainly that scene, and most guys don’t really like it. It’s nice that some get it. Love your review!
@@anthonyhutchins2300 My wife and I loved this movie so much that we went back the next weekend and saw it again. My wife of 30 years passed away in 2009 and I know she is waiting at the top of that staircase for me.
@@MatthewPettyST1300 She surely is waiting there for you. But until you get there yourself, she's also surely wishing you live the best and most beautiful life for yourself and her memory.
Yes, I was going to say this. There's a class divide, obviously, but his language is very appropriate to the era. When you read newspapers from the time you can see the same style. That's how the "educated" (rich) classes spoke in 1912.
Her departure wasn't so full of people in reality though. and she wasn't THAT big of a deal considering Olympic had been in service for about a year. Same size, same luxury. Titanic was the second.
I think that say's something about the irrational/emotioal behaviour of women! And before anyone says 'its just a movie, it might say something about what the writer thinks about women' I'd say we all bought it didn't we?
@@tristramcoffin926 No one is saying it would save the US! But perhaps that it was foolhardy to simply toss it in the ocean for some stupid sentimental bollocks. Heck, give the money to a children's charity for goodness sake!
okay so some info: - kathy bates' character, molly brown, was a real person. she took charge of her rescue boat and basically saved all of them when the crew member refused to go back for more people. - the band playing until the very end really happened. - all of the footage of the ship underwater was the real titanic. it wasn't discovered until the mid-80s and until then everyone assumed it had stayed in one piece, which is why older movies and paintings and stuff have that image of "her whole ass sticking up in the air". but when they found it and saw it was broken in half... yeah. - i think - i THINK - that james cameron (or kate winslet or somebody) has said that old rose threw the diamond into the water because she wanted the team to actually find it. but i could be making that up. - there's a popular fan theory that jack wasn't a real person (in the context of the movie, i mean) but rose's guardian angel. he had no family, appeared in rose's life when she needed him, changed her for the better and set her on the correct path, and disappeared when he knew she would be okay. i really like that whole idea. god i love this movie. thank you so much for this reaction!!
Some fun facts: the beginning underwater bit is from the actual titanic. Cameron got a bit obsessed during research lol. That scene when Hockley flips the table was unscripted, and Rose's "we had an accident" was improv. And the background when they makeout at the front of the ship was a real sunset, which is great mostly because it looks CGI! "On the bed, I mean the couch" was a fumble by Leo and they kept it in. Kate Winslet actually ended with pneumonia because the water they filmed in was so cold. I really loved this movie when I was growing up hahaha. Poor Jack. This was fun, thanks for posting!
Some people interpret the ending as Rose passing away in her sleep and meeting Jack in heaven. It kind of makes sense given that Jack told her that you're going to die an old lady warm in your bed.
I used to think that, but now I think it's a dream sequence because her husband isn't there to greet her. Remember, she was married and had children with a guy for decades, and made many friends who also passed along the way, but none of them are there. I think she's dreaming about reconnecting with all the people in the wreck below since she spent all day remembering those few days.
Apparently the guy at the back of the ship, with Rose and Jack, was a real person. He was a baker on the Titanic. He survived the incident and he credited his survival to drinking so much whiskey that his body temp didn’t go down. He laid in the water for about 3 hours before he was saved.
I feel like allowing Jack to die and the detestable character to live was really realistic to exactly what happened on the ship, first class passengers being given preference & all. It's commentary on society, the rich can get away with murder. They "always win one way or another" as he said
Cal lived because he lied. He was a detestable human being and that was just another example of how gross he was. Had he died you risk creating some sympathy for him. Additionally, you know there would be douche bags on here blaming Rose, saying if it wasn't for her, he'd have gotten on the first lifeboat he was offered. Just like they blame her for Jack's death.
The old couple who were pictured laying together proves that life isn't that simple. He was the owner of Macy's and refused a seat on the lifeboats giving the opportunity to a younger man. His wife decided to stay with him, and have her seat to her maid.
There are a lot of iconic movies I haven't seen. I'm 33 and I hadn't seen any Hitchcock movies until I saw Psycho and North by Northwest recently. A couple months ago I saw Scarface for the first time. I was watching The Godfather last sunday. Again, a lot of iconic movies I still haven't seen. Now I recall a lot of references from The Simpsons I didn't get when I was a kid LOL
At the beginning it really is the Titanic. They had to invent new cameras capable of sustaining the water pressure. James Cameron said that there was no point in making a movie if it didn’t revolutionize the film industry and so he did that.
"Showing that the titanic sank was already somewhat of a spoiler to the ending" ... sir... lol. This was a historic event that happened before the movie was made. I'm sure people went into this movie already knowing that the Titanic sank XD
ironically james cameron said to explain the sinking is why he put the beginning scenes in, and even he acknowledged it was a “spoiler” even though it’s obviously based off of the real sinking.
You'd be surprised. I distinctly remember some people finding it weird how there were so many books and documentaries made about an event that happened in a movie that had just come out in theaters.
ashlyn based of the theory of the sinking... No survivor account describes what Cameron’s film depicts. Very very few mention seeing the propellers. All those still on board after all the lifeboats had left and survived described the ship’s last moments as a sudden wave washing across the deck and the ship taking a sharp swing before sinking quickly within 5 mins. Does that sound like the stern rising to an impossible 90° angle? Titanic broke into three sections. The bow section and the wreckage of the stern are about ¾ of the ship. There is another ¼ of the ship’s structure that is a mountain of twisted, mangled debris that is completely ignored by everyone... but it’s still a quarter of the entire ship.
My mom and aunt, who are baby boomers born in the late '50s, distinctly remember a schoolyard diddy based off of the event. Much like the Lizzie Borden rhyme and the Ring-Around-A-Rosie rhyme, just another one of those songs with eerie origins that kids like to recite. So, if anyone remembered that song, despite not knowing anything else, they knew what was up going into the movie. EDIT: Lol, ended up searching up the song. The chorus: "It was sad. It was sad. It was sad when the great ship went down. (to the bottom of the...) Husbands and wives, Little children lost their lives It was sad when the great ship went down.)"
@@marieantoinette6058 can't figure out if you're a Titanic-groupie or Cameron-hater. We all know movies are fiction and writers/directors take liberties with stories. Don't watch movies to learn history.
It's always a delight to see someone watch Titanic for the first time. "This man has the personality of a doorknob" LOL. Your hatred of Cal reminds me of Madeline Kahn from Clue: "I hated her so much...it-it-the f-flam-flames. Flames on the side of my face..."
All the haters hated Leo because he was a teen idol. Guys just wanted to hate him because every girl was in love with him. I remember every dude watch cheering about Leo's demise.
@@SeanDaRyan yeah DEFINITELY back then and atleast 10 years after aswell (I remember me saying Titanic was my favorite movie was mocked by every guy I told, and I watched it the first time when I was 11 in 2000. Guys who was a teenager in the late 90's are still acting as if it's a bad movie when I talk about it with them) and Leo got so much hate, the guys were so jealous they tried to insult him by calling him gay, a sissy etc, even tho his talent was undeniable. Kind of like guys talked about Justin Bieber in the beginning of his career. I love that Leo got his redemption!
When I first saw it back in the times I "just" found it an extreme scene showing what people had to go through at that moment. Now, having two daughters myself, I can not help but bursting into tears watching it. Even in this reaction video I had to pause it for some minutes to regain my composure.
@@jurgensommer430 Same. I don't recall how I reacted the first time, but now with children myself, this reaction video proved difficult to get through.
More trivia: the ending scene was actually Rose passing away and now, she's in Heaven with Jack. All the people around them died on the Titanic: the band, Tommy, Fabrizio, Captain Smith, Thomas Andrews... That scene was all of them in Heaven.
@@lionlyons obviously bc she's reuniting with jack in his heaven and maybe james cameron thought it would be beautiful if they all met in heaven again (also to the TS: wouldn't call it trivia since it's up to the viewer to decide what it means, like all art. I thought the same as you but it's not like it's a fact, is it? james cameron has said it's up for interpretation. but I agree that the guy watching seems pretty clueless so I get why you wrote it lol)
so he said, but clearly its a lie! In this shot, the clock shows 2.20am (the time the ship died) and only dead people (they who died during the sinking) are by the staircase.
@@thomasnieswandt8805 Clearly it isn't. If James Cameron explained it, which he did, then that's what happened. She met Jack in heaven that's what James said so u can stop theorising
I never really tear up in a romance movie (most of them aren’t really my kind of movie) but Titanic is just so perfect in its story and execution that the ending has me in floods every time. I usually say that movies are subjective, and they are, but I cannot understand hatred toward this movie. It isn’t overrated, it’s a classic for all the right reasons.
Yeah... I don't believe any of these youtubers anymore. I subscribed to ONE and all of a sudden ALLLLLL these self-proclaimed movie buffs haven't seen most of the best movies ever made? no sense
"The characters in this movie are unbelievable sometimes." People in panic often are. We would like to think we would do "the right thing" but life often doesn't work that way. As a first responder it has always been unfortunate to see people lose their humanity. Celebrate and share LOUDLY when people actually step up to the mark.
Yes, thank you. Panic is just different. I felt it only once in my life and once it kicks in, say goodbye to any coherent thoughts, you are just becoming a mess. It's easy to say in the youtube comment section "lol why are they being so dumb? I would do this and that!"
I'm so happy to see this comment, cause it frustrates me as well to hear people talk/write about how immaculate and infallable their hypothetically-panicked selves would be... Ego-stroking and ignorance. People tend to be more couragious than we think in certain types of emergencies, but more self-serving and ruthless than we think in order types of emergencies. Especially desperate situations that draw out over an extended period of time, such as a ship sinking. I have absolutely no way of knowing what I would do in a situation like that and neither do anyone else that have never been in one :/ I suppose we need a bit of dellusion to stay sane and be able to stand ourselves, though, who knows.
You are correct, James Cameron actually did go down to the actual Titanic wreck to get those shots. Also, "Titanic" ship they filmed on was built at 7/8 scale.
He's been there several times since then. He filmed the Ghosts of the Abyss and has various documentaries that explores the wrecksite and does analysis of the sinking.
The scale is 100%, but some sections were removed and acted when you can't see the ship in full view. That's where you get the 90%. Only the starboard side on the black hull was in full detail. The shots at the beginning showed port side. The whole frame had to be mirrored along with all text in the shot. Whenever you see the whole ship, that's of a scale model with digital people added.
Titanic is my favorite movie of all time. In fact, it's so special to me that I only watch it once a year. I always start it on April 14, and I finish it on the 15th, in concurrence with the time frame of the sinking.
That footage at the beginning isn’t real footage. It’s footage from the later “Boarding Scene” just put down in a sepia like filter and slowed down to mimic what actual footage would look like. Real Life footage of Titanic departing Southampton doesn’t exist as of now.
Titanic, a film I put on hold for so many years. See, I always viewed it as a "girly" film when I was a lot younger because a lot of girls I know cried over it. Then, I finally give it a watch last year and my thought was, "Wow, I can't believe it took me this long to watch this. This is one of my fav films now." It's unbelievable how such skewed perception can make you miss out on something you might enjoy or even love.
@@carlhartwell7978 You haven't watched the movie then, MANY women and children died, there's a f*cking scene of a mother reading her children one last bedtime story before they die, you donut! "All the men die." *You say as screams of women and children echo in the background*
Did I say no women or children die? I mean a far better argument for you to make against my comment would be, 'but there are men who survive'. Fine, I was being flippant. But clearly your chances of survival would be better if you're a woman on any sinking ship, or pretty much any disaster tbh. I do'nt _necessarily_ have a problem with that, I can understand the biological imperative that women are a _less expendable commodity_ in these situations. but what tends to get irritating is when fieminnists ignore it... _Men and wiomen are equal..._ but only at certain times, then women are nore imprtant! lol. Fact is, men and women AREN'T equal, full stop. Blue and red are not equal, they are different, that's why they have different names, so do men and women. Different things, by DEFINITION cannot be equal.
@@carlhartwell7978 Men and women weren’t equal at THAT time, that’s all that matters. And even now we know men and women are biologically different and that’s good, BUT they should have equal rights- that’s what feminism is!
React to : The pianist Léon the profesionnal Donnie Darko Eyes wide shut Full Metal jacket The shining A clockwork orange Apocalypse now Platoon King of comedy Taxi driver Casino Goodfellas Requiem for a dream Django unchained Joker 1917 One flew over the cuckoo’s nest The Truman show Parasite Once upon a time in America Shutter island La haine Misery Paths of glory
"James Cameron does not do what James Cameron does for James Cameron. James Cameron does what James Cameron does because James Cameron IS James Cameron" (Sorry for stealing that one)
I've watched this movie literally thousands of times. Even went to see it in the theater twice and it still makes me sob uncontrollably every single time... But then the infamous "propeller guy" scene rears it's ugly head and I start laughing hysterically and it makes me feel like the devils asshole.
Don’t worry. As emotional as that scene is, it always got a laugh out of me. My little brother lost his shit in the theatre at that part and it just infected me. Lol.
Hi there, Brandon! Please allow me to nerd out over here as an historian of the RMS Titanic and the White Star Line, the company that owned the vessel, with some fun facts I feel like will further enhance the movie for you, given your lack of context for a lot of this: - Titanic was never actually advertised as unsinkable. Its transverse watertight bulkhead design was described in 'The Shipbuilder,' a trade publication, as "rendering the ship virtually unsinkable," but the White Star Line itself never used that phrasing to describe Titanic. That's an example of memory conflating the quote from the trade publication with advertisement after the fact to make the sinking seem more hubristic. - The film goes out of its way to make J. Bruce Ismay (Jonathan Hyde), the managing director of the White Star Line, into a mustache-twirling villain throughout, mostly because that's the popular perception of Ismay. Scrutiny of survivor accounts actually reveal Ismay was quite active in helping to get people into the lifeboats - and only boarded one himself when he could see no women or children around to board the boat. Much of the vitriol towards Ismay stemmed from the newspapers of William Randolph Hearst, who knew Ismay before hand and immensely disliked him, and so directed his papers to tar and feather Ismay as a coward. He was traumatized by the sinking, and retired within a year. Until his death in 1937, he only spoke of Titanic once after the official investigations concluded - when his grandson, not knowing any better, asked at a family dinner if he had ever been shipwrecked. "Yes," he replied, "I was once on a ship some people thought was unsinkable." - There is a *lot* of contention over whether or not a ship's officer committed suicide. Some survivors claim that one did, some survivors dispute the assertion. There is, however, very little evidence that First Officer Murdoch (Ewan Stewart) was the one who did so. The more likely candidate for an officer committing suicide is Sixth Officer James Moody, the youngest of Titanic's deck officers, and a sailor who had trained aboard a Royal Navy training vessel, unlike his civilian colleagues. This theory is flimsy, but based on survivors who claim there was a suicide saying the officer performed a military salute before shooting himself. Cameron did, eventually, apologize to Murdoch's family for showing him as committing suicide in this film, and 20th Century Fox gave a cash award to the high school in his hometown in Scotland to support their William McMaster Murdoch Award, a cash prize upon graduation for students fulfilling certain criteria. - The priest seen giving absolution on the sinking ship, quoting the Book of Revelations - "...and there was no more sea..." - is Father Thomas Byles, an English Catholic Priest travelling in Second Class. He was last seen doing exactly what he's seen doing in the film: leading those about to die in prayer and absolving them of their sins. There is currently a campaign ongoing, led by the current priest of his parish, to get the Vatican to consider Father Byles for sainthood. - The elderly couple seen cuddling in their bed as their cabin floods are Isidor and Ida Straus. Mrs. Straus was preparing to board a lifeboat, and when he asked if he could join his wife, Mr. Straus was refused a place in a boat. She stepped away from the boat, and he tried to convince her to get into it. "We have been married these forty years," she responded. "Where you go, I go." They were last seen sitting in a pair of deck chairs, holding hands, as the ship sank from beneath them. Mr. Strauss' body was recovered, and is buried in New York City. Their children donated a massive residence hall, Straus Hall, to Harvard University in their honor. They are also memorialized by a park in New York City, and by a plaque at the flagship store of Macy's Department Store - which Mr. Straus was the owner of. - Frederick Fleet, the lookout who spotted the iceberg and calls the bridge to give the infamous warning "Iceberg Right Ahead, Sir!" never recovered from that night. He always believed he was responsible for Titanic hitting the berg and sinking. Following the death of his wife, Fleet committed suicide in January, 1965 - leaving a suicide note which expressly mentioned his lingering grief over the sinking of Titanic. - A little girl can be seen being told by her father "be a good girl and hold mummy's hand" while being put into a lifeboat. This little girl is meant to be Eva Hart, one of the last survivors of the Titanic - who was seven when the ship sank. The dialogue are the last words her father, Benjamin Hart, ever said to her. Hart died in 1996, while the film was in production. - Contrary to what Rose claims ("we all called her Molly") Margaret Tobin Brown (Kathy Bates) was never known as Molly in life. She was "Maggie" to her close friends. The nickname "Molly" was applied to her posthumously thanks to the 1960 Broadway Musical "The Unsinkable Molly Brown," loosely based on her life; and adapted into a 1964 film starring Debbie Reynolds. She was also an incredibly outspoken feminist, who ran twice for the U.S. Senate before women could even vote. - Something the film leaves out almost entirely (but you'd have to be incredibly eagle-eyed to spot it) is the fact there was a ship not even ten miles from Titanic, sitting there at anchor to wait for dawn to try and traverse the ice. The S.S. Californian had tried to contact Titanic earlier in the day to warn them of the ice ahead, and the transmission came through so loud and so abruptly on the wireless telegraph while senior operator Jack Phillips was trying to send a message that he snapped "Shut up, Shut up, I am working Cape Race!" at them over the apparatus. The officers on watch on the bridge of Californian watched Titanic steam up past them - all lights blazing - and then suddenly go dark. They thought the ship had just put out its lights, but the ship had actually turned to try and avoid the iceberg, and had gone from parallel to them to perpendicular. They could see Californian from Titanic - and that's why Titanic was firing those signal rockets: Californian's one wireless operator had gone to bed, and so the ship didn't hear the distress call. Captain Lord of the Californian refused to listen to his officers about the ship nearby "firing rockets," and went back to bed. Cameron narratively leaves this out of the film - but sharp eyed viewers can spot the Californian's mast lights on the horizon in some wide shots. - Captain Smith (Bernard Hill) was not catatonic during the sinking. Survivor accounts tell us he was incredibly active - pacing the boat deck back and forth, supervising the loading of the lifeboats, going to check on the distress signals, helping women into the boats. Some survivors on the overturned Collapsible B, a lifeboat that had turned upside down and had nearly fifty people clinging to it through the night, even claimed Captain Smith had swum up to the boat after the sinking to hand off a baby he had recovered from the water (that later froze to death) before proclaiming "Good luck, boys. I'm off to follow the ship." - The body of Wallace Hartley (Jonathan Evans-Jones) the leader of Titanic's band, was recovered after the sinking and returned to England for burial. More people attended his service than attended the funeral and burial of Prime Minister Henry Campbell-Bannerman, the only Prime Minister of Great Britain to die at Number 10 Downing Street, only four years before the sinking. The violin Hartley played aboard the Titanic, recovered from a violin case strapped to his chest, sold at auction in 2013 for $1.7 Million.
And not all gates were locked. The gates were for people who were sick with a contagious diseases and were put there, so it wouldn’t infect the entire ship.
Is it possible that the gunshots came from Chief Officer Henry Wilde? Since he is the only other officer besides Smith, Murdoch, and Moody to perish in the sinking
At the end, she passes away in her sleep while on the ocean above the Titanic wreckage (where Jack passed away). The final scene is the "afterlife" seeing all the souls that were lost during the sinking of the ship. 😭
the end is seen by most people as rose’s death and joining everyone who died that night on the ship in the afterlife. she lived the life that she promised to jack, she was able to tell her and jacks story, and put the diamond back in the place it should’ve been, so she finally died in peace after that. the clock behind jack at the end even shows the exact time that the ship had fully sunk
This movie was such an achievement of filmmaking as well as a good movie. It’s hard to convey quite how big a deal it was that year. It’s easy to get cynical about its popularity, but I still love it all these years later. There’s another movie about the sinking of the Titanic from 1958, A Night to Remember, that is also a really great docudrama telling of the events.
I think the reason why he let Cal live was because that was actually the case back then. There WERE alot of rich and maybe selfish people who survived, while alot of poor, lovely people died.
That's a generalization. There were plenty of perfectly nice rich people, and poor assholes. Read about the lives of the actual people on board before you judge them.
Kathy Bates played Molly Brown, a real life survivor of the Titanic. You probably know her from Misery, and I am pretty sure she won the Oscar for that role. But she has been in a ton of other stuff.
Ah this movie takes me back to watching it on VHS. It's so long it took two VHS tapes. Then waiting a half an hour for it to rewind to watch it again. Good simple times.
Just found out your channel. I have to say, your voice is so calm and relaxing, it's very refreshing since a lot of youtubers tend to speak loudly. I'll watch other videos of yours for sure! Ciao from Italy ;)
I still don't think I've watched this whole movie in one sitting, but I saw parts of it when I was young, and Kate Winslet was probably the first time I really thought "wow, women are pretty". She still wows me in this movie.
I think I fell in love with Rose in this movie and I've loved Kate Winslet ever since (even though I know there's a huge difference between an actor and the character they play).
@@bobblebardsley I know what you mean. We watched Titanic in school & I fell in love with Kate too. After Titanic I went on a movie watching spree & ended up watching almost every other movie Kate has been in. My favorite ones ended up being the 2001 cartoon adaption of A Christmas Carol (she has one hell of a lovely singing voice) & Finding Neverland because it made me bawl my eyes out.
@@flowerdolphin5648 'What If' from A Christmas Carol made it to #6 in the UK charts when the movie was released, so yeah if I hadn't already decided I was a fan, that sealed the deal for me too. I like how even when I hate her character in stuff, I still love her performance. And she has strong principles irl too, which I respect a lot. Just seems like a generally good person.
The underwater scenes at the beginning were actually filmed at the true wreckage site of the Titanic! The lengths James Cameron went to for this film are incredible. Another amazing piece of trivia is that the collective runtime of all the scenes in this movie set in 1912 (aka on the Titanic itself) is 2 hours and 40 minutes, which is how long the Titanic itself took to sink from collision with the iceberg to disappearing beneath the ocean. Such attention to detail and true respect for the legacy of the ship. Also important to know that the musicians who played the entire time the ship sank were real people - and they really did that.
Okay, seriously - you've never seen Titanic?! LOL Yes, that is Kathy Bates. Fun Fact: James Cameron is obsessive about his level of meticulous detail and recreation of historicity with regards to this subject matter. Everything that happens, and the way that it happened, is true. The ship nearly sinks in "about" real time as possible, the musicians really did stay back to play...ultimately to their demise. There really was a well-known (at the time) elderly couple who died in their bed, The ship flooded the way it did, and sank the way it is portrayed. And, if memory serves, in the biggest cosmic coincidence ever, I think there was an actual person on board Titanic named Jack Dawson who ended up drowning.
I specifically saw this in the theatre for Kate Winsletts boobs when I was just a wee teenager. Made my dad sit in the back while me and my buddy sat front row.
Fun fact: some of the first shots of the wreckage, is the actual Titanic, James actually dived to the wreck for footage and to get more accuracy, he also made a documentary after he made this movie! He was very interested in the history of the titanic so most of the characters in this movie are based of real people on board of the Titanic the night it sunk!
Interesting fact about this movie: James Cameron was actually just interested in the history of the Titanic sinking, and disguised it as a love movie. Once the ship hits the iceberg the events play out in real time, with major events happening when they actually happened after one another. That's why the run time is so long.
If you take out all of the 1997 ‘present day’ scenes, then the film is exactly 2hr 40m. This means that the scenes in 1912 equal the real life sinking time of the ship. Pretty unique and interesting fact
@@ameliaxx Now that is a fact. If you notice the clock at the end during the dream/heaven sequence is at 2:20 and it's at night. Fun fact about Titanic's clock, Honour and Glory Crowning Time, it was on all three Olympic-class ships. They were carved individually. The one from the first ship, the Olympic, still exists. The original color was oak. Then the staircase was later painted olive green. Then it was painted white. There are no photos of Titanic's grand staircase and some believe the clock wasn't installed in time. The cherub on the the center railing was modeled after the cherubs outside the Palace of Versailles where Marie Antoinette resided. The artist took a little liberty on the cherubs. Some of the wood features from Olympic survived today.
Kathy Bates is a jewel in this movie. She steals every scene she is in. You may have seen her in "Misery." She portrays Mollie Brown. There's an older movie called "The Unsinksable Mollie Brown." You might enjoy it.
I met Molly's granddaughter. By the way, Molly Brown was never called Molly until after the movie. Her real name was Margaret and went by Maggie. She traveled to New York to visit her ailing son. She was friends with John Jacob Astor, the richest man on board and in the world at the time. When Astor married Madeleine and she was with child, it was a scandal because she was only 19. Margaret supported him. Margaret held several fundraisers for the survivors because many of them lost everything. Margaret also supported orphans. She almost became the first US senator, but gave up the spot. Margaret was a very assertive woman who fit in very well, not the obnoxious woman portrayed in movies.
Finally! I was hoping someone would say that! An ocean liner (like Titanic) is the same as an airliner or even a shuttle bus. It’s about the destination, the ship is just the thing you’re on to get there. A cruise ship (like Oasis Of The Seas) is more about being on the ship and enjoying the time on the ship
I was around at the time, and also have never seen this movie. So I also won't watch this reaction. Just something about taking a real tragic event, and adding a fake love story, just doesn't seem right. Same thing said for Pearl Harbor (2001).
@@nataliedepriest9113 remember, it was two VHS. I remember saving up all my money buying it at Blockbuster when it first came out, and thinking it to VHS thing was the coolest thing ever.
@@BrandonLikesMovies the internet, where we forget that we may not be chatting with people in our IRL social group. Not everyone is in the same city or county, has the same level of education, economical bracket, or age.
What I love about this movie is how they show that these people in the beginning were so adamant about getting the diamond that they never once thought of all the suffering that the people on the actual Titanic went through.
It actually took the Titanic damn near 3 hours to fully go down. These people really suffered. The classism is so disgusting and terrible. So many deaths.
And after that ship sank god himself said to Hockley, can't sink that ship huh? Well it looks like I just did, I'll be seeing you on the crash of 29 after you blow your brains and then I'll sending you to hell where you belong
i was 20 when this movie came out and i saw it seven times in the theater. SEVEN. it was my favorite movie for years and years. i am stupidly excited to watch this.
Did we even see her naked, though? I don't recall us actually seeing her, just drawn breasts. Your aunt and Galman's mother wouldn't have fared well in the older times, when nudity was practically everywhere in the form of statues and paintings, lol. I guess some adults see the human body as being inherently sexual.
@@VelkanAngels you see everything of Rose during the drawing scene lol!! Except her 🐈. It was tastefully done to the point that people dont remember it as a nude scene but as a beautiful moment lollllll. It also snuck past the R rating to be PG13
I think Hawkley living just adds to the true to life frustrations that the majority of deaths were the poor, and crew. There's a video of the Titanic sinking in real time you can find on RUclips, very interesting and sad watch. Many of the lifeboats weren't even half capacity.
There's a cut scene where Ismay (the man who wanted all the boilers lit) walked on the deck of the rescue ship, Carpathia, and has to injure the hard looks from the other survivors, especially women and children, some of who you see having to leave their husbands/fathers behind. They glare at him like "Why did you survive when my husband/father did not?" One officer, Lightoller (the one who had the dispute with Andrews about the number of people on the boats) took the order "women and children first" as "women and children only" and lowered boats half full, also with the belief they would pick people up lower down (some of the crew had gone to open doors lower down to allow the boats to pick people up and they never came back). but once the boats reached the water they just rowed away.
There's a really cool photo you should look up. Its dicraprio standing in a pool of water next to rose on the piece of wood. Movie magic made it look like he was actually floating in the ocean. Love that kind of stuff.
I'll always remember seeing this movie at the theater with my dad when I was 7. I tried to hide my tears at the end and my dad told me "don't worry I think everyone is crying right now". So cool to see and ear your first reactions, it brings me back in 1997 with my dad
Apologies for the audio cutting out from 14:30-14:50, the background music got copyrighted.
that was my first guess....the piano in that score is classic...copyright for sure lol.
The Goonies next
The story of Jack and his friend, Rose, her mother, her fiance and his bodyguard were the only fictional parts of the movie. They are there to help you feel the loss of what happened. The other people you see and hear from around the ship are real, from the owner of the ship to Molly Brown (the unsinkable Molly Brown, as she was called after this incident). The images at the very beginning were real. That really was the titanic under the water. There IS footage of the Titanic leaving, but it wasn't nearly as good a quality as what you saw at the beginning. I watched long "making of" video explaining why they did this and that and where the historical information came from. A LOT of research was done to make this movie to try to make the events leading up to and during the sinking of the Titanic as true to life as possible (excluding the story-line of the fictional characters of Jack and Rose). That includes that opening shot of the ship leaving. There is a real image of the Titanic before she left the dock of the people on the deck waving. They took that image, cleaned it up so they could see faces and clothing, then recreated the look of the people on the deck and where they were standing, then filmed it. There was incredible attention to detail ♥.
Edit: Those words you say are unused or least used were not uncommon at the time. The upper class were taught very well. While they aren't really used as much now, they WERE then.
Molly Brown, the lady helping him, wasn't born rich. Her husband struck gold and she became rich over night. No matter how fancy she dressed, she still was a very down to earth person...a prospector's wife. It's what made her so lovable :D
Edit 2: They actually did play music on deck as the ship was beginning to sink. Most of the scenes you see come from the eyewitness accounts of survivors. As I said, they paid extreme attention to detail with every moment of the voyage and sinking. Staff were actually telling off people for destroying parts of the ship in an attempt to get above deck! The steerage people WERE locked below deck so they could load the first class passengers in the boat first. And they did finally break free. Bribes WERE made by upper class men to get on the boats with the women and children. The part with the crew man firing into the air, then at a passenger and finally at himself actually happened.
Edit 3: I like to think that ending scene was her dying and joining him. She was very very old after all. And it's a nice sort of completion. She lived a full life and finally joined him at the end. :)
watch one flew over the cuckoos nest.
Do you plan on watching 'Good Will Hunting'? would love to see a reaction of that @Brandon Likes Movies
The last scene was “Titanic Heaven”. Everyone who died on the ship was there and Jack had been waiting for her there by the clock until she died an old lady, in her bed. Also, if you look at the pictures on her desk it showed that she did all of the things that they said that they would do together.
Not sure she died there. She could have been just asleep.
Yes. True. She died right after her mission got fulfilled: telling a story of her and Jack and returning the diamond where it belonged. Then she died in a bed just like how she promised to Jack to never “ LET GO “. After more than 100 years of living, she finally reunited with the people on Titanic. The very memory that rooted in her heart, always. The ending is not fictional though. James Cameron gave us the Happy Ending everyone wishes for. Finally, she returned to Jack in the afterworld: not exactly heaven but the spiritual world that was waiting for Rose to finally returned.
At the end I think she was sleeping beacuse of the lyrics of the song "Every night in my dreams
I see you.."
Simon T then her heart must go on too right?
@@markiahnadiaries5051 yes, he is in her heart and she will go on, that's what the song says..🤷♂️
As soon as he said, “I hope Fabrizio makes it out,” I went oh honey :(
Anne Bancroft was so freakin' *hot!*
Fabrizio and Tommy’s deaths hit hard😢
Sarahxo but at least they end up in heaven with Jack and Rose.
Tru 😤
After reading this I’m like did he die? I’m LIKE OH YEAH HE GOT DROWNED BY THE thingy falling on them
“I thought knowing the titanic sunk was somewhat of a spoiler” I think everyone knew man cause it’s a true story , great video tho
Excatly lol 🤣
i read that during that part😂
The 100th anniversary of the disaster saw the release of a ton of Titanic documentaries and shit. Twitter was FULL of people being amazed that the Titanic was actually a real thing. They thought it had just been a movie. It was one of the saddest things I've ever seen on the internet.
SquigglyP it’s sad cause this was one of my favorite movies when I was little and I used to watch it all the time and idk how I knew it was a true story probably from one of my parents but I just assumed this was something everyone knew 😂
I’d say he was being sarcastic maybe lol?
kate winslet is so classically beautiful in this movie
I was 7 years old when I first saw this movie and you can imagine I felt the same way lol.
@@GHound420 oh my gosh same! Love this movie by far my favorite! My great great uncle actually died on the Titanic 🚢
Kate Winslet is beautiful. Classically or not, lol. One my favorite actresses ever.
Ikr she looks as if she belongs in the old times.
@Osman Yousif It's a public secret that the Academy Award people have a love-hate relationship with young talented performers/new comers
For how chill you typically are, you were amusingly ruthless over Hockley's character XD
Hated his character 😂
@@BrandonLikesMovies Billy Zane is so damn great at playing villains. Check out DEAD CALM and DEMON KNIGHT for further proof.
@@jackthenarrator4735 He is amazing in Dead Calm.
@@BrandonLikesMovies I actually found the script written for him rather cartoonish and deliberate.
That had me laughing a lot throughout this reaction. Even though he died he wasn’t satisfied 😂
"He put a pistol in his mouth."
Brandon: *I mean, that's not super satisfying, but I'll take what I can get.*
LOL
to be fair it was not that long after the sinking that the stock market crashed so he died pretty young
“Throw Cal off the ship!” Was my favorite moment
So savage lmao
They weren't quite "Cruise Ships" back then. They were modes of transport. The only way to cross the ocean.
Also want to point out that everyone waving as the ship leaves port, that still happens on cruise ships regularly to this day, granted not everyone takes part, but it is a well established tradition. My mum used to sell cruises so I went on them regularly during my teens, probably been on 15 ish ships all over the world.
@@fir3gaming664 lmao thats a fun fact
@@fir3gaming664 That is indeed a fun fact Kurtice. So Alex, was it all worth it or did it get boring after a while?
Idk you got ocean crossing ships then you got the Titanic Wich was a mix of a cruise ship and a transport
Alex Hunt I usually just get drunk on all the free champagne when the ship leaves port.
This movie really is the only movie that will make me cry EVERY time. Even watching you watch it and not seeing the full scenes, I started getting tears in my eyes and a lump in my throat. Theres just something about how the music, the shots, everything that makes me so incredibly emotional
It’s the song. Gets me every time.
plus having in mind that the sinking really happened.....
I watched this movie 4 times in one day when I got my heart broken. I love it so much
@@nellies THAT SCENE AH
Same. I started crying right out the gate lol
fun fact: jack had to die or else it would’ve ruined the whole point of the movie which is to live your life and make each day count. he died for her and she lived for him.
also in the ending scene rose dies and goes to heaven.
"He died for her and she lived for him." Damn, I love that.
That’s your interpretation, not a fact.
She could have scooted over just a smidge, is all I'm sayin.
刘凯琳 actually james cameron said it himself.
Yeah if he did not die, the ending scene would not be as good, I don’t actually mind his death, at least she reunited with him in the afterlife, her true love and who knows maybe Calvert also lost his true love and is with her in his own heaven, so it does not matter about her Calvert life what matters is that she is with her one true love
Billy Zane did such a magnificent job being a colossal prick. Honestly: he in large part makes the movie. Without his character/performance, Jack's and Rose's story would be diminished.
Very true!
The only thing this movie needed to add was giving him a moustache to twirl evilly. When I watch the movie I like to imagine he's doing that every time he talks to Jack.
@@BrandonLikesMovies my favorite performance from Billy Zane would be Tales From The Crypt Demon Knight" he plays the central villain like here, but he's very fun in the role. If you've never seen it, fun dumb movie lol. Not asking for a reaction, just Billy Zane related.
@@flibber123 u know if there was a railroad track, we would see Jack tied to it as he laughed maniacally
Agree. The fact that I hated him throughout this whole movie just proves how great he did at the role.
she died and in her afterlife she met jack, thats the ending of the movie, she wasnt going back in her memories.
Which sucks for her husband of 60 years, left alone in the afterlife for a man his wife knew for 2 days.
Rob Fraser 😂
James Cameron said he left it up for interpretation.
The ending is left open for interpretation. I personally think old Rose is just dreaming. There's some clues through the movie. First of all old Rose seems to be a healthy energetic centenarian. She doesn't seem sick or near death. When we first see her at the beginning of the movie she's doing some pottery meaning that she's active. Also the first lyrics of the song ''My Heart Will Go On'' say ''Every night in my dreams, I see you, I feel you''. I don't think these lyrics are an accident. I think they're a clue or a give away. Also after old Rose drops the necklace into she ocean she gives a face of relief. The necklance was her last painful reminder of the Titanic and so she comes back to the ocean to drop it in the water and finally put the Titanic behind her. At the end of the movie she dreams with Jack because she spend a whole day telling her story on the Titanic. All her memories and emotions came back. And so she has this dream with Jack on the Titanic because even though she was put the Titanic behind her Jack and his memory still lives within her and she dreams with him because a part of her still loves him.
I tilt to the opposite. She has fulfilled all the tasks and activities Jack charged her with during her life (depicted by her photographs & earlier dialogue) and so the telling of her story, their history, closes the circle. Here, above the titanic, the nexus where her soulmate departed, she can finally be with him once more. And so we see her ‘dying and old lady, warm, asleep in her bed’ and her soul reuniting.
This is my first video of yours!
Here’s a couple fun facts about the movie:
• The band really did play until the end and sink with the ship.
• The chef you see next to Rose on the back of the sinking ship, was a real person, and had been seen throwing chairs off the boat throughout the night for people to hold on to. He got so drunk leading up to the ship going down, that the alcohol in his blood kept him from freezing and the water and he was rescued.
• Unsinkable Molly Brown (Kathy Bates) did really try to make her life boat turn back, even picking up an oar to start rowing herself, but she was unsuccessful and was threatened.
Also John Jacob Astor, the richest man on the ship, helped his wife on the lifeboat and went back for his dog. He let other dogs out of their crates while looking for his dog so they could still have a chance to live. They show the dogs running loose on the deck in a deleted scene.
@@katwebbxo so did john and his own dog that he found lived?
@@buffycatnip Sadly he didn't and I'm pretty sure the dog didn't either. 😥
James Cameron was also the artist that did the sketch of Rose
In real life, it was actually Molly Brown who threatened to throw the officer overboard if he didn’t make an attempt to go back and rescue the passengers in the water.
“Toss this guy over the deck right now!” Bro! With your soft spoken, velvet voice of yours sounding as aggressive as I’ve heard, I legit laughed my ass off hearing that.
**calm velvet voice** "Dang, that dude just shattered his legs bouncing off that propeller..." This is the way all bad news should be reported.
Watch "Misery" with Kathy Bates and James Caan... classic.
Yessss!!!!
Read the book instead. The movie doesn't do it any justice
@@moondog3056 such a good book! 😭
Moon Dog they’re both good.
It would be a good addition to Shawshank and Green Mile for the Steven King movie trifecta. And yes the book is one of my favorites but her portrayal of the character is perfection.
How can this movie still feel so intense so many years after , my God it's forever a masterpiece. That last shot in the movie makes me cry EVERYTIME.
at the end of the day we all arent really that different
Time doesn't exist and we made it up according to George Carlin.
“Tell mother. Don’t tell Cal.” I can’t. 😂
“This guy has the personality of a doorknob”. That got me. Ha ha.
The best description ever!
That is somewhat offensive towards doorknobs.
now THAT is a description I dont think anyone could better....."the personality of a doorknob"......it's brilliant!! love it!
When Titanic came out, I was 12 years old. Because the big sister of my best friend wanted to see this movie and she didn't want to go alone, her sister (my best friend) went with her. And because I was supposed to sleep over at their house this night, I went with them. I wasn't interested in this movie at all so my expectations were pretty small. I didn't even care at this point. LET ME TELL YOU - I couldn't sleep that night. I cried my eyes out the whole night. I couldn't get over the fact that so many people lost their lives in this tragic way and many people of them were poor and good people and were treated so badly. It ate me up. Alongside with this music, it broke my heart. The music still haunts me today and I get teary immediately.
Same for me after I saw it for the first time in theaters and I was 13. I still ball like a baby everytime I rewatch, which is why even though it's one of my favorite movies I can only handle watching it once, or twice, a year.
I was 11 and saw this movie as a sleep over activity outing. We were so sad afterwards lol
Yeah, me too. Mom took me to see it when I was 8. As a boy I was more interested in the mechanics of the ship but nowadays I get the whole story and it makes me cry like a baby.
I saw it in theaters on New Year’s Day. Past family tradition. Sat near the front because it was so popular those were the only seats left. Don’t remember crying while in theater, but ever since then, the ending where she goes back to titanic makes me cry every time.
I feel you. I've watched it hundreds of times seen every documentary but every time I see the kids, the mother and the baby, the final scene, it kills me
Some sad little facts: the real musicians in the Titanic actually stayed on board and played as long as they can during the evacuation of the Titanic to calm the passengers, they perished along with the ship. Another fact is that the owner of Macy’s department store we’re one of the passengers that died during the sinking.
Just to make it worse, the musicians families received bills for the cost of their uniforms (not from White Star, but from the agency that had the contract to provide musicians to White Stars ships).
At the end they played 'plus près de toi mon dieu' which means 'closer to the, my lord' like they actually did in 1912. It's the music playing during the showing of the couple in bed, the mother with children, de rich man in his seat under the dome. That being the positions how rests of People were found on the ocean floor.
Actually, the musicians were FORCED by the White Starline company to stay. And then yes their family got billed for their uniforms. White Starline deserved what they got.
It was Isidor straus. In the film , he was the old man in bed with his wife Ida as the ship sank.
One of them (actors) is Roberto Benigni, great actor.
Brandon: “I bet they’re actually filming underwater”
Me: LOL dude that’s the actual Titanic, not even a model. That’s the real ship at the bottom of the ocean.
Yes... and no
The drone footages are all real footages taken by Cameron's team on site (they did 12 dives). They almost lost one when its cable had been stuck in the boat structure
Some wide shots (the ones with the submarines visible) are models filmed on a set full of smoke (dry for wet technique)
@@axlm.808 Right, some was filmed in a tank. A lot of the shots were to convince 20th Century Fox to make the movie. James Cameron's brother also helped engineer the lighting rig to get more exposure.
This Gyarados (Its a Pokemon) knows his ocean
Omg i didn’t know that. This movie is impressive because of many reasons, but this makes it incredibly much better.
@@valentinafangirling A lot of people say that the movie is an inaccurate portrayal. However, any inaccuracies are because of new information that has came out since the movie. It was very accurate to the information at the time. There were things that were left out of the movie that add to the accuracy. Those are in the deleted scenes.
Not everything was depicted. In fact, when the real Titanic left the dock, another one of the docked ships, SS New York, started drifting toward Titanic's stern (rear end) from the suction generated from Titanic's propellers. SS New York was more than half as long as Titanic and it was a near collision. Titanic passengers could hear the steel cables snapping from the SS New York as it got closer. Captain Smith had the engines stopped and reversed one of the propellers. Meanwhile, a nearby tugboat dragged the SS New York away. Captain Smith was able to outmaneuver the Titanic to avoid collision. Had Titanic collided, it could have delayed the maiden voyage indefinitely. Cameron declined to show this because it would take out the grandeur of the departure.
Great reaction. One thing, Titanic wasn't a cruise ship, it was a passenger liner, it wasn't used for vacations it was used as a means of transportation from Europe to America and vice versa. Ocean liners were the only way to travel abroad before planes.
Today we would consider it a cruise ship, but pleasure cruises weren’t around at this time
Technically desgin wise it would still be considered an ocean liner. The Queen Mary 2 is the only ship today considered an ocean liner by desgin, she has a deeper draft and sharper bow to tackle the rough swells of the North Atlantic, traits alot of cruise ships dont have, Queen Mary port to port cruises, shes big enough for it no doubt but can do Trans Atlantic travels, my first time traveling to England was on the Queen
The fact that this movie started out being popular, went through the "too popular for its own good and people can't stand it anymore" phase and came out the other end of that still being popular and is still considered a great (and now a classic) movie 23 years later is remarkable.
I think a lot of people hated it just for the sake of hating it but it really is a fantastic film and my favourite of all time.
@@sarahxo2317 what makes it your favourite film? Genuine question
@@sarahxo2317 I remember back when it came out and a lot of people (including me) started to hate it because it was everywhere to the point of being honestly obnoxious. It stayed in theaters for months on end, the theme song got constant airplay on the radio and MTV, and its fans talked non-stop about it. Back then we weren't used to this level of saturation. It wouldn't even register these days, where you have a lot of content on demand and can avoid whatever you don't want to see. Back then, you were stuck with it regardless of whether you liked it or not.
I was in college when it came out and watched it 5x in the theater. It was highly regarded at the time. It wasn’t until later than ppl started hating it cuz some ppl get something out of hating popular things (and Titanic was the ultimate in popular things- breaking box office records and staying on top for many many years, only to be supplanted by Cameron’s Avatar). Glad to see that good entertainment will be recognized as such past the initial hype/hate phase.
I saw this on release day, junior year of high school, with another guy and 2 girls who were friends. It was weird that everybody was shocked that Jack died, because all 4 of us picked up on it at the very beginning (I can't remember exact wording) but when the grandchildren have no idea who Jack was and that she never even told her love story of him pretty directly tells you that he doesn't survive. If he did survive, they'd have known him. I mean, she has this love story, then just gets married to some other guy and it never even gets brought up? Made no sense that everybody was always surprised that he dies. I didn't realize until later that almost nobody put that 2 and 2 together at the beginning.
But all 4 of us thought that the love story was super cheesy and were kind of laughing through plenty of parts because of how cheesy it got. The action and the effects and the sinking were all top notch, but the love story that surrounds it is pretty bad.
Fun fact: flipping over the table was totally off script. Apparently Billy Zane was just really submerged in the moment.
Dang well it totally sold that scene!
also kate was genuinely shocked in that moment so they just decided to keep the scene because the emotions in it were so real
Fun fact Billy Zane is in back to the future, he’s part of Bifs gang
He was getting revenge for Kate spitting in his face earlier, which was also unscripted and a genuine shock for Billy. So he discussed with James before filming the table flip and said he was gonna scare her.
@@Moakmeister lmao I wanna imagine what it was like there 😂😂😂😂
I respect that you acknowledged the symbolism of her throwing the diamond in the ocean. My dad absolutely hates this movie because of mainly that scene, and most guys don’t really like it. It’s nice that some get it. Love your review!
What do you mean most guys? What guys don't like this movie? Lol
@@anthonyhutchins2300 My wife and I loved this movie so much that we went back the next weekend and saw it again. My wife of 30 years passed away in 2009 and I know she is waiting at the top of that staircase for me.
MatthewPettyST1300 Unless she had a Jack Dawson in her life that she never told you about...😏
MatthewPettyST1300 That is so sweet. I hope you see her at that staircase.
@@MatthewPettyST1300 She surely is waiting there for you. But until you get there yourself, she's also surely wishing you live the best and most beautiful life for yourself and her memory.
The old woman is the one and only famed Hollywood royalty Gloria Stuart. She starred in the very first film adaptation of The Invisible Man in 1933.
she was also a co-founder the screen actors guild
Did not know that, that's pretty damn cool
She was a beautiful woman back in her day
I saw her in a precode movie not long ago yes she was a dish!
Philly and a million other things
Also - it was 1912 - “the most obscure / unused words” weren’t all that obscure, especially amongst the elite.
Yes, I was going to say this. There's a class divide, obviously, but his language is very appropriate to the era. When you read newspapers from the time you can see the same style. That's how the "educated" (rich) classes spoke in 1912.
mc finn 🤣🤣🤣
mc finn kawhis burner
The departure at the beginning had such a big crowd because it was the biggest ship in the world leaving for its maiden voyage.
And it was an immigrant ship - people leaving for a new life.
Her departure wasn't so full of people in reality though. and she wasn't THAT big of a deal considering Olympic had been in service for about a year. Same size, same luxury. Titanic was the second.
The black and white video of titanic leaving is the only original piece of film of titanic
@@jeanscuissiato135 Olympic was the prototype. Titanic was improved upon and was 1000 tons heavier
Thing is though is that Titanic’s send off was not even half as big when her older sister Olympic went on her maiden voyage.
For anyone who cares, the Heart of the Ocean would be worth a little over 426,000,000 USD based on its carat size alone.
Gasp!! I clutch my nonexistent pearls😂
That's 6,000 USD more than a full stock of coke in gta online
that would put an insignificant dent in the national debt.
I think that say's something about the irrational/emotioal behaviour of women! And before anyone says 'its just a movie, it might say something about what the writer thinks about women' I'd say we all bought it didn't we?
@@tristramcoffin926 No one is saying it would save the US! But perhaps that it was foolhardy to simply toss it in the ocean for some stupid sentimental bollocks. Heck, give the money to a children's charity for goodness sake!
okay so some info:
- kathy bates' character, molly brown, was a real person. she took charge of her rescue boat and basically saved all of them when the crew member refused to go back for more people.
- the band playing until the very end really happened.
- all of the footage of the ship underwater was the real titanic. it wasn't discovered until the mid-80s and until then everyone assumed it had stayed in one piece, which is why older movies and paintings and stuff have that image of "her whole ass sticking up in the air". but when they found it and saw it was broken in half... yeah.
- i think - i THINK - that james cameron (or kate winslet or somebody) has said that old rose threw the diamond into the water because she wanted the team to actually find it. but i could be making that up.
- there's a popular fan theory that jack wasn't a real person (in the context of the movie, i mean) but rose's guardian angel. he had no family, appeared in rose's life when she needed him, changed her for the better and set her on the correct path, and disappeared when he knew she would be okay. i really like that whole idea.
god i love this movie. thank you so much for this reaction!!
That's a really interesting theory!!
. . . And porked her in the baggage deck?!? How does this guardian angel theory (which I’ve never heard before) account for them making love?
@@mena94x3 Angels need love too.
@@mena94x3 And so I guess all of Jack's friends/ associates and Jack's interactions with other main characters are all parts of her imagination also
@@mena94x3 What's wrong with porking? And why would angels be denied that sweet pleasure?
Some fun facts: the beginning underwater bit is from the actual titanic. Cameron got a bit obsessed during research lol. That scene when Hockley flips the table was unscripted, and Rose's "we had an accident" was improv. And the background when they makeout at the front of the ship was a real sunset, which is great mostly because it looks CGI! "On the bed, I mean the couch" was a fumble by Leo and they kept it in. Kate Winslet actually ended with pneumonia because the water they filmed in was so cold. I really loved this movie when I was growing up hahaha. Poor Jack. This was fun, thanks for posting!
Some people interpret the ending as Rose passing away in her sleep and meeting Jack in heaven.
It kind of makes sense given that Jack told her that you're going to die an old lady warm in your bed.
I like that interpretation
I used to think that, but now I think it's a dream sequence because her husband isn't there to greet her. Remember, she was married and had children with a guy for decades, and made many friends who also passed along the way, but none of them are there. I think she's dreaming about reconnecting with all the people in the wreck below since she spent all day remembering those few days.
Plus all the people there died there.
“Some people _interpret_ it” ?? I always thought it was the obvious conclusion . . . perhaps not.
That's exactly what its supposed to be.
"This guy speaks as if he earns $5000 a minute."
$5000 back then is about $650000 now
Fun fact it was actually James Cameron who drew the picture of Rose
...amd he is lefty while Leo is Right, so The Footage of him Drawing is mirrored.
*and
he was a matte painting artist before he was a director
he did the new york skylines background for Escape From New York among others
Wow, I did not know that!
@@suvijii841 You should see the concept art he made for Aliens.
Apparently the guy at the back of the ship, with Rose and Jack, was a real person. He was a baker on the Titanic. He survived the incident and he credited his survival to drinking so much whiskey that his body temp didn’t go down. He laid in the water for about 3 hours before he was saved.
Yassi indeed but he was like half the weight of the movie character
Only pointing that out because your weight plays a big factor
@@Cassxowary I didn't know that ☺☺
Yeah... And I'm immortal and I can never die.
That's the story he told afterwards, but I don't think people really believe it.
You didn't show "It's been 84 years" scene, I am disappointed.
Mean Persona disappointed* but honestly...
Maggie Smith took care of that line when Leo kissed her at the awards a couple years ago.
I feel like allowing Jack to die and the detestable character to live was really realistic to exactly what happened on the ship, first class passengers being given preference & all. It's commentary on society, the rich can get away with murder. They "always win one way or another" as he said
Cal lived because he lied. He was a detestable human being and that was just another example of how gross he was.
Had he died you risk creating some sympathy for him. Additionally, you know there would be douche bags on here blaming Rose, saying if it wasn't for her, he'd have gotten on the first lifeboat he was offered. Just like they blame her for Jack's death.
The old couple who were pictured laying together proves that life isn't that simple. He was the owner of Macy's and refused a seat on the lifeboats giving the opportunity to a younger man. His wife decided to stay with him, and have her seat to her maid.
Im starting to think you had no visual media growing up! 😂
He was blind until 2020 then he got a new head now hes catching up
Some people seems to be living under a rock all his life...
There are a lot of iconic movies I haven't seen. I'm 33 and I hadn't seen any Hitchcock movies until I saw Psycho and North by Northwest recently. A couple months ago I saw Scarface for the first time. I was watching The Godfather last sunday. Again, a lot of iconic movies I still haven't seen. Now I recall a lot of references from The Simpsons I didn't get when I was a kid LOL
@@ianchristopher9422 it's just a movie after all, it's not like he never heard the national anthem
Hollywood isn't the only place producing movies, there are more than 200 countries in the world.
At the beginning it really is the Titanic. They had to invent new cameras capable of sustaining the water pressure. James Cameron said that there was no point in making a movie if it didn’t revolutionize the film industry and so he did that.
"Showing that the titanic sank was already somewhat of a spoiler to the ending" ... sir... lol. This was a historic event that happened before the movie was made. I'm sure people went into this movie already knowing that the Titanic sank XD
ironically james cameron said to explain the sinking is why he put the beginning scenes in, and even he acknowledged it was a “spoiler” even though it’s obviously based off of the real sinking.
You'd be surprised. I distinctly remember some people finding it weird how there were so many books and documentaries made about an event that happened in a movie that had just come out in theaters.
ashlyn
based of the theory of the sinking...
No survivor account describes what Cameron’s film depicts. Very very few mention seeing the propellers.
All those still on board after all the lifeboats had left and survived described the ship’s last moments as a sudden wave washing across the deck and the ship taking a sharp swing before sinking quickly within 5 mins.
Does that sound like the stern rising to an impossible 90° angle?
Titanic broke into three sections. The bow section and the wreckage of the stern are about ¾ of the ship. There is another ¼ of the ship’s structure that is a mountain of twisted, mangled debris that is completely ignored by everyone... but it’s still a quarter of the entire ship.
My mom and aunt, who are baby boomers born in the late '50s, distinctly remember a schoolyard diddy based off of the event. Much like the Lizzie Borden rhyme and the Ring-Around-A-Rosie rhyme, just another one of those songs with eerie origins that kids like to recite. So, if anyone remembered that song, despite not knowing anything else, they knew what was up going into the movie.
EDIT: Lol, ended up searching up the song. The chorus:
"It was sad. It was sad.
It was sad when the great ship went down.
(to the bottom of the...)
Husbands and wives,
Little children lost their lives
It was sad when the great ship went down.)"
@@marieantoinette6058 can't figure out if you're a Titanic-groupie or Cameron-hater. We all know movies are fiction and writers/directors take liberties with stories. Don't watch movies to learn history.
It's always a delight to see someone watch Titanic for the first time.
"This man has the personality of a doorknob" LOL.
Your hatred of Cal reminds me of Madeline Kahn from Clue: "I hated her so much...it-it-the f-flam-flames. Flames on the side of my face..."
I _LOVE_ Clue!! Such a classic, so utterly quotable. ❤️❤️❤️
“ yes, I did it. I killed Yvette. I hated her so much-that-Fll-flame-FLAMES on the side of my face -Heav--breathle--HEAVING BREATHES”
He should totally react to Clue!
"This dude has the personality of a doorknob." These little assessments are why I love your reactions. The "-lovesmovies" is fitting.
Rose: "I'm so cold."
Brandon: "You're so cold?! You're sitting on the door!"
Jack should be freezing in this momentttt lol
Titanic is a fantastic movie. Don't let all the "cool guy" haters tell you otherwise.
All the haters hated Leo because he was a teen idol. Guys just wanted to hate him because every girl was in love with him. I remember every dude watch cheering about Leo's demise.
Exactly
haha are there "cool guy" haters that rag on Titanic??
@@haydennault5342 I thought Leo deserved an Academy award for his part. That had to be a very difficult movie to film and Cameron is a perfectionist.
@@SeanDaRyan yeah DEFINITELY back then and atleast 10 years after aswell (I remember me saying Titanic was my favorite movie was mocked by every guy I told, and I watched it the first time when I was 11 in 2000. Guys who was a teenager in the late 90's are still acting as if it's a bad movie when I talk about it with them) and Leo got so much hate, the guys were so jealous they tried to insult him by calling him gay, a sissy etc, even tho his talent was undeniable. Kind of like guys talked about Justin Bieber in the beginning of his career. I love that Leo got his redemption!
Your take on Cal is my FAVORITE thing ever. I'm dying with laughter.
The scene with the low class mother telling her children a bed time story is completely heart-wrenching.
When I first saw it back in the times I "just" found it an extreme scene showing what people had to go through at that moment.
Now, having two daughters myself, I can not help but bursting into tears watching it.
Even in this reaction video I had to pause it for some minutes to regain my composure.
@@jurgensommer430 Same. I don't recall how I reacted the first time, but now with children myself, this reaction video proved difficult to get through.
Fun fact: the actress playing the third class Irish mommy was also the actress who played the tough marine Vasquez in the movie Aliens.
That scene made me cry harder than Jack's death in the theater.
More trivia: the ending scene was actually Rose passing away and now, she's in Heaven with Jack. All the people around them died on the Titanic: the band, Tommy, Fabrizio, Captain Smith, Thomas Andrews... That scene was all of them in Heaven.
"All the people around them died on the Titanic". Yes, they did. So why is Rose there? She didn't die in the sinking.
@@lionlyons obviously bc she's reuniting with jack in his heaven and maybe james cameron thought it would be beautiful if they all met in heaven again
(also to the TS: wouldn't call it trivia since it's up to the viewer to decide what it means, like all art. I thought the same as you but it's not like it's a fact, is it? james cameron has said it's up for interpretation. but I agree that the guy watching seems pretty clueless so I get why you wrote it lol)
Or it was just her final dream and memories before passing on.
so he said, but clearly its a lie! In this shot, the clock shows 2.20am (the time the ship died) and only dead people (they who died during the sinking) are by the staircase.
@@thomasnieswandt8805 Clearly it isn't. If James Cameron explained it, which he did, then that's what happened. She met Jack in heaven that's what James said so u can stop theorising
I never really tear up in a romance movie (most of them aren’t really my kind of movie) but Titanic is just so perfect in its story and execution that the ending has me in floods every time.
I usually say that movies are subjective, and they are, but I cannot understand hatred toward this movie. It isn’t overrated, it’s a classic for all the right reasons.
"FIRST TIME WATCHING"
*me having watched titanic almost 23 times:* impossible
Yeah... I don't believe any of these youtubers anymore. I subscribed to ONE and all of a sudden ALLLLLL these self-proclaimed movie buffs haven't seen most of the best movies ever made? no sense
@Arezki Oudachène mind the fact "almost" 23 times lol
@@dratelectasis same thought
Since you're revisiting a lot of the old classics, I hope you'll give "Amadeus" a shot!! It's about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart!
Yes!!! I LOVE Amadeus!
Omg, in my top ten! Please brah, do it!
Ooooooooh, Amadeus!! So good!
great movie.
YES! I mean, it's nicer if you have at least a little appreciation for his music, but it's a great movie even if you don't.
"The characters in this movie are unbelievable sometimes."
People in panic often are. We would like to think we would do "the right thing" but life often doesn't work that way. As a first responder it has always been unfortunate to see people lose their humanity. Celebrate and share LOUDLY when people actually step up to the mark.
Yes, thank you. Panic is just different. I felt it only once in my life and once it kicks in, say goodbye to any coherent thoughts, you are just becoming a mess. It's easy to say in the youtube comment section "lol why are they being so dumb? I would do this and that!"
I'm so happy to see this comment, cause it frustrates me as well to hear people talk/write about how immaculate and infallable their hypothetically-panicked selves would be... Ego-stroking and ignorance. People tend to be more couragious than we think in certain types of emergencies, but more self-serving and ruthless than we think in order types of emergencies. Especially desperate situations that draw out over an extended period of time, such as a ship sinking. I have absolutely no way of knowing what I would do in a situation like that and neither do anyone else that have never been in one :/ I suppose we need a bit of dellusion to stay sane and be able to stand ourselves, though, who knows.
"a dish" is actually a very popular early 20th century compliment to describe an attractive female.
Well, now it's a "snack". So it went from the plate itself to what's on the plate haha
My mum still describes good looking men as "dishy"
@@tfpp1 "dish" is also used to refer to what's on the plate...
@@silkwesir1444 I think you missed the joke...
@@tfpp1 it clearly wasnt- you cant just excuse your stupidity by saying "it's a joke"-
You are correct, James Cameron actually did go down to the actual Titanic wreck to get those shots. Also, "Titanic" ship they filmed on was built at 7/8 scale.
He's been there several times since then. He filmed the Ghosts of the Abyss and has various documentaries that explores the wrecksite and does analysis of the sinking.
The scale is 100%, but some sections were removed and acted when you can't see the ship in full view. That's where you get the 90%. Only the starboard side on the black hull was in full detail. The shots at the beginning showed port side. The whole frame had to be mirrored along with all text in the shot. Whenever you see the whole ship, that's of a scale model with digital people added.
Titanic is my favorite movie of all time. In fact, it's so special to me that I only watch it once a year. I always start it on April 14, and I finish it on the 15th, in concurrence with the time frame of the sinking.
Yes it is actual footage of the Titanic.
Some of it is and some of it is a model. :)
That footage at the beginning isn’t real footage. It’s footage from the later “Boarding Scene” just put down in a sepia like filter and slowed down to mimic what actual footage would look like. Real Life footage of Titanic departing Southampton doesn’t exist as of now.
Sorry i'm italian. What "footage" mean?
Titanic, a film I put on hold for so many years. See, I always viewed it as a "girly" film when I was a lot younger because a lot of girls I know cried over it. Then, I finally give it a watch last year and my thought was, "Wow, I can't believe it took me this long to watch this. This is one of my fav films now." It's unbelievable how such skewed perception can make you miss out on something you might enjoy or even love.
It is a girly film, all the men die.
@@carlhartwell7978 You haven't watched the movie then, MANY women and children died, there's a f*cking scene of a mother reading her children one last bedtime story before they die, you donut!
"All the men die." *You say as screams of women and children echo in the background*
Did I say no women or children die?
I mean a far better argument for you to make against my comment would be, 'but there are men who survive'.
Fine, I was being flippant.
But clearly your chances of survival would be better if you're a woman on any sinking ship, or pretty much any disaster tbh.
I do'nt _necessarily_ have a problem with that, I can understand the biological imperative that women are a _less expendable commodity_ in these situations. but what tends to get irritating is when fieminnists ignore it...
_Men and wiomen are equal..._ but only at certain times, then women are nore imprtant! lol.
Fact is, men and women AREN'T equal, full stop.
Blue and red are not equal, they are different, that's why they have different names, so do men and women. Different things, by DEFINITION cannot be equal.
@@carlhartwell7978 Men and women weren’t equal at THAT time, that’s all that matters.
And even now we know men and women are biologically different and that’s good, BUT they should have equal rights- that’s what feminism is!
Cal: God himself cannot sink this ship!
You: But an iceberg could!
I love it 😂
React to :
The pianist
Léon the profesionnal
Donnie Darko
Eyes wide shut
Full Metal jacket
The shining
A clockwork orange
Apocalypse now
Platoon
King of comedy
Taxi driver
Casino
Goodfellas
Requiem for a dream
Django unchained
Joker
1917
One flew over the cuckoo’s nest
The Truman show
Parasite
Once upon a time in America
Shutter island
La haine
Misery
Paths of glory
This person has a grade S LVL of movies for you. Granted maybe not all but they are all great in my opinion.
excellent list you got here. One add:
D2: The Mighty Ducks
Don’t at me...
You keep reposting the same list despite the fact that he’s seen multiple films on this list and has even done a video to at least one already.
The Departed
Great list, he's already reacted to whiplash though
"His name is James, James Cameron, The bravest pioneer. No budget too steep, no sea too deep, Who's That? It's him, James Cameron!"
He really raised the bar.
Whats that! Its a bird! No! A PLANE! Look! Its JAMES CAMERAN!
"James Cameron does not do what James Cameron does for James Cameron. James Cameron does what James Cameron does because James Cameron IS James Cameron"
(Sorry for stealing that one)
Pshh have you seen
He is a Titanic enthusiast in real life Some of the shots in the beginning of the movie are of actual Titanic from Cameron's dives
I've watched this movie literally thousands of times. Even went to see it in the theater twice and it still makes me sob uncontrollably every single time... But then the infamous "propeller guy" scene rears it's ugly head and I start laughing hysterically and it makes me feel like the devils asshole.
Don’t worry. As emotional as that scene is, it always got a laugh out of me. My little brother lost his shit in the theatre at that part and it just infected me. Lol.
You’re not the only one. There are so many anecdotes about audiences sobbing but then cracking up when the guy hit the propeller.
What Brandon knows about the movie: The Titanic sinks, Also water is wet.
Ambie, technically water isn’t wet. Things get wet when water gets on them. Water can’t get on itself.
@@oaf-77 water is itself so it's always wet
Oaf contradiction, water is sticky
@@devinmccurry4235 nope
And by acknowledging that Titanic sank over 100 years ago, Cameron shows that he totally respects his audience
Hi there, Brandon! Please allow me to nerd out over here as an historian of the RMS Titanic and the White Star Line, the company that owned the vessel, with some fun facts I feel like will further enhance the movie for you, given your lack of context for a lot of this:
- Titanic was never actually advertised as unsinkable. Its transverse watertight bulkhead design was described in 'The Shipbuilder,' a trade publication, as "rendering the ship virtually unsinkable," but the White Star Line itself never used that phrasing to describe Titanic. That's an example of memory conflating the quote from the trade publication with advertisement after the fact to make the sinking seem more hubristic.
- The film goes out of its way to make J. Bruce Ismay (Jonathan Hyde), the managing director of the White Star Line, into a mustache-twirling villain throughout, mostly because that's the popular perception of Ismay. Scrutiny of survivor accounts actually reveal Ismay was quite active in helping to get people into the lifeboats - and only boarded one himself when he could see no women or children around to board the boat. Much of the vitriol towards Ismay stemmed from the newspapers of William Randolph Hearst, who knew Ismay before hand and immensely disliked him, and so directed his papers to tar and feather Ismay as a coward. He was traumatized by the sinking, and retired within a year. Until his death in 1937, he only spoke of Titanic once after the official investigations concluded - when his grandson, not knowing any better, asked at a family dinner if he had ever been shipwrecked. "Yes," he replied, "I was once on a ship some people thought was unsinkable."
- There is a *lot* of contention over whether or not a ship's officer committed suicide. Some survivors claim that one did, some survivors dispute the assertion. There is, however, very little evidence that First Officer Murdoch (Ewan Stewart) was the one who did so. The more likely candidate for an officer committing suicide is Sixth Officer James Moody, the youngest of Titanic's deck officers, and a sailor who had trained aboard a Royal Navy training vessel, unlike his civilian colleagues. This theory is flimsy, but based on survivors who claim there was a suicide saying the officer performed a military salute before shooting himself. Cameron did, eventually, apologize to Murdoch's family for showing him as committing suicide in this film, and 20th Century Fox gave a cash award to the high school in his hometown in Scotland to support their William McMaster Murdoch Award, a cash prize upon graduation for students fulfilling certain criteria.
- The priest seen giving absolution on the sinking ship, quoting the Book of Revelations - "...and there was no more sea..." - is Father Thomas Byles, an English Catholic Priest travelling in Second Class. He was last seen doing exactly what he's seen doing in the film: leading those about to die in prayer and absolving them of their sins. There is currently a campaign ongoing, led by the current priest of his parish, to get the Vatican to consider Father Byles for sainthood.
- The elderly couple seen cuddling in their bed as their cabin floods are Isidor and Ida Straus. Mrs. Straus was preparing to board a lifeboat, and when he asked if he could join his wife, Mr. Straus was refused a place in a boat. She stepped away from the boat, and he tried to convince her to get into it. "We have been married these forty years," she responded. "Where you go, I go." They were last seen sitting in a pair of deck chairs, holding hands, as the ship sank from beneath them. Mr. Strauss' body was recovered, and is buried in New York City. Their children donated a massive residence hall, Straus Hall, to Harvard University in their honor. They are also memorialized by a park in New York City, and by a plaque at the flagship store of Macy's Department Store - which Mr. Straus was the owner of.
- Frederick Fleet, the lookout who spotted the iceberg and calls the bridge to give the infamous warning "Iceberg Right Ahead, Sir!" never recovered from that night. He always believed he was responsible for Titanic hitting the berg and sinking. Following the death of his wife, Fleet committed suicide in January, 1965 - leaving a suicide note which expressly mentioned his lingering grief over the sinking of Titanic.
- A little girl can be seen being told by her father "be a good girl and hold mummy's hand" while being put into a lifeboat. This little girl is meant to be Eva Hart, one of the last survivors of the Titanic - who was seven when the ship sank. The dialogue are the last words her father, Benjamin Hart, ever said to her. Hart died in 1996, while the film was in production.
- Contrary to what Rose claims ("we all called her Molly") Margaret Tobin Brown (Kathy Bates) was never known as Molly in life. She was "Maggie" to her close friends. The nickname "Molly" was applied to her posthumously thanks to the 1960 Broadway Musical "The Unsinkable Molly Brown," loosely based on her life; and adapted into a 1964 film starring Debbie Reynolds. She was also an incredibly outspoken feminist, who ran twice for the U.S. Senate before women could even vote.
- Something the film leaves out almost entirely (but you'd have to be incredibly eagle-eyed to spot it) is the fact there was a ship not even ten miles from Titanic, sitting there at anchor to wait for dawn to try and traverse the ice. The S.S. Californian had tried to contact Titanic earlier in the day to warn them of the ice ahead, and the transmission came through so loud and so abruptly on the wireless telegraph while senior operator Jack Phillips was trying to send a message that he snapped "Shut up, Shut up, I am working Cape Race!" at them over the apparatus. The officers on watch on the bridge of Californian watched Titanic steam up past them - all lights blazing - and then suddenly go dark. They thought the ship had just put out its lights, but the ship had actually turned to try and avoid the iceberg, and had gone from parallel to them to perpendicular. They could see Californian from Titanic - and that's why Titanic was firing those signal rockets: Californian's one wireless operator had gone to bed, and so the ship didn't hear the distress call. Captain Lord of the Californian refused to listen to his officers about the ship nearby "firing rockets," and went back to bed. Cameron narratively leaves this out of the film - but sharp eyed viewers can spot the Californian's mast lights on the horizon in some wide shots.
- Captain Smith (Bernard Hill) was not catatonic during the sinking. Survivor accounts tell us he was incredibly active - pacing the boat deck back and forth, supervising the loading of the lifeboats, going to check on the distress signals, helping women into the boats. Some survivors on the overturned Collapsible B, a lifeboat that had turned upside down and had nearly fifty people clinging to it through the night, even claimed Captain Smith had swum up to the boat after the sinking to hand off a baby he had recovered from the water (that later froze to death) before proclaiming "Good luck, boys. I'm off to follow the ship."
- The body of Wallace Hartley (Jonathan Evans-Jones) the leader of Titanic's band, was recovered after the sinking and returned to England for burial. More people attended his service than attended the funeral and burial of Prime Minister Henry Campbell-Bannerman, the only Prime Minister of Great Britain to die at Number 10 Downing Street, only four years before the sinking. The violin Hartley played aboard the Titanic, recovered from a violin case strapped to his chest, sold at auction in 2013 for $1.7 Million.
And not all gates were locked. The gates were for people who were sick with a contagious diseases and were put there, so it wouldn’t infect the entire ship.
Is it possible that the gunshots came from Chief Officer Henry Wilde?
Since he is the only other officer besides Smith, Murdoch, and Moody to perish in the sinking
"if this guy does not get tossed overboard at some point this movie gets a ZERO FROM ME" I CACKLED SO HARD
When you said “toss this guy overboard right now, don’t wait until the end of the movie” milk shot out of my nose 😂
😂😂
Were you drinking milk at the time? Or did Brandon make you laugh so hard that you produced your own? 😂
At the end, she passes away in her sleep while on the ocean above the Titanic wreckage (where Jack passed away). The final scene is the "afterlife" seeing all the souls that were lost during the sinking of the ship. 😭
False. Cal was in the scene. And in no way is that directly implied, it’s just your interpretation.
One of the best endings in movie history IMO
The second the music starts, I'm already misty eyed.
Kathy Bates is one of my favorite actresses, check out 'Misery" where I first remember seeing her shine.
Fried Green Tomatoes!!
sprayarm I opened this comment to reply the same thing. She was excellent in Misery, but Fried Green Tomatoes has my heart.
Shine. Lol
Dolores Claiborne is another world class performance. Also another King adaptation.
Courtney Valdez - Oooh, I was just going to say that. Also adored her in Fried Green Tomatoes.
the end is seen by most people as rose’s death and joining everyone who died that night on the ship in the afterlife. she lived the life that she promised to jack, she was able to tell her and jacks story, and put the diamond back in the place it should’ve been, so she finally died in peace after that. the clock behind jack at the end even shows the exact time that the ship had fully sunk
This movie was such an achievement of filmmaking as well as a good movie. It’s hard to convey quite how big a deal it was that year. It’s easy to get cynical about its popularity, but I still love it all these years later. There’s another movie about the sinking of the Titanic from 1958, A Night to Remember, that is also a really great docudrama telling of the events.
Little fact, all the drawings are from James Cameron. It's his own hand that we see when he's drawing rose, not Leo.
Momo which is an underrated thing no one talks about
I think the reason why he let Cal live was because that was actually the case back then. There WERE alot of rich and maybe selfish people who survived, while alot of poor, lovely people died.
That's a generalization. There were plenty of perfectly nice rich people, and poor assholes. Read about the lives of the actual people on board before you judge them.
@@JWRogersPS ”Maybe”
Kathy Bates played Molly Brown, a real life survivor of the Titanic. You probably know her from Misery, and I am pretty sure she won the Oscar for that role. But she has been in a ton of other stuff.
I thought she was great in Fried Green Tomatoes....especially when she has more insurance ;-) ...or was it 'better'? :-D
Greg All fried green tomatoes was awesome
Ah this movie takes me back to watching it on VHS. It's so long it took two VHS tapes. Then waiting a half an hour for it to rewind to watch it again. Good simple times.
Just found out your channel. I have to say, your voice is so calm and relaxing, it's very refreshing since a lot of youtubers tend to speak loudly. I'll watch other videos of yours for sure! Ciao from Italy ;)
Thanks so much Claudia!
I adore your reactions. So wholesome and pure 🥺
I still don't think I've watched this whole movie in one sitting, but I saw parts of it when I was young, and Kate Winslet was probably the first time I really thought "wow, women are pretty". She still wows me in this movie.
I think I fell in love with Rose in this movie and I've loved Kate Winslet ever since (even though I know there's a huge difference between an actor and the character they play).
@@bobblebardsley I know what you mean. We watched Titanic in school & I fell in love with Kate too. After Titanic I went on a movie watching spree & ended up watching almost every other movie Kate has been in. My favorite ones ended up being the 2001 cartoon adaption of A Christmas Carol (she has one hell of a lovely singing voice) & Finding Neverland because it made me bawl my eyes out.
@@flowerdolphin5648 'What If' from A Christmas Carol made it to #6 in the UK charts when the movie was released, so yeah if I hadn't already decided I was a fan, that sealed the deal for me too. I like how even when I hate her character in stuff, I still love her performance. And she has strong principles irl too, which I respect a lot. Just seems like a generally good person.
The underwater scenes at the beginning were actually filmed at the true wreckage site of the Titanic! The lengths James Cameron went to for this film are incredible. Another amazing piece of trivia is that the collective runtime of all the scenes in this movie set in 1912 (aka on the Titanic itself) is 2 hours and 40 minutes, which is how long the Titanic itself took to sink from collision with the iceberg to disappearing beneath the ocean. Such attention to detail and true respect for the legacy of the ship. Also important to know that the musicians who played the entire time the ship sank were real people - and they really did that.
Okay, seriously - you've never seen Titanic?! LOL
Yes, that is Kathy Bates.
Fun Fact: James Cameron is obsessive about his level of meticulous detail and recreation of historicity with regards to this subject matter. Everything that happens, and the way that it happened, is true. The ship nearly sinks in "about" real time as possible, the musicians really did stay back to play...ultimately to their demise. There really was a well-known (at the time) elderly couple who died in their bed, The ship flooded the way it did, and sank the way it is portrayed. And, if memory serves, in the biggest cosmic coincidence ever, I think there was an actual person on board Titanic named Jack Dawson who ended up drowning.
I specifically saw this in the theatre for Kate Winsletts boobs when I was just a wee teenager. Made my dad sit in the back while me and my buddy sat front row.
Fun fact: some of the first shots of the wreckage, is the actual Titanic, James actually dived to the wreck for footage and to get more accuracy, he also made a documentary after he made this movie! He was very interested in the history of the titanic so most of the characters in this movie are based of real people on board of the Titanic the night it sunk!
@yuqipie love It was found in 1985, 12 years before the movie came out.
@@JJdaPK Was is not by John Balleard???
"Nobody that I want to survive is doing so well right now." Well, yes. Basically everyone but Rose dies.
Interesting fact about this movie: James Cameron was actually just interested in the history of the Titanic sinking, and disguised it as a love movie. Once the ship hits the iceberg the events play out in real time, with major events happening when they actually happened after one another. That's why the run time is so long.
The sinking was actually an hour longer. Titanic sank in 2hr and 40min. (11:40 PM, Sunday, 4/14/12 - 2:20 AM, Monday, 4/15/12).
If you take out all of the 1997 ‘present day’ scenes, then the film is exactly 2hr 40m. This means that the scenes in 1912 equal the real life sinking time of the ship. Pretty unique and interesting fact
@@ameliaxx Now that is a fact. If you notice the clock at the end during the dream/heaven sequence is at 2:20 and it's at night. Fun fact about Titanic's clock, Honour and Glory Crowning Time, it was on all three Olympic-class ships. They were carved individually. The one from the first ship, the Olympic, still exists. The original color was oak. Then the staircase was later painted olive green. Then it was painted white. There are no photos of Titanic's grand staircase and some believe the clock wasn't installed in time. The cherub on the the center railing was modeled after the cherubs outside the Palace of Versailles where Marie Antoinette resided. The artist took a little liberty on the cherubs. Some of the wood features from Olympic survived today.
Kathy Bates is a jewel in this movie. She steals every scene she is in. You may have seen her in "Misery." She portrays Mollie Brown. There's an older movie called "The Unsinksable Mollie Brown." You might enjoy it.
Yes! "Misery" is film worth reacting to!!!
Rebecca S this and every other movie and series and as a person, like the real one was!
Mac C. That kinda scarred me as a kid tbh
I met Molly's granddaughter. By the way, Molly Brown was never called Molly until after the movie. Her real name was Margaret and went by Maggie. She traveled to New York to visit her ailing son. She was friends with John Jacob Astor, the richest man on board and in the world at the time. When Astor married Madeleine and she was with child, it was a scandal because she was only 19. Margaret supported him. Margaret held several fundraisers for the survivors because many of them lost everything. Margaret also supported orphans. She almost became the first US senator, but gave up the spot. Margaret was a very assertive woman who fit in very well, not the obnoxious woman portrayed in movies.
Small detail, but Titanic was an ocean liner not a cruise ship
Finally! I was hoping someone would say that!
An ocean liner (like Titanic) is the same as an airliner or even a shuttle bus. It’s about the destination, the ship is just the thing you’re on to get there. A cruise ship (like Oasis Of The Seas) is more about being on the ship and enjoying the time on the ship
I know haha, I was annoyed every time he called it a cruise ship
Oh my god I was literally looking for reactions to titanic earlier this morning you absolute king
lmao i love your icon
Lol thanks
tit tit There are a couple decent reactions. Dylan is in Trouble does one.
@@susanmaggiora4800 omg yeah I love him
This movie came out in 1997. It was a huge deal. It's so weird to me that you haven't seen Titanic before. Ha!
Not like my parents would've taken me to see it as a toddler lol
@@BrandonLikesMovies Ha! I guess I will allow that excuse. I was in college. Saw it in the theater twice and bought the special edition double VHS!
I was around at the time, and also have never seen this movie. So I also won't watch this reaction. Just something about taking a real tragic event, and adding a fake love story, just doesn't seem right. Same thing said for Pearl Harbor (2001).
@@nataliedepriest9113 remember, it was two VHS. I remember saving up all my money buying it at Blockbuster when it first came out, and thinking it to VHS thing was the coolest thing ever.
@@BrandonLikesMovies the internet, where we forget that we may not be chatting with people in our IRL social group. Not everyone is in the same city or county, has the same level of education, economical bracket, or age.
What I love about this movie is how they show that these people in the beginning were so adamant about getting the diamond that they never once thought of all the suffering that the people on the actual Titanic went through.
“Tell mother, don’t tell cal” 😂 keep up the great reactions
It actually took the Titanic damn near 3 hours to fully go down. These people really suffered. The classism is so disgusting and terrible. So many deaths.
2 hours and 40 minutes actually
"Reacting to Titanic" and he has the same expression the whole video. I'm not complaining, it's just funny
Hockley: “God himself could not sink this ship”
Brandon: “But an iceberg could”
Funniest thing I’ve seen all day
Did people in 1912 not know that you never shit talk God before doing something that could eventually become life threatening?
And after that ship sank god himself said to Hockley, can't sink that ship huh? Well it looks like I just did, I'll be seeing you on the crash of 29 after you blow your brains and then I'll sending you to hell where you belong
i was 20 when this movie came out and i saw it seven times in the theater. SEVEN. it was my favorite movie for years and years. i am stupidly excited to watch this.
I was in high school when this came out. Also saw it 7 times in the theater with my girlfriend. 6 of those times were "not by my choice". LOL
I love how chilled your reaction videos are, awesome to see you react to this movie
"this guy has the personality of a doorknob." I laughed so hard at that!!!
You should watch the following Leonardo DiCaprio movies
- Romeo + Juliet,
- Catch Me if You Can,
- The Revenant,
- Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Catch Me If You Can is so underrated
I agree, catch me if you can has a great story based on true events and the "villain" and "hero" really have an amazing bond.
may I recommend The Great Gatsby aswell.
Also Shutter Island
Haven't seen The Revenant but agree with all the other ones. The Romeo and Juliet adaptation might actually be the one I wanna see most.
The nude scene was definitely a shock to my uptight aunt who took my older brother to see this. He was around 13.
Hahaha my mother almost had a heart attack!
Did we even see her naked, though? I don't recall us actually seeing her, just drawn breasts. Your aunt and Galman's mother wouldn't have fared well in the older times, when nudity was practically everywhere in the form of statues and paintings, lol. I guess some adults see the human body as being inherently sexual.
@@VelkanAngels They're from different generations though. Fanatically religious and overall not into nudity
@@VelkanAngels you see everything of Rose during the drawing scene lol!! Except her 🐈. It was tastefully done to the point that people dont remember it as a nude scene but as a beautiful moment lollllll. It also snuck past the R rating to be PG13
i would definitely still consider this movie pg13 though
I think Hawkley living just adds to the true to life frustrations that the majority of deaths were the poor, and crew. There's a video of the Titanic sinking in real time you can find on RUclips, very interesting and sad watch. Many of the lifeboats weren't even half capacity.
There's a cut scene where Ismay (the man who wanted all the boilers lit) walked on the deck of the rescue ship, Carpathia, and has to injure the hard looks from the other survivors, especially women and children, some of who you see having to leave their husbands/fathers behind. They glare at him like "Why did you survive when my husband/father did not?" One officer, Lightoller (the one who had the dispute with Andrews about the number of people on the boats) took the order "women and children first" as "women and children only" and lowered boats half full, also with the belief they would pick people up lower down (some of the crew had gone to open doors lower down to allow the boats to pick people up and they never came back). but once the boats reached the water they just rowed away.
@@michaelpapadopoulos3756im still bitter Lightoller survived lmao
There's a really cool photo you should look up. Its dicraprio standing in a pool of water next to rose on the piece of wood. Movie magic made it look like he was actually floating in the ocean. Love that kind of stuff.
I'll always remember seeing this movie at the theater with my dad when I was 7. I tried to hide my tears at the end and my dad told me "don't worry I think everyone is crying right now". So cool to see and ear your first reactions, it brings me back in 1997 with my dad
I've watched this movie a thousand times and it still gets me
Went to the movies with my girfriend in 7th grade to see Titanic. Held her hand the whole 3 hours lol. Very sweaty.
My man haha