@@Schifffahrtsgeschichte Blame RUclips's busted copyright detection system :/ At first I used the file from the "Band of Courage" CD in the revised sinking, no problems In this one it flagged as copyright. So I found a recording made pre 1920's and put that in, it got flagged as well (anything before 1923 I think is public domain unless specifically copyrighted). Rather than dispute the strikes and wind up losing which would lead to channel deletion, I was forced to remove the songs. There are still audio effects playing in those sections, just no music. i.imgur.com/WgNLtHK.png
since RUclips's becoming more corporate they're going to start making it so that only the channels that pay them get to stay and then smaller RUclipsrs like us who do this more for a hobby than for a profit will get removed even if we don't infringe on copyright
Imagine being in a lifeboat after the ship sank, listening to the people screaming in the water get slowly quieter, and quieter until absolute silence and the pitch blackness of the sea. Tragedy. Absolute tragedy.
For me, the scariest part of the animation is how dark the ocean is, especially when the lights go out on the Titanic as well. Terrible to imagine that you're in the midst of the ocean, chilling water everywhere and not a single sign of light appears for hours that would signal some hope for the survivors.
When I saw that iceberg rip through the hull, I would have immediately been making a flotation device out of something. Especially if I was like Jack and was there by myself. My hour would have been spent building a boat.
@@AnasSyriano многие не знали, что делать и как им спасаться. Там была дезорганизованность и паника. Наверное, было несколько человек, которые соорудили плоты и пустились вплавь. Думаю, тех было гораздо меньше, которые были с женами и детьми...
@@AverageAlien Some dude had ptsd after surviving the sinking, the nearby baseball stadium's cheering where he lived after the event reminded him of the screaming. People were, are and will be as "soft" as they always did
@@AverageAlien I hate to break it to you but WW1 soldiers even without experiencing the Titanic’s sinking were prone to PTSD. I can’t imagine how watching 1,500 people die on top of that can be good for you mentally. Also since when is it soft to be understandably upset over witnessing countless deaths? Do you think you’re some ultra badass who can shrug tragedies off?
Another survivor said in an interview that her and everyone in her lifeboat was terrified that they would go down with the ship. When Titanic was going down apparently it was sucking the lifeboat closer to it. Pretty scary
@@linhhoang3636 umm, Mythbusters busted the myth a decade or more ago that a ship going down causes suction. They did it small scale then large scale. There’s just way too much water to ship. But of course scared in a lifeboat, you wouldn’t know that. The movie has it, but that’s a movie. If you watch a model of it, it doesn’t happen.
@@Apollostowel a ship that size sinking at that rate would cause a noticeable divet in the general area. Like when the two last cheerios in a bowl will slowly slide towards each other. It does cause a inward slope due to the displacement of water. It's just physics. If you're next to something like that as it happens, don't bother swimming.
this is not appreciated enough, this must've taken a very long time to research and animate. adding in the audio, the comments, the morse code and all those details. Honestly respect.
I can’t imagine how horrifying it would be for the operators in the other ships rushing to them to notice the ship that has been “screaming” for help for hours has gone dead silent
Whats worse is that as the titanic's power began to dwindle and the antenna is lowered by the sinking, the signal is getting weaker with each transmission which would be noticeable So they would hear the titanic slowly fade away from barely understandable messages, to erratic static beepung to eventual silence.
I feel the worst for the third class passengers. There's a scene where a mother is trying to put their children to sleep because she knew that they couldn't escape and they were going to die in the movie titanic. Its so sad
I'm glad you made it as dark as it is because it really would have been that dark. It's no wonder there was confusion as to whether or not the ship broke in half because apart from starlight on a flat ocean there was literally no other light at all to see. It's like a giant black coffin slipping into the sea. Beautiful and terrifying at the same time.
My thoughts as well. One survivor was noted as saying he heard a huge boom from the sound of the boilers breaking loose and falling towards the bow, which could be accurate. Or it could have actually been the sound of the ship buckling. Or it could have been both, perhaps the boilers did break free and fall, taking out much of the internal structure, further weakening the hull and contributing to it buckling.
What’s really upsetting is how desperate and terrifying the Morse code gets as it goes along, especially since the signal is getting weaker and weaker, the last message literally can’t finish
I think the two world wars would have buried the story of Titanic, but the book 'A Night to Remember' by Walter Lord was published in 1956 and the movie was made in 1958. I do believe that Lord's portrayal helped to preserve this tragedy forever.
It's scary how the ship took around 2 hours and 40 minutes to sink, yet for most of that time it seemed really slow. Only at the last 5 minutes does Titanic go from still being mostly on the surface to completely swallowed up by the sea.
Yeah that was absolutely terrifying watching it slowly sink into the black like that. And gods this is just a video I can't even imagine _being_ there. I sat here, thinking _if only people had _*_listened_*_ and got off, if only the boats have been filled properly_ ... So many more could have lived.
When the lights go out towards the end, with no moon that night, i felt that. The fear those poor souls must have felt. What a terrifying way to leave this earth.
One of the survivors who managed to get onto a lifeboat said she will never forget the silence that came afterwards once all screams died down in the ocean along with the ship 🥺 Edit: The survivor who said this was Eva Hart, if you want to look her up. Her interview is here on RUclips. She was 7 years old when she saw that ship sink.
Since...it really happened...back in 1912.... Over 1500 people freezing to death in darkness...so tragic. Hope this kind of maritime disaster never happens ever again..
@@danieldoo1821 the "lucky ones" froze to death. There were those who were crushed when the funnels toppled, some who fell into the crack formed when the hull split or slid into the capstans and other fixtures on deck, others who were drowned below decks when watertight bulkheads collapsed, etc. My choice would've been freezing while trying to swim to a lifeboat. At least you go peacefully with all your guns blazing.
@@RobDog65 the people wasn't lucky that they froze to death because some of them had baby's and it's sad because the mom's the dad's did not get to see there baby's grow up it's sad it's not luck for any of them that died
Wow..this gave me chills. This is so tragic. Most people on the ship didn't realize how serious the situation was until it was too late. So sad that not even all the children were saved. But also very tragic for all the men and fathers who knew they had to sacrifice their lives for their women and children.
The Fathers that died really had nothing to be thankful for as they watched their families float away in those lifeboats. The wives and children may have survived the sinking, but they soon came to the realization that, unless they were wealthy, they were doomed to a life of poverty and despair. In those days, few women had good jobs! When the breadwinner was gone, the family was all but doomed financially. Sad.
@@philiphatfield5666not exactly true. My grandfather was born in 1930 in a family of 11 brothers and sisters, and when he was two years old, his father died. His mother didn’t have a job (of course), the oldest of his brothers was 14, and above all, his family didn’t have any land due to the father working in constructions, which meant that they couldn’t even farm to feed themselves. All this happened in a dirt poor province of fascist Italy during the worst years of the Great Depression.. a place with far, FAR less opportunities than the US of the 1910s. All of them had to work like animals until the war came, and then every single brother he had was taken prisoner (either by the Germans, the Brits, the Americans, or the Russians)… but they all survived, coming back to tell the tale and build decent, honest lives for themselves and their families. Humans are very tenacious animals… much more than one would think.
Same. I genuienly loved the Cameron movie, but even when it released I was annoyed it wasn't more about the ship and crew rather than a love story. There was so much it missed out.
I thought having perhaps a miniseries about the first ship on the scene of this historical event, that sailed through waters littered with icebergs at maximum speed and in complete darkness to reach the Titanic. We all know the story of the Titanic but putting you as the viewer on the other side of it, what it would be like to arrive there -what you would see. You can also include the ship that has everyone even the radio operator sleeping while within distance of the Titanic to see the distress flares and the captain ignoring them. I'm sure there is a story there for a competent writer
There’s not much information about the crews it would have to be a fiction. Plus the movie industry isn’t about making good stories they want to shove a love story down your throat
@@Dreadpirateflappy making it a love story/focusing on the passengers humanized the victims a little bit more; make them seem less like statistics, it’s easy to forget about the lives lost when you focus too much on the technicality of the ship itself. That’s what documentaries and channels like this are for.
I still think about the fact that she’s still, after all this time, sitting right there at the bottom of the ocean. That’s so chilling and unbelievable to me
Peoples personal items, baggage,shoes all the things they had is down there in the cold lonely depths. Its a terrible tragedy. These were people like us with dreams who died freezing and screaming . Pretty sad.
Makes me think of all the bones of slaves you'll find at the bottom of the ocean too. That genuinely haunts me even though im not black. I think of it every time i swim in the ocean
I couldn’t imagine anyone would actually watch the whole 2 hours 45 minutes of a boat sinking, but here I am. Well done, this is an incredible masterpiece. Thank you for this.
We've seen the event unfold so quickly in movies, but the reality just hit of how terrifying and excruciatingly painful it must've been every second that death was looming. This is truly chilling.
The fact that this happened DEAD in the middle of the ocean, hours away from any land- not to mention it was so dark out you could bearly see anything. Imagine how cold it would be- not even being in the water but like literally just the air, I mean it's cold enough for an iceberg. This is an informative video thank you
I can't imagine how that would be. The air temp was already frigid. You've probably already been outside long enough to be chilled to the bone. And then you finally realize the next thing that's going to happen to you is you'll be plunging into even colder water, that's over 2 miles deep, completely in the dark, with no help coming, and just waiting to die, however long that may take. Also, knowing there's only two ways you're going to die: freezing to death, or drowning. Absolutely horrible.
@@Marvelfanatic3658 Very sad. Which is worse, freezing or drowning? I would think drowning would be faster and less suffering involved. Either way is horrible. And either way, you have that long period of fear, knowing what's eventually going to happen.
It really hurts to hear that not all the boats were filled up and a few of them could have still held at least 15-20 more passengers. I know it must have been hectic and terrifying but it's such a shame to hear how easy it could have been to just save a few more lives.
They were more concerned with saving the wealthy than anyone else. There’s even stories from survivors that rich ppl were actually bribing the officers for a spot on the boat smfh. Like wtf man
That's something that got to me also. There was apparently even a lifeboat that the officers lowered with just 25 people in it when it was designed and large enough to fit at least 60 people. As the person above stated, it came down to wealth and class. If you were poor, they didnt care about you.
@@isaac-p6126 there was a whole deck below for the poor and they werent allowed to enter first class deck or second class to be able to get on a lifeboat they were guarded to stop them from gettin up look up "the Addergoole fourteen" they were on the ship they were immigrants because they were poor and trying to go to america for a better life so fact check yourself before you wreck yourself
@@Murilovisky007 back in those days the lifeboats were meant to be used as ferrys cause on the busy Atlantic route they thought there would be a ship in range to rescue the passengers of the sinking vessel. The reason they changed it to have enough lifeboats for everybody was an idea that was created because of this tragedy because they had realized that there may not always be a ship close enough to save the passengers. This is what started the shift from lifeboats from being ferrys to their modern-day counterparts of being fully equipped survival rafts
As a kid I used to be confused by the fact that among the survivors there was so much conflicting information about the sinking. Whether or not it broke in half, why hardly anyone went back to help, what songs the band played etc. With this I now have a clearer understanding of why. It was pitch black out and my God the screams of the poor people in the water and still on board… I doubt anyone in a lifeboat was able to think clearly.
the problem was that there was no proper protocol, the ship was believed to be unsinkable, and the company owning RMS Titanic booked more people yet not enough lifeboats for them all
I think it did break into 2 pieces. That last part where it tipped up would've made that inevitable. Ppl n the lifeboats who had sense should've paddles as far away as quickly as possible to avoid being sucked underwater with the ship 😳
@@User_92020it’s extremely important. It’s one of the most important events in history, and the conflicting stories people give allow us to see the amount of confusion and lack of attention being paid due to the chaos
The musicians that played right until the final moments of the sinking are often praised for their unimaginable courage, but I wonder how many people have thought about the physical suffering they endured to keep playing in those freezing temperatures. Their fingers must have been frozen through to the bone, the pain dreadful, especially for the stringed instruments players, but they never gave in to keep others calm. God bless them.
I think the most heart-breaking parts were the messages from other ships. At least a dozen ships, all desperately telling the Titanic to hang on, we're coming as fast as we can! Then to realize most of them are hundreds of miles -- and many hours -- away. You can almost hear them saying "Why can't I make this thing go any faster?!" :(
I can't imagine how frustrating it must have been to be one of the wireless operators that night. Titanic: "CQD. SOS. Struck iceberg. Position 41 46' N, 50 14'W. Come at once. Require immediate assistance." Everyone: "What is the matter? What's your position? Do you require assistance?" Titanic: "..."
Ironically it was the wireless operators that failed to deliver an iceberg warning from other ships prior to the collision. It was left undelivered in the wireless room until the Titanic's Second Officer saw it well after the collision.
@@cto1ggCalifornia was nearest ship to Titanic about 18miles away they warned Titanic a about the ice field ahead and titanic basically replied them with shut the fk up California was anchored 18 miles away because of the ice ahead and it was a moonless night and wireless operator of California shut down the system and went sleep after his shift and then titanic asked them for help but no one was there to receive the message if California received that message and came for rescue a lot of lifes could've been saved carpethia was 58 miles away at that time
@cto1gg that's because of how wireless operators acted. In those days they were doing thousands of civilian messages a hour and were paid. The wireless operators were overwhelmed. It's part of why Californians message was so harshly recieved by Philips. If they weren't paid to send those messages or they were limited, the warnings would've been sent to the bridge. Sterile cockpit issues here
Can you imagine being loaded on to a boat with your mother and seeing your father stay behind . Heartbreaking.. so sad to read how many boats left without all seats being taken .
When I was little, we went to the Titanic museum in Pigeon Forge. The ‘ captain ‘ gave a big speech before everyone went in about fathers having to leave their sons and daughter and I started crying because I thought that it was real and I didn’t want my dad to leave us. Now, I can’t imagine being the age that I was back then and having to live through that for real.
@@kayleighwilson1551 wow I wonder if that museum is still around would love to visit but the thought of that truly brings tears to your eyes .. men should have been given a chance to get into the boats especially when there was so many seats not being filled .
@@Nene-vh7rq The museum is definitely still there, I think. There was an accident of some kind and they had to rebuild it, from my understanding, but it’s there. The actual sinking definitely could have been handled better than it was. When I was younger, and even just starting to dig into it, I thought ‘ oh, yeah, they tried everything that they could and it just didn’t work. They couldn’t do anything else. ‘ I was both confused and outraged when I found out that more people would have had a chance of surviving with all the seats that were in the lifeboats; the ratio of seats taken vs. seats available especially gets on my nerves. According to somebody else who commented here, Thomas Andrews even tried to advocate for the lifeboats to be put to better use and was shot down. It’s really sad to think about and makes me angry. It ultimately came down to whether you had money or you didn’t. These people were really out here just putting prices on lives.
@@Nene-vh7rq there is also a great one in Branson Missouri. You get a ticket of a passenger at the beginning, and in the end, you get to see if “you” lived or died
@@kayleighwilson1551 “putting prices on lives” I couldn’t have said it any better you’re definitely right and thank you for the information regarding the museum.
I watched the whole thing. I can't believe I watched the whole thing. Its 5.44am. I read someone's comment that they watched the whole video and I thought to myself that it would ridiculous to watch the ship sink for nearly 3 hours. Yet hear i am. Absolutely fantastic work by the producers of this video. I'm thoroughly amazed
Now THIS is a horror film. I cannot even begin to fathom the sheer terror and anguish these people must have felt… Absolutely chilling. Really excellently made.
A good book to read is "The Shadows of the Titanic" where survivors give accounts of the sinking and their lives after. It's chilling to read when they describe what it was like that night. For Example Jack Thayer who is mentioned in the video, his story is in the book.
God, i love how you really can only JUST make out the iceberg, and only because you know to look for it. Really brings home just how impossibly hard it was to see. This whole thing is probably one of the scariest things I’ve ever experienced.
To me the scariest part is how the entire back of the ship was able to be lifted up into the air like nothing just by the sheer force of the water flooding and sinking the front. The ship was huge and heavy. Chilling.
It was due to the double bottom plating of the ship which was quite strong. It also was the reason why the sinking forward part was able to quickly pull down the separated aft as the double bottom was still attached. I've seen some studies which showed that the aft could have been afloat for around 20-30 more minutes if the aft separated totally. So it was basically gain some lose some.
As I can't afford to buy sound files, I had to make due with free-use copyright free ones for the screams. I apologize profusely to the disruption your poor ears suffered for listening to the same sound file for 5 minutes while it was on a loop.
@@TitanicAnimations I understand the use of screams..lol..but if you would have left the captions up a little longer it would have been better..all in all I enjoyed your work, thanks for the vidio and best of luck.
@Railfan 765 It's a nice thought. But there were alot of noble men back then. It's just as likely that he didn't have much fear in his death and whatever happens, happens.
The second half of the quote is what really gets me. Tell my wife I did my best, and no woman or child drowned because I was a coward. I don't think he was joking. I think he was a gallant gentleman who'd made his peace.
The Captain, Mr. Andrews, and probably even Murdoch could have all gotten on the lifeboats if they had wanted to. They all chose to stay behind and try and save as many as they could. They could have all pointed ther fingers at eachother, but they didn't. They did their duty till the very end.
What truly sends shivers up my spine about this whole incident, something you captured beautifully in this animation, are the sounds of the sinking/collapsing ship. Not only is it pitch black outside, the air is below freezing & everyone is in disarray. It's already a living nightmare. At the forefront of it all, a colossal structure of steel and iron is descending into the ocean; bellowing out eerily thunderous sounds. Like a giant creature slowly dying. Absolutely chilling.
Masterfully and very poetically written The Titanic and it's 1500 victims died a slow agonizing and horrible death some of the passengers dying in ways that we don't know about or don't want to know about Just imagine being one of those trapped inside as the water forces the air out of the compartments during the first several hundred feet of The descent or some of the unlucky few that thought they had escaped only to be sucked back into the ship and dragged down with it
I am watching this by myself. The entire 2 hrs 45 minutes of it. It ended at 1 am. I got so scared when the ship started tearing apart with thundering sounds going down. Absolutely, positively terrifying.
The part I find most eerie is how absolutely still the water is. Instinctively I expect bad weather for a ship to sink, so the calm ocean makes me feel as though the Titanic shouldn't be able sink.
The communication between the radio operators tears me up... you can notice the level of panic increasing on the titanic in the final 45 minutes. The other ships responding that they are rushing to help not knowing they won't even be there quick enough to see the ship go down.
@@AgitatedTaco Kinda funny. They were a bunch of rich people who tried to skirt past safety guidelines thinking they were bigger than the laws of physics. They got their comuppance.
As a mother, I cannot imagine being among the lower class and knowing your babies have no chance of surviving, so all you can do is hold them tight during the slow await of death. How horrible.
titanic is my mom's favorite movie and every time we watch it together she mentions this. I have an older sister too, and she always tells us that she can't even imagine how the mothers were feeling because she can't process having to wait for death helplessly while my sister and I wait with her not understanding what's going on. it's truly awful to think about
I'm 30 years old and ever since learning about Titanic all the way back in 3rd Grade, it's just one of those things that has never left me. It has had a stranglehold on my imagination. The grandest ship in the world, a true marvel of human engineering without all of the fancy technology we have today, gone, along with all of those poor people.
Tbh I would love to see it and explore it. What breaks my heart is all the pain and suffering those people went through. Idk if I could've bared to see that.
It's unimaginable thinking how terrifying this must have been... especially in the pitch black of night. Apparently it took just 4 hours after the titanic sank that help arrived. That's amazing but those 4 hours I bet must have felt like an eternity. And to arrive in the approximate location where the help signal was sent must have been crazy to find just rafts and no ship.
@@Firemarioflower I agree the inaction was definitely reprehensible, but a brief glance at Wikipedia brought me these findings: No formal charges were ever brought against Lord and his crew for their inaction. Lord disputed the findings and would spend the rest of his life trying to clear his name. In 1992, the UK Government's Marine Accident Investigation Branch re-examined the case and while condemning the inaction of the Californian and Captain Lord, also concluded that due to the limited time available, "the effect of Californian taking proper action would have been no more than to place on her the task actually carried out by Carpathia, that is the rescue of those who escaped ... [no] reasonably probable action by Captain Lord could have led to a different outcome of the tragedy".
What I love about this video is it made it human. It sounds weird but most people think of the Titanic as the Jack and Rose love story and forget about the real horror that was experienced that night. I find the pitch dark water so frightening and it’s a video! I can’t imagine, I don’t want to imagine, how they must’ve been feeling. What they must’ve felt.
Yeah the whole thing is really sad and how many more could have been placed on the life boats and was even let on the boats because of gender or class status. Really unnecessary loss made worse by actions of a few.
Exactly! As a person who has a horrible phobia of the ocean i can’t imagine what a terrifying and insanely creepy and anxiety filling situation that was. Just waiting for your death that is so close, in the middle of the ocean at night in super cold freezing weather. I wish this never happened but it did…i would have died from a heart attack tbh before i would even drown but isn’t it so horrible dying in the ocean alone with many creepy sea animals etc. that‘s a horrible death.
man people died in so many messed up ways....drowning, freezing, being squashed, hitting things after falling etc. just so sad, but this animation in the best ive ever seen. good stuff
and the people being sucked into the funnel 1 hole, once it collapsed. Imagine being sucked down there. Where does it end? in the boilers. And with a few tons of water each second falling down on you. That is one of the worst death.
Like literally anything could kill them at that point, being crushed by the ship(after it split) or the funnels, the ship pulling you down after it sinks completely, falling in between the bow and stern sections after it splits, getting electrocuted. Like these deaths were probably the ones someone would think would be unlikely back then
The morse code is honestly so sad. 2:32:28 "Haven't heard MGY (Titanic) for about half an hour. And then the next code is just MGY desperately sending out codes to no one basically :'(
I thought almost 3 hours of staring at a ship would be boring.... It wasn't. The messages and audio, the sounds of people, music and the boat and even watching the liner slowly sink; I was transfixed. Brilliant!
Despite this being incredibly tragic I always remember the story of a chef who got black out drunk when he found out the ship was sinking thinking he was going to die, but ended up surviving because of the huge amount of alcohol in his system
One of the scariest things for me was how dark it was. The titanic sunk in about 3km deep water. That would be truly terrifying for some of the people still on the ship as it went down. It can take anywhere from 5mins to 30mins to drown in salt water. So as that ship is sinking into the dark water you would be sucked down with it. Imagining looking up to see the surface getting darker and darker until you can no longer see the surface and some of the less fortunate who actually survived longer until the ship got really deep would’ve been crushed because of water pressure which also very scary. It disturbed me more just to know if the fear these people felt knowing they were going to die, and the way most of them died is just cruel.
yeah since the suction would bring them down this is definitely what happened to some and it sucks. I dunno if this or falling off the ship when at full tilt
Yeah, once the power failed the video got dark. I realized in some of the other animations they leave the lights on until it goes under so you can see what's happening. But this is how it would have been. Total darkness save the light from the stars. Scary shit.
The real scary part is the people that were stuck in air pockets inside the stern section of the ship knowing they were far under water until those pockets finally imploded.
Videos such as this fill me with a sense of dread that is near unmatched. The initial calmness of the situation, the loss of hope in the distress calls, the other ships making a futile effort to come to her aid and then the final, inevitable collapse. Seeing messages from other ships stating "We will be there in 4 hours." when we all know now that the Titantic will disappear in nearly half that time, the sense of hopelessness that hits me is so unique and tragic.
That was just the closest ship to respond that said it would take 4 hours. All of the other ships that responded said it would take longer for them to arrive.
@daniellelacy7158 Yeah, that makes it even worse. I said four hours because it was the closest. The closest ship (besides possibly the Californian) being 4 hours away while the rest were much further behind, it hits in such a strange way for me.
The soul onboard officially recognised as the last person to leave the ship was Charles Joughin. Joughin was the Master Baker of the Titanic who had a strong team of 13 Bakers working under him. As the tragedy began to unfold, Charles was nominated to be one of the Stewards of lifeboat ten, assisting both women and children aboard. He also initiated the idea of distributing four loaves of bread to each of the survivors within the lifeboats. Joughin, when given the duty of boarding lifeboat ten when it was ready to launch, quickly proceeded to go back down to his bunker to retrieve a few personal effects including a dram of alcohol. Upon his return to the main deck and to his abject horror, the lifeboat was launched after another Steward had been found to take over the responsibility. Charles Joughin would later recall how he hung to the stern of the ship as she went down below the water - "Riding her like an elevator". He infact survived for over two hours paddling away in the icy cold water with little to no ill-effects. The alcohol he imbeded was later discovered to be the main reason his body adapted so well and he didn't freeze to death. The fact that Charles Joughin was the last man to stand on the stern of the Titanic makes him the last man to leave her. Incredible story of survival and altruism. Chris (UK).
I agree he was one of the last to leave the ship. But I personally disagree with his accounts of the stern during the breakup. Reason why? He told an Officer on board Carpathia that he jumped from A-deck as soon as he left the pantry after hearing the big crashing sound. Add onto the well documented fact that he was drunk that night and he's an unreliable witness at best. Not saying that what he claims happened didn't happen, just saying that I don't subscribe to his story based on his unreliability. Cheers, Phillip
@@TitanicAnimations I suppose we'll never truly know how certain events played out aboard the doomed liner during those wee small hours on that April morning. I will say though, the very fact that Joughin ordered that bread should be distributed and the fact that he threw deckchairs and other loose objects into the water in order to give people a fighting chance says a lot about his character and personality. These acts alone tell me he was an honourable man and an utterly selfless one at that. Now of course, the latter minutes of the ships life and his last moments upon her could have been embellished in order to juice up his remarkable story of survival, like I said, we'll never know but what is certain is that Charles Joughin made an incredible contribution in assisting his fellow passengers. I have to say aswell Phillip, this is an amazing simulation you've created here and I thank you for it. Because the night/morning of the 14th and 15th April was moonless as described by the passengers aboard and of course the sea being like a millpond, it must have been difficult to ascertain on the horizon where the sky ended and the ocean began. This dilemma was observed by a distant ship who noticed a faint but bright light in the far distance (which was infact one of Titanic's rockets). The Officer consulted with his Captain and they both agreed that it must be a bright star in the sky. The Titanic still captivates the public imagination as much today as it did back then because of her charisma and sheer size. She represented all that was glamorous, romantic, dramatic and a salvation to many who relied upon her to journey them to a better life.... On this count, she didn't fulfil those dreams, hopes and aspirations of many aboard, but foundered as she had lived - with grace and elegance. It was only during the last few minutes that she creaked and moaned as she broke apart but otherwise, remained poised until the end.... As Eva Hart observed, even as her lifeboat was by now a couple of miles away, the Titanic dazzled with beauty and authority. This is a tragedy that will talked about in 1,000 years time. Lest We Forget all who lost their lives on April, 15th 1912 aboard the RMS Titanic. Many thanks again Phillip 🖒 Chris (UK).
The alcohol part is a myth. The idea that he survived because alcohol warmed him up literally is the OPPOSITE of what alcohol does to your body. Drinking moves heat away from your core and towards the surface of your skin, by relaxing your blood vessels (it's a sedative drug, that's what it does). This makes you FEEL warmer, but it's actually super fucking dangerous if you're in a cold climate because: A: Your core now has less heat, meaning it can't go as long without shutting down B: You lose surface heat very very quickly, meaning all that heat you just transferred is GONE in a few minutes. Surface temp and core temp are very different things, and a lot of people don't realise this. For example, a fan ONLY cools your surface temp down (fun fact: it also relies on the existence of sweat to do this. Literally what a fan's doing is cooling down your sweat) and does nothing for your core temp. If you're overheating, you will still be overheating with a fan. You just won't FEEL like you are. A lot of people tend to make this mistake, because the way alcohol works does trick you into thinking you're warmer than you are; and I wouldn't be surprised if he thought that was the reason he lived, but honestly, he survived in SPITE of that if he was drinking at all. Not because of it. Pro tip: DO NOT try to survive in a cold climate by drinking. You will actually just die faster.
@@LordofFullmetal I'd also like to point out Joughin is often quoted to be treading water for multiple minutes, sometimes up to an hour before he was picked up by a lifeboat. Thats also another physical impossibility. In 28F water you will freeze to death in less than 15-20 mins. The inconsistencies in his story plus the fact he readily admits he was drunk has always led me to doubt his point of view to a certain extent.
@@TitanicAnimations Four minutes. It takes four minutes to die of hypothermia in water that cold. I don't know how drunk he was, but I imagine that he was drunk enough that it felt like hours but was probably only a couple of minutes.
The part for me that stood out amongst the chaos even in the movie was how the quartet or band played until the very last moment they could. Like a soundtrack to a slow but inevitable death. They’re the brave souls in my opinion of this Beautiful Dark Tragedy.
Coming from someone who watched the entire video; To say that the amount of work and research that went into this is highly respectable is a gross understatement. Incredible job!
I went kayaking a few years ago, late winter early spring. My brother and I measured the temperature of the water and realized it was about 2 degrees warmer than the water in the Northern Atlantic the morning titanic sank. So one at a time we jumped in from our kayaks and I’m not exaggerating when I say this, from the time I hit the water I came straight up and I needed help getting back in our kayak because my extremities were already numb. I was in the water for approximately 15-20 seconds. What a bad way to go.
The comment of "1000 knives stabbing you all over your body" in the '97 film were actually taken from a survivor of the disaster. Water that cold is no joke.
You can swim for a few minutes if youre used to swimming in ice cold water. Its a winter hobby here in Finland. Real good ice swimmers can swim for much longer than that
I had the same experience jumping in the sea from some rocks into about 2 metre deep water. The sea was probably about 14 degrees (August Cornwall sea temp) and the second I hit the water my body went into shock and I genuinely couldn’t move. The water felt way colder than I was expecting and my dad had to get half way in to pull me out. Would have surely drowned if I was dumb enough to try that by myself. Cold water is not to be fucked with no matter how strong of a swimmer you think you are
--- Time Stamps for Songs --- 42:00 Ragtime Dance - Scott Joplin 46:00 Queen of Sheba - Handel 49:10 Merry widow - Franz Lehar 52:00 Frankie & Johnny - N/A 55:20 The Cascades - Joplin 58:23 Alexander's Ragtime Band - Joplin 1:01:10 On the Beautiful Blue Danube - Arthur Fiedler 1:11:15 Gluhwurmchen Idyll - Paul Linke 1:13:52 Maple Leaf Rag - Joplin 1:17:40 Valse Septembre - Felix Godin 1:22:16 Pleasant Moments - Joplin --- 1:25:00 1 AM --- 1:35:00 Waiting For The Robert E Lee - L wolfe Gilbert. (My Favourite) 1:37:48 Turkey Trot - White Star Line SongBook. 1:41:29 The Merry Widow - Franz Lehar 1:43:15 Frankie & Johnny - N/A 1:45:26 Ave Maria - Schubert 1:48:10 Oh You Beautiful Doll - Brown & Ayer 1:51:21 Emperor Waltz - Strauss 2:03:00 Maple Leaf Rag - Joplin 2:06:38 Londonderry Air - N/A 2:09:05 Elite Syncopations - Joplin 2:12:50 Let Me Call You Sweetheart - Friedman & Wilson. 2:14:50 Pleasant Moments - Joplin 2:18:13 The Stars Spangled Banner - F. Scott Key 2:20:03 The Barcarolle - Offenbach 2:23:00 Madama Butterfly - Pucinni --- 2:25:00 2 AM --- 2:29:00 Alexander's Ragtime Band - Berlin 2:37:14 Nearer My God to Thee - Adams
Waiting For The Robert E Lee - L wolfe Gilbert, is also my favorite! I keep rewinding to listen to it since I love the version that is played in this well-made animation. I can not seem to find the version on RUclips or anywhere, except for different versions which I do not like ;( If there is an idea of this version's whereabouts please inform me!
my god man I remember reading a reading rainbow book saying how in the future we may be able to see photorealistic examples of the titanic, but this really does take the cake, with morse code messages, animations, and even time stamps to break down everything. just wow.
do you remember the name of the book? I read a reading rainbow book about the future once too, it said something about cars that could shrink to fit into tight parking spaces
You have to admire the bravery and commitment of the engineers and stokers deep inside the sinking ship. They kept the electricity working until the very end, just two minutes before she went down. With the lights and the ability to control the list to some extend the crew had at least an opportunity to save some of those lifes. As far as I know, no engineer survived the sinking.
@@InTenMinutes1 I bet andrews told bell what happened. And bell would know being chief engineer once the 5th compartment was gashed they were gonna sink regardless
Oddly enough, a good portion of the stokers survived. Once the boilers were shut down, Bell released most of them to go help with loading the boats. The guy you see screaming to shut the boiler doors in Cameron's Titanic survived the sinking.
@@superdingo9741 not much sense to have more? So you’re ok with people designing ships without the capacity to keep everyone on board safe in the event of disaster? You’re saying it’s ok for 47% of the people onboard to be left to die by design?
"We've dressed up in our best, and are prepared to go down like gentlemen. I am willing to remain and play the man's game if there are not enough boats for more than the women and children. Tell my wife I played the game straight out and to the end. No woman shall be left aboard this ship because Ben Guggenheim is a coward." What a Boss.
I'm an animator and can I just say how much of a good job you've done on this? I'm honestly stunned at the accuracy, dedication and detail. I've been obsessed with the Titanic since I was a child and you've done such a service to the memory of the ship, crew and passengers who perished.
So impressing! My grandfather's uncle went down with the Titanic, 3rd class passenger from Sweden. This has made me really fascinated of everything about it. It's crazy that so many more people could have been saved if they used the boats properly... Thank you for an incredible simulation!
@@annasalander4316 Oh, I see him now. Born July 25, 1887 in Eldsberga, Halland, Sweden. 8 siblings. He was a gardening student in England and Germany. Travelled as a third passenger of the Titanic with intent to join his brother, Gustaf, in Minnesota. His ticket number was 7266.
@@Shadywolf09 thank you so much! I don’t know much about it, but I really want to know more. Everything about it just makes me shiver - what a destiny… I can’t believe being there and experiencing that
It kind of amazes me how long it took them to start lowering lifeboats. It’s also a shame that most went out not at full capacity. On todays cruise ships, you’d be looking at probably a 45 minute wait time max. That is if there wasn’t mass panic. I imagine this is the major reason we didn’t see more survivors.
They started trying to get people onto lifeboats within 30 minutes of striking the iceberg. They left at low capacity simply because people did not want to get on. Loading at full capacity would not have saved more lives because of how long it took to lower. Not all the lifeboats even left the ship before she sank.
By all accounts, there wasn't a mass panic until close to the very end. Because the ship sank so gradually, many people didn't even realize it was going down at all, or were under the impression that another ship would easily come by and pick them up. They lowered the lifeboats because people were simply refusing to board them at first.
Even if you made it to a lifeboat, at that point you still didn't know if you were going to survive. In the middle of the cold, dark ocean with nobody nearby for hours. And the sheer luck that the waters were calm. The Atlantic has never been known for its calm demeanor.
The calmness of the water was one of the contributing factors in the accident. Calm waters kept the ocean waves from breaking at the base of the iceberg, which would have alerted the lookout crew to the presence of the iceberg much sooner.
On the lifeboat you knew you were most likely going to survive. It happened all so fast, alot of people were not even considering that they were going to die. Even the ones in the water didn't expect to float there for so long without help that they freeze to death.
@@thecensoredmuscle563 it’s one of those out of the frying pan and into the fire. You’re dead square in the middle of the ocean, I doubt anyone felt safe in the lifeboats
It's amazing that it doesn't look so bad the first two hours. Most passengers probably believed the ship would stay afloat long enough for help to arrive. It's not until the upper part of the bow plunges it's clear the ship is going to sink soon and time is running out.
Several passengers, once aboard Carpathia, said they were told the ship would be fine for at least 12 hours if not longer before other rescue ships came. It wasn't until they were on-board, saw no Titanic anywhere, and the debris floating nearby that it began to slowly dawn on them that she'd gone down.
@@TitanicAnimations Maybe it was because there was a sinking that happened before the Titanic, which lasted for 12 hours to sink, so they though that was what going to happen to the Titanic.
Eva Hart came to my school and delivered a lecture to us sixth formers in '82. It was fascinating. I met her afterwards and thanked her for such a moving story. One thing I will never forget from her lecfure; she was asked repeatedly to speak about Titanic over the years, and she always resisted. Finally, she gave in, to the producers of "A Night To Remember", and agreed to act as an advisor - with the caveat that (and I quote her words from that lecture back in 82) - that they didn't try to "replicate the noises the people made as they drowned" Rest in Peace Eva x
Can’t even imagine how terrifying it must be for everyone there. My heart hurts imaging myself in their shoes. Rest In Peace to the lives lost that morning
That always gets me too. I wonder if they thought they had more time based on the rate it was sinking. In those last minutes things accelerated so much it must have been shocking. I can’t even imagine the horror. It’s disappointing to see so many people cracking jokes in the comments.
@@uribheidi It lulled the majority of passengers into a false sense of security. The thinking was that even if Titanic were in trouble, she would clearly stay afloat long enough for help to arrive. But that last 20 minutes was astounding. It went from slight panic to unreal terror.
The boat deck had a lot of areas for water to down flood. Funnel bases. Ladders down to the boiler rooms and engine room. Deck hatches. Grand staircase. Into public rooms from the boat deck. Once the forecastle went under her fate was sealed. At that point several tons of seawater started coming in from above all at once.
a 20 kW light would have illuminated that berg from 2 km, Titanic needed just slightly more than 1 km to stop, factoring crew reaction time in it wouldn't have crashed and lights were allowed after the accident, so the British joined the civilized world... only that it cost 1500 their lives
Can't even imagine how unbelievably terrifying this would be once you accepted what was happening. A lot of people onboard never thought it was going to sink even when they were loading the lifeboats.
i think one of the most eery moments of this entire video is the 44:00 mark, where if you look at the lights in rooms right where the waterline is, you can notice how they slowly begin to disappear, and you start to notice that the ship really is sinking. of course it can probably be noticed before, but with the band playing in the background, it makes this whole section far more horrifying.
@@awesommender354 sarcasm right? Lol i watched the movie when I was 5 and I balled my eyes out. Whether because I realized what had happened or if i was emulating emotions from around me... awesome movie anyways
TITANIC-CQD CQD CQD HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG LOADING WOMEN AND CHILDREN INTO THE LIFEBOATS REQUIRE IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE. FRANKFURT-WHATS THE MATTER WITH YOU? YOUR SUCH A DRAMA QUEEN. HOWS THE WEATHER? TITANIC-CALM AND CLEAR OLD MAN.
The guys on that german ship did not speak english. I bet it was Quiet a shock for them when they came home and read the newspaper. "ohhh, so that happend " xD
Lots of respect to the stewards who knew they were doomed but continued working to keep passengers calm knowing they wouldnt receive their last paychecks. Respect to the captain, crew, and engineers who went down with the ship instead of taking life boats.
@@2012farfar Surely the Captain was being dumb. But he still respected the rule of the sea at the time. "Woman and children first" and that the captain will go down with their ship unless all passengers are evacuated safely.
As tragic and terrifying as this is, there’s something fascinating about it, isn’t there? All of the tragedy’s in history, there’s just something about the Titanic that captures our imagination. Over a century later and here we are.
Totally think the '97 movie helps! But there's a reason it's been made into so many movies, documentaries, books, etc. in the first place. I personally think it's a combination of a few things: The size of the ship, which was huge. The loss of life, also pretty huge. Decent amount of very wealthy people were on board. And the cockiness of touting it as "unsinkable", then being proven wrong on the maiden voyage... Just a perfect storm of tragedy really, it's very sad. (Added reason for myself: I live in Halifax, Nova Scotia where a lot of people who died in the tragedy were buried, as it's near the sinking site. The cemetery my Great Grandma is in has quite a few Titanic victims buried in it. We also have some artifacts from the Titanic in our museum that's located not far from the cemetery.)
I think because it’s the ocean, the most known unknown in human imagination. One that’s easier for our tiny minds to imagine and fear than the greater unknown of the universe. Titanic being the most recent and biggest marine tragedy. Hence the fascination.
I think what attracts us so much about Titanic is that it has all the ingredients of a novel. It also happened at a time that was left far behind in time but photographic documents and videos came to exist. We have images of some of the real passengers, their officers and the ship itself as it left port. All this, adding the series of errors and misfortune they had, make this catastrophe something that will never leave any generation unmoved. My condolences and memories for all those who perished that tragic night. A very good recreation. Greetings
INTERIOR SCENES 7:14 - 7:30 Water entering Boiler Room 6 14:59 - 15:14 Deeply flooded Boiler Room 6 15:44 - 16:00 Water entering Orlop Deck (just below mail room) 17:14 - 17:30 Orlop Deck below mail room almost completely submerged 17:59 - 18:15 D-deck Landing (not flooding at the moment) 20:15 - 20:30 Peering into Cargo Hatch No. 1 (Water on G-deck) 20:44 - 20:59 Water entering 1st class baggage room on G-deck 26:15 - 26:30 Water now flooding F-deck (G-deck still flooding) 30:00 - 30:14 Water enters Squash Court on G-deck 35:19 - 35:59 Water nearing E-deck, F-deck almost submerged 45:19 - 46:00 Bulkhead on E-deck collapses, E-deck flooding 1:07:00 - 1:07:21 Water going down the stairs from E to F deck 1:15:00 - 1:15:30 Water flooding E-deck at Scotland Road 1:35:14 - 1:35:30 Boiler Room 5 bulkhead gives way, rapid flooding 1:39:59 - 1:40:14 Water begins to creep up Grand Staircase at E-deck 1:44:30 - 1:44:59 Boiler Room 4 is abandoned. Water one foot deep 2:09:00 - 2:09:14 Water begins flooding D-deck Reception Area 2:14:00 - 2:14:59 Reception Area and Dining Room on D-deck rapidly flood I hope some of you find this comment useful.
@@thescpearrapemaster6204 Yeah, that's what I had originally typed but RUclips was being a brat and decided to mess stuff up. Thanks for catching that. Fixed!
This animation made me realize something. The way the split actually happened, as it was more subtle than what the movie makes you believe, and it happened in near pitch black darkness, it’s no wonder there were conflicting reports back then that if the Titanic sunk whole or split in two. Really a terrifying experience that would have been. And yet, you see her hang on just enough for all her life boats deploy, even though they only saved less than half of the passengers. You don’t see that with the Lusitania, or heck, even the Costa Concordia to deploy all of its lifeboats before they sank or capsized.
If the breakup happened that way, there would be no reports of a breakup at all, it's way too subtle. The breakup may have been more visible, but fast and in the darkness, so many would not have seen it.
although with costa they didn''t have as many deaths anyways, im not sure but i think they got help much faster then titanic did, and had 32 ldeathes out of 3 thoasand people
If the captain of the Costa Concordia had been on Titanic he'd have been one of the first to get into a lifeboat. Apparently as Concordia sunk the captain basically "did a runner" so to speak and got himself off in a lifeboat and to shore (which was nearby). There are recordings of radio chatter with the harbourmaster basically telling him to "get back on and help people". Most of the men on Titanic (other than Ismay who was disgraced for life) accepted that they weren't going to get a boat and so went down with Titanic.
@@danielmorris6523 Interesting enough a similar thing happened in a cruise ship (unfortunately I don't remember the name) but the actual crew of the ship left all people behind and didn't notify anyone about the ship being in the brick of sinking, the only ones who took action and saved everyone was the band that had being hired for the shows 😮, I couldn't believe the story but it's true.
Imagine how the survivors must have felt, knowing they were all alone out there after the titanic was completely gone, not knowing if help would ever get there.
This Morse code exchange is wild Titanic: Help I'm sinking Boat 1: who's sinking? Titanic: me! Send help Boat 2: what's the matter? Titanic: struck Berg, sinking Boat 1: who struck a Berg? Titanic: me, send help. Sinking Boat 2: oh hey Titanic. Do you need help? Boat 3: who needs help?
Not this one but with another video exactly like this one with more terrifying sound I watching at night and I was starting to be sleepy so I decided to put the video on screen saver and sleep at this sound.
2:13:37 Carpathia: "MPA to MGY. All our boats are ready. We are coming as hard as we can OM. Double watch on engine room. Have your lifeboats ready when we arrive!" How the radio operators of Carpathia tried to instill hope is quite moving.
The captain of the Carpathia ran full power to Titanic, turned off electricity and heat in the cabins. It’s an amazing story how quickly they were able to make it.
You're a passenger on the deck of the Carpathia. You've just finished dinner, you and about 100 people are roaming top side. All of the sudden, crews begin readying the lifeboats. -"What the hell is going on? A drill?" -"No the Titanic just sent an SOS, they're sinking!" That's gotta be chilling for you to be told you're on you're way to Rescue survivors of the Unsinkable Ship, which is now sinking. Honestly,
Apparently maurice moss' grandad was on the Virginia doing the late shift that night. Joking aside, terrible AND avoidable tragedy. God rest their souls. Somehow, though, you just think some things are destined to happen.
@Soul fuck that. You put them on your damn ship and you pull as many out of the damn water as you can. If you have to force 15 people in a hold, that's what you fucking do.
you don't need to worry about provisions, get people out of the fucking water ASAP. Other ships will be coming too, you can transfer people as need be when the other ships come. As soon as they saw the first rocket, turn around and fucking investigate, pull your radio operator on his ass, and get shit ready.
I think this is one of the most realistic real-time simulations that I have come across online. You have done such an amazing job in recreating Titanic's final hours. I feel a sense of dread when I watch this. The smooth-as-glass ocean reflecting the stars and the Titanic's lights... the distant sounds of Wallace Hartley's band playing... the sounds of the passengers and the morse code echoing into the cold night... the sounds of the dying ship. You feel a sense of helplessness when you watch everything unfold before your eyes. I understand that Titanic: Honor and Glory's supporters have been attacking your work but they have to understand that no one has claim over history. Anyone is entitled to recreate the disaster with whatever theory they believe is accurate. There will never be a 100% accurate portrayal on the disaster because we weren't there. Thank you for working hard during the last five years to make this happen. Well done!
@@TitanicAnimations I think james Cameron and his team pretty much surmised the stern sank faster, then it did in his original movie, and it never stood on end, as long as it did...but still a chilling video!
Why can't people appreciate this beautiful rendering of the tragedy and the work that went into it, as well as enjoy the Honor and Glory Titanic simulator? They're both made by people that obviously put a lot of hard work into it.
Could you imagine being on the most luxurious ship of the time, toasting and dancing…and a few hours later, it’s sinking while ragtime music blares as you walk/run down flooded hallways. For some reason, that ambiance and picture is so uncomfortable
NEWER VERSION WITH ANIMATED CHARACTERS: ruclips.net/video/BN4m1_S-vJk/видео.html
:( Song D'Autumn was the best song
@@Schifffahrtsgeschichte Blame RUclips's busted copyright detection system :/
At first I used the file from the "Band of Courage" CD in the revised sinking, no problems In this one it flagged as copyright. So I found a recording made pre 1920's and put that in, it got flagged as well (anything before 1923 I think is public domain unless specifically copyrighted).
Rather than dispute the strikes and wind up losing which would lead to channel deletion, I was forced to remove the songs. There are still audio effects playing in those sections, just no music.
i.imgur.com/WgNLtHK.png
since RUclips's becoming more corporate they're going to start making it so that only the channels that pay them get to stay and then smaller RUclipsrs like us who do this more for a hobby than for a profit will get removed even if we don't infringe on copyright
A few days early no?
As a guy who enjoy Rock and electronic/dance I do quite enjoy the classic it a shame that you can't play those two
The fact that this happened in the middle of the night makes it so much more haunting.
But wouldn’t the iceberg have melted during the day
@@emilywood5875 the ice is dense and won't melt in the heat.
The fact that this happened in the middle of the ocean makes it so much more haunting.
The fact that so many people died makes it so much more haunting.
The fact that this is a true event makes it so much more haunting.
Imagine being in a lifeboat after the ship sank, listening to the people screaming in the water get slowly quieter, and quieter until absolute silence and the pitch blackness of the sea. Tragedy. Absolute tragedy.
That's why, in Cameron's movie, we see Rose's mother covering her ears with her hands. That must've been unbearable to hear.
Yes, survivors reported that dreadful silence once Titanic disappeared (Eva Hart for instance)
Traumatized
Trauma
😭😭😭
For me, the scariest part of the animation is how dark the ocean is, especially when the lights go out on the Titanic as well. Terrible to imagine that you're in the midst of the ocean, chilling water everywhere and not a single sign of light appears for hours that would signal some hope for the survivors.
When I saw that iceberg rip through the hull, I would have immediately been making a flotation device out of something. Especially if I was like Jack and was there by myself. My hour would have been spent building a boat.
I agree. Deep ocean water freaks me out, especially at night 😬
@@desertweasel6965, Джек решал вопрос с Роуз.
Yes
I'm sure many people fainted already before they died
@@AnasSyriano многие не знали, что делать и как им спасаться. Там была дезорганизованность и паника. Наверное, было несколько человек, которые соорудили плоты и пустились вплавь. Думаю, тех было гораздо меньше, которые были с женами и детьми...
Imagine narrowly escaping the titanic and then going to WW1, 2 years later…. The amount of trauma from both events would be unbearable
People weren't as soft
@@AverageAlien Some dude had ptsd after surviving the sinking, the nearby baseball stadium's cheering where he lived after the event reminded him of the screaming.
People were, are and will be as "soft" as they always did
@@AverageAlien how would that be soft??
@@katzea.a7880 must've been soft
@@AverageAlien I hate to break it to you but WW1 soldiers even without experiencing the Titanic’s sinking were prone to PTSD. I can’t imagine how watching 1,500 people die on top of that can be good for you mentally.
Also since when is it soft to be understandably upset over witnessing countless deaths? Do you think you’re some ultra badass who can shrug tragedies off?
Another survivor said in an interview that her and everyone in her lifeboat was terrified that they would go down with the ship. When Titanic was going down apparently it was sucking the lifeboat closer to it. Pretty scary
Like a bucket going down it becomes some sort of drain, scale that to the size of the Titanic so you can achieve that effect
Mythbusters busted this myth, though I understand the fear.
@@Apollostowel how?
@@linhhoang3636 umm, Mythbusters busted the myth a decade or more ago that a ship going down causes suction. They did it small scale then large scale. There’s just way too much water to ship. But of course scared in a lifeboat, you wouldn’t know that. The movie has it, but that’s a movie. If you watch a model of it, it doesn’t happen.
@@Apollostowel a ship that size sinking at that rate would cause a noticeable divet in the general area. Like when the two last cheerios in a bowl will slowly slide towards each other. It does cause a inward slope due to the displacement of water. It's just physics. If you're next to something like that as it happens, don't bother swimming.
this is not appreciated enough, this must've taken a very long time to research and animate. adding in the audio, the comments, the morse code and all those details. Honestly respect.
100%
Yes well said
Ikr? It does take awhile to do research and it's very important to make your video as historically accurate as possible
Disagree you ever watched Titanic there's a litteraly animation of it in the movie
@@gieria7433 which Is shorter and with a much bigger budget probably
I can’t imagine how horrifying it would be for the operators in the other ships rushing to them to notice the ship that has been “screaming” for help for hours has gone dead silent
Whats worse is that as the titanic's power began to dwindle and the antenna is lowered by the sinking, the signal is getting weaker with each transmission which would be noticeable
So they would hear the titanic slowly fade away from barely understandable messages, to erratic static beepung to eventual silence.
@@Ani-Max-Ations like the surfside pool 🥲
@@Ani-Max-Ations yeah the fish are having a great time in it
@@Ani-Max-Ations Huh? It's at the bottom of the ocean, wouldn't all of it be filled with water, not just the pool?
I feel the worst for the third class passengers. There's a scene where a mother is trying to put their children to sleep because she knew that they couldn't escape and they were going to die in the movie titanic.
Its so sad
I'm glad you made it as dark as it is because it really would have been that dark. It's no wonder there was confusion as to whether or not the ship broke in half because apart from starlight on a flat ocean there was literally no other light at all to see. It's like a giant black coffin slipping into the sea. Beautiful and terrifying at the same time.
I love your description! It’s very poetic thanks for sharing
Stars look nice.
"Giant black coffin" - chillingly apt.
My thoughts as well. One survivor was noted as saying he heard a huge boom from the sound of the boilers breaking loose and falling towards the bow, which could be accurate. Or it could have actually been the sound of the ship buckling. Or it could have been both, perhaps the boilers did break free and fall, taking out much of the internal structure, further weakening the hull and contributing to it buckling.
@@foskco87 The first thing Robert Ballard found of the ship was a boiler. Question is whether or not they broke free before or after the split.
108 years later and we are still fascinated by the Titanic.
Stolen
wikked girl wtf
Corona virus has already wiped out more people
@@edmundpower1250 bruh im- how is that eVEN RELATED
@@edmundpower1250 But sure that is a future film for people to comment on in 100 years.
What’s really upsetting is how desperate and terrifying the Morse code gets as it goes along, especially since the signal is getting weaker and weaker, the last message literally can’t finish
One of the most tragic things about the sinking.
I believe there were two operators and one of them literally dragged the other guy out.
Only one of them survived
The Junior Operator got crushed by a collapsible lifeboat and the other died in an unknown way
@@timmy841212 and how many more people could have been on those life boats
@Trey Stephens Bride survived the sinking, Philips died.
*I still can’t believe that even in 2019 were still fascinated by her.*
I think the two world wars would have buried the story of Titanic, but the book 'A Night to Remember' by Walter Lord was published in 1956 and the movie was made in 1958. I do believe that Lord's portrayal helped to preserve this tragedy forever.
Ya
It'll be 200 years later and the Titanic tragedy will still fascinate us to the core
@@kylephantom4 Despite the wreck no longer existing.
TakeoutLime47
k
It's scary how the ship took around 2 hours and 40 minutes to sink, yet for most of that time it seemed really slow. Only at the last 5 minutes does Titanic go from still being mostly on the surface to completely swallowed up by the sea.
yeah it really picks up around 2:10 when boiler room 4 starts to flood
Once the actual superstructure of it went under it had minutes
Last 20 minutes, actually. It’s much scarier to have a ship sink about that fast after it first starts sinking like the RMS Lusitania did.
Yeah that was absolutely terrifying watching it slowly sink into the black like that. And gods this is just a video I can't even imagine _being_ there.
I sat here, thinking _if only people had _*_listened_*_ and got off, if only the boats have been filled properly_ ... So many more could have lived.
When the lights go out towards the end, with no moon that night, i felt that. The fear those poor souls must have felt. What a terrifying way to leave this earth.
Well said..😭😭😭
Except for starlight
Die slowly watching the stars, must be sad but with a beautiful view
In all honesty I believe the pitch dark water and no way to see what’s underneath me would be what would kill me rather than the cold.
Dude the ocean terrifies me enough, but complete darkness, screaming of many people and the cold? Man that’s hell.
One of the survivors who managed to get onto a lifeboat said she will never forget the silence that came afterwards once all screams died down in the ocean along with the ship 🥺
Edit: The survivor who said this was Eva Hart, if you want to look her up. Her interview is here on RUclips. She was 7 years old when she saw that ship sink.
That's horrifying
@@throast7247 yeah his interview is on RUclips if you wanna watch more
@@tls4022 ouu! Thank you I'm going to look that up now
@@tls4022 hi, what was the title?
Sauce! We need the sauce!
This may be an animation, but man, is it eerie as all hell.
Sure is. Especially when the lights went out and it was pitch dark.
Since...it really happened...back in 1912....
Over 1500 people freezing to death in darkness...so tragic.
Hope this kind of maritime disaster never happens ever again..
@@danieldoo1821 the "lucky ones" froze to death. There were those who were crushed when the funnels toppled, some who fell into the crack formed when the hull split or slid into the capstans and other fixtures on deck, others who were drowned below decks when watertight bulkheads collapsed, etc. My choice would've been freezing while trying to swim to a lifeboat. At least you go peacefully with all your guns blazing.
I read this in Octavia’s voice
@@RobDog65 the people wasn't lucky that they froze to death because some of them had baby's and it's sad because the mom's the dad's did not get to see there baby's grow up it's sad it's not luck for any of them that died
Wow..this gave me chills. This is so tragic. Most people on the ship didn't realize how serious the situation was until it was too late. So sad that not even all the children were saved. But also very tragic for all the men and fathers who knew they had to sacrifice their lives for their women and children.
Whole families died together including the Anderssons from Sweden, in third class. It’s just terrible that not even the kids could be saved.
The Fathers that died really had nothing to be thankful for as they watched their families float away in those lifeboats. The wives and children may have survived the sinking, but they soon came to the realization that, unless they were wealthy, they were doomed to a life of poverty and despair. In those days, few women had good jobs! When the breadwinner was gone, the family was all but doomed financially. Sad.
@@philiphatfield5666 except a lot of the families were financially compensated by the White Star Line so they weren’t abandoned completely.
@@philiphatfield5666not exactly true.
My grandfather was born in 1930 in a family of 11 brothers and sisters, and when he was two years old, his father died. His mother didn’t have a job (of course), the oldest of his brothers was 14, and above all, his family didn’t have any land due to the father working in constructions, which meant that they couldn’t even farm to feed themselves.
All this happened in a dirt poor province of fascist Italy during the worst years of the Great Depression.. a place with far, FAR less opportunities than the US of the 1910s. All of them had to work like animals until the war came, and then every single brother he had was taken prisoner (either by the Germans, the Brits, the Americans, or the Russians)… but they all survived, coming back to tell the tale and build decent, honest lives for themselves and their families.
Humans are very tenacious animals… much more than one would think.
But their lifes should be saved if they fill all those empty lifeboats
This makes me want a modern Titanic film solely about the crew. Could be absolutely amazing.
Same. I genuienly loved the Cameron movie, but even when it released I was annoyed it wasn't more about the ship and crew rather than a love story.
There was so much it missed out.
I thought having perhaps a miniseries about the first ship on the scene of this historical event, that sailed through waters littered with icebergs at maximum speed and in complete darkness to reach the Titanic. We all know the story of the Titanic but putting you as the viewer on the other side of it, what it would be like to arrive there -what you would see. You can also include the ship that has everyone even the radio operator sleeping while within distance of the Titanic to see the distress flares and the captain ignoring them.
I'm sure there is a story there for a competent writer
There’s not much information about the crews it would have to be a fiction. Plus the movie industry isn’t about making good stories they want to shove a love story down your throat
Nah need a movie on Estonia rather than titanic
@@Dreadpirateflappy making it a love story/focusing on the passengers humanized the victims a little bit more; make them seem less like statistics, it’s easy to forget about the lives lost when you focus too much on the technicality of the ship itself. That’s what documentaries and channels like this are for.
I still think about the fact that she’s still, after all this time, sitting right there at the bottom of the ocean. That’s so chilling and unbelievable to me
The titanic is pretty much rusted and gone by now
Peoples personal items, baggage,shoes all the things they had is down there in the cold lonely depths. Its a terrible tragedy. These were people like us with dreams who died freezing and screaming . Pretty sad.
Yeah… along with silverware and personal belongings. It’s so heartbreaking and eerie to think about.
@@bettybane9915 yeah, it's starting to dissappear. When we're old, it will be gone forever
Makes me think of all the bones of slaves you'll find at the bottom of the ocean too. That genuinely haunts me even though im not black. I think of it every time i swim in the ocean
I couldn’t imagine anyone would actually watch the whole 2 hours 45 minutes of a boat sinking, but here I am. Well done, this is an incredible masterpiece. Thank you for this.
@XΣΠΩ Π7 are you okay?
It really puts the viewer into the thick of things, without some love story of Jack and Rose sidetracking what's actually going on.
@@centuryrox I am extremely ferocious! Wow, very crazy I tell you, I'm basically a god you know
@XΣΠΩ Π7
@Kingy
You both okay?
@XΣΠΩ Π7 💀😭
We've seen the event unfold so quickly in movies, but the reality just hit of how terrifying and excruciatingly painful it must've been every second that death was looming. This is truly chilling.
The fact that this happened DEAD in the middle of the ocean, hours away from any land- not to mention it was so dark out you could bearly see anything. Imagine how cold it would be- not even being in the water but like literally just the air, I mean it's cold enough for an iceberg. This is an informative video thank you
I can't imagine how that would be. The air temp was already frigid. You've probably already been outside long enough to be chilled to the bone. And then you finally realize the next thing that's going to happen to you is you'll be plunging into even colder water, that's over 2 miles deep, completely in the dark, with no help coming, and just waiting to die, however long that may take. Also, knowing there's only two ways you're going to die: freezing to death, or drowning.
Absolutely horrible.
@@centuryrox I think more people froze than drowned (still sad to think about).
@@Marvelfanatic3658 Very sad. Which is worse, freezing or drowning? I would think drowning would be faster and less suffering involved. Either way is horrible. And either way, you have that long period of fear, knowing what's eventually going to happen.
@@centuryrox drowning is worse. At one point, the freezing will stop hurting, and your breathing will just become slower until you lose consciousness.
hours??? Try days away from land.
*I CAN'T BELIEVE THE GUY THAT FILMED THIS DIDN'T BOTHER HELPING.*
Ik what a spaz
ikr like so rude
Julian Mcguigan you just ruined the joke get out of here
Ike Greger actually u did
He could have landed that seaplane rescued everyone, or just towed the ship home.
It really hurts to hear that not all the boats were filled up and a few of them could have still held at least 15-20 more passengers. I know it must have been hectic and terrifying but it's such a shame to hear how easy it could have been to just save a few more lives.
They were more concerned with saving the wealthy than anyone else. There’s even stories from survivors that rich ppl were actually bribing the officers for a spot on the boat smfh. Like wtf man
That's something that got to me also. There was apparently even a lifeboat that the officers lowered with just 25 people in it when it was designed and large enough to fit at least 60 people. As the person above stated, it came down to wealth and class. If you were poor, they didnt care about you.
@@isaac-p6126 there was a whole deck below for the poor and they werent allowed to enter
first class deck or second class to be able to get on a lifeboat they were guarded to stop them from gettin up look up "the Addergoole fourteen" they were on the ship they were immigrants because they were poor and trying to go to america for a better life so fact check yourself before you wreck yourself
@@alexf9381 I think that was lifeboat 6, could hold like 65 people and held 25 to 29 (forgot the real number for a moment)
@@Murilovisky007 back in those days the lifeboats were meant to be used as ferrys cause on the busy Atlantic route they thought there would be a ship in range to rescue the passengers of the sinking vessel. The reason they changed it to have enough lifeboats for everybody was an idea that was created because of this tragedy because they had realized that there may not always be a ship close enough to save the passengers. This is what started the shift from lifeboats from being ferrys to their modern-day counterparts of being fully equipped survival rafts
As a kid I used to be confused by the fact that among the survivors there was so much conflicting information about the sinking. Whether or not it broke in half, why hardly anyone went back to help, what songs the band played etc. With this I now have a clearer understanding of why. It was pitch black out and my God the screams of the poor people in the water and still on board… I doubt anyone in a lifeboat was able to think clearly.
the problem was that there was no proper protocol, the ship was believed to be unsinkable, and the company owning RMS Titanic booked more people yet not enough lifeboats for them all
"What song the band played"
Why should that matter 😆 🤣
After doing research, it concludes the song they were playing was SIX NINE GOOBA.
I think it did break into 2 pieces. That last part where it tipped up would've made that inevitable. Ppl n the lifeboats who had sense should've paddles as far away as quickly as possible to avoid being sucked underwater with the ship 😳
@@User_92020it’s extremely important. It’s one of the most important events in history, and the conflicting stories people give allow us to see the amount of confusion and lack of attention being paid due to the chaos
The musicians that played right until the final moments of the sinking are often praised for their unimaginable courage, but I wonder how many people have thought about the physical suffering they endured to keep playing in those freezing temperatures. Their fingers must have been frozen through to the bone, the pain dreadful, especially for the stringed instruments players, but they never gave in to keep others calm. God bless them.
what frosts? it was 0 degrees outside.
You again???, You said this in a different Titanic video.
Well hello there 😍😍
@@Garcia-md3qn hey
Those musicians did their job. Nothing more
I felt a great disturbance, as if hundreds of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.
with oysters, even
10/10 star wars quote
You'd better get on with your exercises.
Or perhaps its just a little headache!
TheCraigy111 Ice Berg: Execute order 66
Water: It will be done, my lord
I think the most heart-breaking parts were the messages from other ships. At least a dozen ships, all desperately telling the Titanic to hang on, we're coming as fast as we can! Then to realize most of them are hundreds of miles -- and many hours -- away. You can almost hear them saying "Why can't I make this thing go any faster?!" :(
true
And although it arrived too late for most, at least the Carpathia arrived only around an hour after the Titanic went under.
Frankfurt said what is the matter so they shut him up
and then the Californian which was closest ignored the distress calls for whatever reason
@@typo1345californian's wireless operator wasnt active (probably because titanic told them to shut up)
I can't imagine how frustrating it must have been to be one of the wireless operators that night.
Titanic: "CQD. SOS. Struck iceberg. Position 41 46' N, 50 14'W. Come at once. Require immediate assistance."
Everyone: "What is the matter? What's your position? Do you require assistance?"
Titanic: "..."
Ironically it was the wireless operators that failed to deliver an iceberg warning from other ships prior to the collision. It was left undelivered in the wireless room until the Titanic's Second Officer saw it well after the collision.
@@cto1ggCalifornia was nearest ship to Titanic about 18miles away they warned Titanic a about the ice field ahead and titanic basically replied them with shut the fk up California was anchored 18 miles away because of the ice ahead and it was a moonless night and wireless operator of California shut down the system and went sleep after his shift and then titanic asked them for help but no one was there to receive the message if California received that message and came for rescue a lot of lifes could've been saved carpethia was 58 miles away at that time
@cto1gg that's because of how wireless operators acted.
In those days they were doing thousands of civilian messages a hour and were paid.
The wireless operators were overwhelmed.
It's part of why Californians message was so harshly recieved by Philips.
If they weren't paid to send those messages or they were limited, the warnings would've been sent to the bridge.
Sterile cockpit issues here
Can you imagine being loaded on to a boat with your mother and seeing your father stay behind . Heartbreaking.. so sad to read how many boats left without all seats being taken .
When I was little, we went to the Titanic museum in Pigeon Forge. The ‘ captain ‘ gave a big speech before everyone went in about fathers having to leave their sons and daughter and I started crying because I thought that it was real and I didn’t want my dad to leave us. Now, I can’t imagine being the age that I was back then and having to live through that for real.
@@kayleighwilson1551 wow I wonder if that museum is still around would love to visit but the thought of that truly brings tears to your eyes .. men should have been given a chance to get into the boats especially when there was so many seats not being filled .
@@Nene-vh7rq The museum is definitely still there, I think. There was an accident of some kind and they had to rebuild it, from my understanding, but it’s there. The actual sinking definitely could have been handled better than it was. When I was younger, and even just starting to dig into it, I thought ‘ oh, yeah, they tried everything that they could and it just didn’t work. They couldn’t do anything else. ‘ I was both confused and outraged when I found out that more people would have had a chance of surviving with all the seats that were in the lifeboats; the ratio of seats taken vs. seats available especially gets on my nerves. According to somebody else who commented here, Thomas Andrews even tried to advocate for the lifeboats to be put to better use and was shot down. It’s really sad to think about and makes me angry. It ultimately came down to whether you had money or you didn’t. These people were really out here just putting prices on lives.
@@Nene-vh7rq there is also a great one in Branson Missouri. You get a ticket of a passenger at the beginning, and in the end, you get to see if “you” lived or died
@@kayleighwilson1551 “putting prices on lives” I couldn’t have said it any better you’re definitely right and thank you for the information regarding the museum.
I watched the whole thing. I can't believe I watched the whole thing. Its 5.44am. I read someone's comment that they watched the whole video and I thought to myself that it would ridiculous to watch the ship sink for nearly 3 hours. Yet hear i am. Absolutely fantastic work by the producers of this video. I'm thoroughly amazed
Agreed. You are not alone, my friend.
Same here. Here I am at 5:21 am having just finished watching the whole video.
It's the quality of the production, it was made with love and not King Neptune's Golden Spatula. The anticipation of the sinking also helps.
I know what you mean, It’s currently 2:31am and I can’t believe I’ve almost finished this entire video
Not sure quite what time it is. After 2 am for me. I did cheat a bit and watch this on 1.25 speed, though...
Now THIS is a horror film. I cannot even begin to fathom the sheer terror and anguish these people must have felt… Absolutely chilling. Really excellently made.
Right?? My heart was pumping those last 15 minutes or so. I watch horror movies all the time, THIS disturbed me far more than any movie.
Nice pun 😉
@@watchuwant1560 because we know that this actually happened and people suffered in one of the worst ways imaginable
I had a dream that I was in the Titanic when it sank.
A good book to read is "The Shadows of the Titanic" where survivors give accounts of the sinking and their lives after. It's chilling to read when they describe what it was like that night. For Example Jack Thayer who is mentioned in the video, his story is in the book.
God, i love how you really can only JUST make out the iceberg, and only because you know to look for it. Really brings home just how impossibly hard it was to see. This whole thing is probably one of the scariest things I’ve ever experienced.
To me the scariest part is how the entire back of the ship was able to be lifted up into the air like nothing just by the sheer force of the water flooding and sinking the front. The ship was huge and heavy. Chilling.
That, was the scariest part?
It's also a testament to the structural integrity of the ship that with these massive forces acting on it, it didn't break apart until ~2.17AM.
It was due to the double bottom plating of the ship which was quite strong. It also was the reason why the sinking forward part was able to quickly pull down the separated aft as the double bottom was still attached. I've seen some studies which showed that the aft could have been afloat for around 20-30 more minutes if the aft separated totally. So it was basically gain some lose some.
@@kerotomas1 Yeah I've seen the 🍌 Peel theory on the Cameron Doc. Interesting studies you refer to though.
@@Firemarioflower Not before it broke in two it didn't, the max angle was around 23°. If you mean after that then sorry, I picked you up wrong.
that one woman is screaming is really going for it in the audio files
As I can't afford to buy sound files, I had to make due with free-use copyright free ones for the screams. I apologize profusely to the disruption your poor ears suffered for listening to the same sound file for 5 minutes while it was on a loop.
Legend says she's still screaming till today, and anyone that sail in the area can hear this looping scream.
@@DVincentW i doubt u even watched the whole 2 1/2 hours of the video
@@TitanicAnimations I understand the use of screams..lol..but if you would have left the captions up a little longer it would have been better..all in all I enjoyed your work, thanks for the vidio and best of luck.
She will scream for Googleplex Googleplex googleplex to the power of googleplex years.
“We’ve dressed up in our best, and are prepared to go down like gentlemen” Ben Guggenheim a true OG
@Railfan 765 men were men in those days, so probably not.
@Railfan 765 It's a nice thought. But there were alot of noble men back then. It's just as likely that he didn't have much fear in his death and whatever happens, happens.
But we would like a brandy!
The second half of the quote is what really gets me. Tell my wife I did my best, and no woman or child drowned because I was a coward. I don't think he was joking. I think he was a gallant gentleman who'd made his peace.
"Tell Peggy to buy some Picassos."
respect to Thomas Andrew. the designer was on his ship’s maiden voyage, and now rests in the ocean with her. what a mad lad
The Captain, Mr. Andrews, and probably even Murdoch could have all gotten on the lifeboats if they had wanted to. They all chose to stay behind and try and save as many as they could. They could have all pointed ther fingers at eachother, but they didn't. They did their duty till the very end.
They died
@@thedarkknight4895Bruh has prolly been fish doo doo for years now lmao
What truly sends shivers up my spine about this whole incident, something you captured beautifully in this animation, are the sounds of the sinking/collapsing ship.
Not only is it pitch black outside, the air is below freezing & everyone is in disarray. It's already a living nightmare.
At the forefront of it all, a colossal structure of steel and iron is descending into the ocean; bellowing out eerily thunderous sounds. Like a giant creature slowly dying. Absolutely chilling.
incredibly well said
And the fact that many people were screaming but nobody from the distance can hear, like lost voices in pain:(
Masterfully and very poetically written
The Titanic and it's 1500 victims died a slow agonizing and horrible death some of the passengers dying in ways that we don't know about or don't want to know about
Just imagine being one of those trapped inside as the water forces the air out of the compartments during the first several hundred feet of The descent or some of the unlucky few that thought they had escaped only to be sucked back into the ship and dragged down with it
I am watching this by myself. The entire 2 hrs 45 minutes of it. It ended at 1 am. I got so scared when the ship started tearing apart with thundering sounds going down. Absolutely, positively terrifying.
Well said. Every sound it made I jumped. It frightened me so. 😥😥😥
The part I find most eerie is how absolutely still the water is. Instinctively I expect bad weather for a ship to sink, so the calm ocean makes me feel as though the Titanic shouldn't be able sink.
Sadly that calm water is partly why she hit the berg. Seas that calm and no moon to light the sky is a dangerous combo
@Иван Лазаров Please don't bring religion into this
@@stixel “Not even God himself can sink this ship.”
@@RevPerdueJosh Except that nobody said that.
The communication between the radio operators tears me up... you can notice the level of panic increasing on the titanic in the final 45 minutes. The other ships responding that they are rushing to help not knowing they won't even be there quick enough to see the ship go down.
They knew they weren’t gonna make it in time but they still tried
He finally loses his cool at 2:16:15 when SS Frankfurt signals "what is the matter?"
@@CountArtha is that when all caps starts being used?
Imagine paying $250k to see the remnants of this ship only to face a demise similar to the victims over 100 years ago…
Skill issue
@@AgitatedTacoyou're not even funny
@@AgitatedTaconot Funny… 🤦♀️
@@AgitatedTacoyou need to shut up
@@AgitatedTaco
Kinda funny. They were a bunch of rich people who tried to skirt past safety guidelines thinking they were bigger than the laws of physics. They got their comuppance.
As a mother, I cannot imagine being among the lower class and knowing your babies have no chance of surviving, so all you can do is hold them tight during the slow await of death. How horrible.
This thought made my stomach churn. Knowing all of this and still having to somehow keep it together for them. Unbearable to think about.
titanic is my mom's favorite movie and every time we watch it together she mentions this. I have an older sister too, and she always tells us that she can't even imagine how the mothers were feeling because she can't process having to wait for death helplessly while my sister and I wait with her not understanding what's going on. it's truly awful to think about
@@aniimako but isn't it incredibly beautiful too, to know how much your mother loves you and your sister?
@@stellarstarvibe absolutely, it's a very weird emotional rollercoaster though
Ditto. I made the mistake of watching Titanic shortly after giving birth....I was a blathering mess for days seeing the frozen baby.
The sound of the telegraph messages going back and forth makes this video even more chilling.
Especially when Titanic was low on power, and Phillips was desperately trying to send messages, yet no one could hear.
CQD MGY. CQD THIS IS... imagine the desperation .... This telegraph message makes it more chilling than the original film...
I know, it’s so sad!
I agree... just watched this for the first time. I think the Morse Code brought it home for me.
I'm 30 years old and ever since learning about Titanic all the way back in 3rd Grade, it's just one of those things that has never left me. It has had a stranglehold on my imagination. The grandest ship in the world, a true marvel of human engineering without all of the fancy technology we have today, gone, along with all of those poor people.
Yeah, think alot of other people felt the same way. I know I did. The movie in 1997 was a huge hit.
Tbh I would love to see it and explore it. What breaks my heart is all the pain and suffering those people went through. Idk if I could've bared to see that.
On its maiden transatlantic voyage, don't forget 😳
@@nica711 yeah it's hilariously sad and tragic
Same here I was in the third grade when it came out I couldn’t watch it until my parents knew when the adult scenes was coming up
It's unimaginable thinking how terrifying this must have been... especially in the pitch black of night.
Apparently it took just 4 hours after the titanic sank that help arrived. That's amazing but those 4 hours I bet must have felt like an eternity.
And to arrive in the approximate location where the help signal was sent must have been crazy to find just rafts and no ship.
@@Firemarioflower I agree the inaction was definitely reprehensible, but a brief glance at Wikipedia brought me these findings: No formal charges were ever brought against Lord and his crew for their inaction. Lord disputed the findings and would spend the rest of his life trying to clear his name. In 1992, the UK Government's Marine Accident Investigation Branch re-examined the case and while condemning the inaction of the Californian and Captain Lord, also concluded that due to the limited time available, "the effect of Californian taking proper action would have been no more than to place on her the task actually carried out by Carpathia, that is the rescue of those who escaped ... [no] reasonably probable action by Captain Lord could have led to a different outcome of the tragedy".
What I love about this video is it made it human. It sounds weird but most people think of the Titanic as the Jack and Rose love story and forget about the real horror that was experienced that night. I find the pitch dark water so frightening and it’s a video! I can’t imagine, I don’t want to imagine, how they must’ve been feeling. What they must’ve felt.
Yeah the whole thing is really sad and how many more could have been placed on the life boats and was even let on the boats because of gender or class status. Really unnecessary loss made worse by actions of a few.
Exactly! As a person who has a horrible phobia of the ocean i can’t imagine what a terrifying and insanely creepy and anxiety filling situation that was. Just waiting for your death that is so close, in the middle of the ocean at night in super cold freezing weather. I wish this never happened but it did…i would have died from a heart attack tbh before i would even drown but isn’t it so horrible dying in the ocean alone with many creepy sea animals etc. that‘s a horrible death.
I think the movie captured the chaos quite well
Movie was perfect, what you mean?
@@tanner201x8 😐
man people died in so many messed up ways....drowning, freezing, being squashed, hitting things after falling etc. just so sad, but this animation in the best ive ever seen. good stuff
and the people being sucked into the funnel 1 hole, once it collapsed. Imagine being sucked down there. Where does it end? in the boilers. And with a few tons of water each second falling down on you. That is one of the worst death.
Like literally anything could kill them at that point, being crushed by the ship(after it split) or the funnels, the ship pulling you down after it sinks completely, falling in between the bow and stern sections after it splits, getting electrocuted.
Like these deaths were probably the ones someone would think would be unlikely back then
@@davidtuchscherer6276 atleast they didnt drown but instantly died with no pain.
@@impulse5674 oh God, I forgot about electrocution being a potential cause of death. When luxury becomes fatality!
The morse code is honestly so sad. 2:32:28 "Haven't heard MGY (Titanic) for about half an hour. And then the next code is just MGY desperately sending out codes to no one basically :'(
Dean Stephens :( i know
I thought almost 3 hours of staring at a ship would be boring.... It wasn't.
The messages and audio, the sounds of people, music and the boat and even watching the liner slowly sink; I was transfixed.
Brilliant!
Despite this being incredibly tragic I always remember the story of a chef who got black out drunk when he found out the ship was sinking thinking he was going to die, but ended up surviving because of the huge amount of alcohol in his system
goals
he was the baker ! first name charles idr last name
I definitely wouldn't go down without being 3 sheets to the wind.
Since when did alcohol make you survive being in freezing cold water?
@@lilyisawesomex3 Charles Joughin
Titanic: Request immediate help, we are sinking!
California: seen
I also see you
Messed up lol
Ss californian. sksksksk!!!
Californian be like: ✓✓
Lmao left titanic on open ▶️
One of the scariest things for me was how dark it was. The titanic sunk in about 3km deep water. That would be truly terrifying for some of the people still on the ship as it went down. It can take anywhere from 5mins to 30mins to drown in salt water. So as that ship is sinking into the dark water you would be sucked down with it. Imagining looking up to see the surface getting darker and darker until you can no longer see the surface and some of the less fortunate who actually survived longer until the ship got really deep would’ve been crushed because of water pressure which also very scary. It disturbed me more just to know if the fear these people felt knowing they were going to die, and the way most of them died is just cruel.
Thanks for the nightmares.
yeah since the suction would bring them down this is definitely what happened to some and it sucks. I dunno if this or falling off the ship when at full tilt
Yeah, once the power failed the video got dark. I realized in some of the other animations they leave the lights on until it goes under so you can see what's happening. But this is how it would have been. Total darkness save the light from the stars. Scary shit.
5 to 30 minutes in salt water?
How long for fresh water?
The real scary part is the people that were stuck in air pockets inside the stern section of the ship knowing they were far under water until those pockets finally imploded.
Videos such as this fill me with a sense of dread that is near unmatched. The initial calmness of the situation, the loss of hope in the distress calls, the other ships making a futile effort to come to her aid and then the final, inevitable collapse. Seeing messages from other ships stating "We will be there in 4 hours." when we all know now that the Titantic will disappear in nearly half that time, the sense of hopelessness that hits me is so unique and tragic.
Also absolute stillness of the Atlantic that night, the stars and cold temps…yes, I know what you mean. Dreadful
That was just the closest ship to respond that said it would take 4 hours. All of the other ships that responded said it would take longer for them to arrive.
@daniellelacy7158 Yeah, that makes it even worse. I said four hours because it was the closest. The closest ship (besides possibly the Californian) being 4 hours away while the rest were much further behind, it hits in such a strange way for me.
The soul onboard officially recognised as the last person to leave the ship was Charles Joughin.
Joughin was the Master Baker of the Titanic who had a strong team of 13 Bakers working under him.
As the tragedy began to unfold, Charles was nominated to be one of the Stewards of lifeboat ten, assisting both women and children aboard. He also initiated the idea of distributing four loaves of bread to each of the survivors within the lifeboats.
Joughin, when given the duty of boarding lifeboat ten when it was ready to launch, quickly proceeded to go back down to his bunker to retrieve a few personal effects including a dram of alcohol.
Upon his return to the main deck and to his abject horror, the lifeboat was launched after another Steward had been found to take over the responsibility.
Charles Joughin would later recall how he hung to the stern of the ship as she went down below the water - "Riding her like an elevator".
He infact survived for over two hours paddling away in the icy cold water with little to no ill-effects. The alcohol he imbeded was later discovered to be the main reason his body adapted so well and he didn't freeze to death.
The fact that Charles Joughin was the last man to stand on the stern of the Titanic makes him the last man to leave her.
Incredible story of survival and altruism.
Chris (UK).
I agree he was one of the last to leave the ship. But I personally disagree with his accounts of the stern during the breakup. Reason why? He told an Officer on board Carpathia that he jumped from A-deck as soon as he left the pantry after hearing the big crashing sound.
Add onto the well documented fact that he was drunk that night and he's an unreliable witness at best.
Not saying that what he claims happened didn't happen, just saying that I don't subscribe to his story based on his unreliability.
Cheers,
Phillip
@@TitanicAnimations I suppose we'll never truly know how certain events played out aboard the doomed liner during those wee small hours on that April morning.
I will say though, the very fact that Joughin ordered that bread should be distributed and the fact that he threw deckchairs and other loose objects into the water in order to give people a fighting chance says a lot about his character and personality.
These acts alone tell me he was an honourable man and an utterly selfless one at that.
Now of course, the latter minutes of the ships life and his last moments upon her could have been embellished in order to juice up his remarkable story of survival, like I said, we'll never know but what is certain is that Charles Joughin made an incredible contribution in assisting his fellow passengers.
I have to say aswell Phillip, this is an amazing simulation you've created here and I thank you for it.
Because the night/morning of the 14th and 15th April was moonless as described by the passengers aboard and of course the sea being like a millpond, it must have been difficult to ascertain on the horizon where the sky ended and the ocean began. This dilemma was observed by a distant ship who noticed a faint but bright light in the far distance (which was infact one of Titanic's rockets). The Officer consulted with his Captain and they both agreed that it must be a bright star in the sky.
The Titanic still captivates the public imagination as much today as it did back then because of her charisma and sheer size. She represented all that was glamorous, romantic, dramatic and a salvation to many who relied upon her to journey them to a better life....
On this count, she didn't fulfil those dreams, hopes and aspirations of many aboard, but foundered as she had lived - with grace and elegance. It was only during the last few minutes that she creaked and moaned as she broke apart but otherwise, remained poised until the end....
As Eva Hart observed, even as her lifeboat was by now a couple of miles away, the Titanic dazzled with beauty and authority.
This is a tragedy that will talked about in 1,000 years time.
Lest We Forget all who lost their lives on April, 15th 1912 aboard the RMS Titanic.
Many thanks again Phillip 🖒
Chris (UK).
The alcohol part is a myth. The idea that he survived because alcohol warmed him up literally is the OPPOSITE of what alcohol does to your body.
Drinking moves heat away from your core and towards the surface of your skin, by relaxing your blood vessels (it's a sedative drug, that's what it does). This makes you FEEL warmer, but it's actually super fucking dangerous if you're in a cold climate because:
A: Your core now has less heat, meaning it can't go as long without shutting down
B: You lose surface heat very very quickly, meaning all that heat you just transferred is GONE in a few minutes.
Surface temp and core temp are very different things, and a lot of people don't realise this. For example, a fan ONLY cools your surface temp down (fun fact: it also relies on the existence of sweat to do this. Literally what a fan's doing is cooling down your sweat) and does nothing for your core temp. If you're overheating, you will still be overheating with a fan. You just won't FEEL like you are.
A lot of people tend to make this mistake, because the way alcohol works does trick you into thinking you're warmer than you are; and I wouldn't be surprised if he thought that was the reason he lived, but honestly, he survived in SPITE of that if he was drinking at all. Not because of it.
Pro tip: DO NOT try to survive in a cold climate by drinking. You will actually just die faster.
@@LordofFullmetal I'd also like to point out Joughin is often quoted to be treading water for multiple minutes, sometimes up to an hour before he was picked up by a lifeboat. Thats also another physical impossibility. In 28F water you will freeze to death in less than 15-20 mins.
The inconsistencies in his story plus the fact he readily admits he was drunk has always led me to doubt his point of view to a certain extent.
@@TitanicAnimations Four minutes. It takes four minutes to die of hypothermia in water that cold.
I don't know how drunk he was, but I imagine that he was drunk enough that it felt like hours but was probably only a couple of minutes.
The part for me that stood out amongst the chaos even in the movie was how the quartet or band played until the very last moment they could. Like a soundtrack to a slow but inevitable death. They’re the brave souls in my opinion of this Beautiful Dark Tragedy.
There’s a movie of this?
@@Ryanbrio yes it’s called “the titanic”
@@mz.belcher4985 omg I must be old I watched it as a kid all the time
@@mz.belcher4985 it’s just titled “Titanic”.
There’s no “the”.
@@GRA2itous same difference..
Coming from someone who watched the entire video; To say that the amount of work and research that went into this is highly respectable is a gross understatement. Incredible job!
Having sailed for 40 years and 20 years in command I am still absolutely absorbed with this tragic moment all our prayers for those soul’s family
I went kayaking a few years ago, late winter early spring. My brother and I measured the temperature of the water and realized it was about 2 degrees warmer than the water in the Northern Atlantic the morning titanic sank. So one at a time we jumped in from our kayaks and I’m not exaggerating when I say this, from the time I hit the water I came straight up and I needed help getting back in our kayak because my extremities were already numb. I was in the water for approximately 15-20 seconds. What a bad way to go.
The comment of "1000 knives stabbing you all over your body" in the '97 film were actually taken from a survivor of the disaster. Water that cold is no joke.
@@TitanicAnimations - If I'm not mistaken, that was Lightoller's description, wasn't it?
@@turricanedtc3764 it was lightoller
You can swim for a few minutes if youre used to swimming in ice cold water. Its a winter hobby here in Finland. Real good ice swimmers can swim for much longer than that
I had the same experience jumping in the sea from some rocks into about 2 metre deep water. The sea was probably about 14 degrees (August Cornwall sea temp) and the second I hit the water my body went into shock and I genuinely couldn’t move. The water felt way colder than I was expecting and my dad had to get half way in to pull me out. Would have surely drowned if I was dumb enough to try that by myself. Cold water is not to be fucked with no matter how strong of a swimmer you think you are
--- Time Stamps for Songs ---
42:00 Ragtime Dance - Scott Joplin
46:00 Queen of Sheba - Handel
49:10 Merry widow - Franz Lehar
52:00 Frankie & Johnny - N/A
55:20 The Cascades - Joplin
58:23 Alexander's Ragtime Band - Joplin
1:01:10 On the Beautiful Blue Danube - Arthur Fiedler
1:11:15 Gluhwurmchen Idyll - Paul Linke
1:13:52 Maple Leaf Rag - Joplin
1:17:40 Valse Septembre - Felix Godin
1:22:16 Pleasant Moments - Joplin
--- 1:25:00 1 AM ---
1:35:00 Waiting For The Robert E Lee - L wolfe Gilbert. (My Favourite)
1:37:48 Turkey Trot - White Star Line SongBook.
1:41:29 The Merry Widow - Franz Lehar
1:43:15 Frankie & Johnny - N/A
1:45:26 Ave Maria - Schubert
1:48:10 Oh You Beautiful Doll - Brown & Ayer
1:51:21 Emperor Waltz - Strauss
2:03:00 Maple Leaf Rag - Joplin
2:06:38 Londonderry Air - N/A
2:09:05 Elite Syncopations - Joplin
2:12:50 Let Me Call You Sweetheart - Friedman & Wilson.
2:14:50 Pleasant Moments - Joplin
2:18:13 The Stars Spangled Banner - F. Scott Key
2:20:03 The Barcarolle - Offenbach
2:23:00 Madama Butterfly - Pucinni
--- 2:25:00 2 AM ---
2:29:00 Alexander's Ragtime Band - Berlin
2:37:14 Nearer My God to Thee - Adams
(Some songs may be delayed by a few seconds.)
Thanks.
TA needs to pin this comment.
tfw when Songe d’Automn didn’t play in this video.
Waiting For The Robert E Lee - L wolfe Gilbert, is also my favorite! I keep rewinding to listen to it since I love the version that is played in this well-made animation. I can not seem to find the version on RUclips or anywhere, except for different versions which I do not like ;( If there is an idea of this version's whereabouts please inform me!
my god man I remember reading a reading rainbow book saying how in the future we may be able to see photorealistic examples of the titanic, but this really does take the cake, with morse code messages, animations, and even time stamps to break down everything. just wow.
do you remember the name of the book? I read a reading rainbow book about the future once too, it said something about cars that could shrink to fit into tight parking spaces
Can't Wait !!
its insane how this guy is still hearting comments and replying to them after all these years of hard work
You guys pay my medical bills by watching. So it’s the least I can do :)
@@TitanicAnimations 🐐
@@TitanicAnimations For a video this good you deserve to have it pay for a mansion!
You have to admire the bravery and commitment of the engineers and stokers deep inside the sinking ship. They kept the electricity working until the very end, just two minutes before she went down. With the lights and the ability to control the list to some extend the crew had at least an opportunity to save some of those lifes. As far as I know, no engineer survived the sinking.
Saddest part it, they probably weren't truly informed of the severity.
@@InTenMinutes1 I bet andrews told bell what happened. And bell would know being chief engineer once the 5th compartment was gashed they were gonna sink regardless
Oddly enough, a good portion of the stokers survived. Once the boilers were shut down, Bell released most of them to go help with loading the boats. The guy you see screaming to shut the boiler doors in Cameron's Titanic survived the sinking.
Can’t imagine being in a boat 1/3 full and watching this from a few hundred yards away.
😭😣
All told the 20 lifeboats should have taken 53% of the people on board instead of the pathetic 35% that were actually rescued
@@jamesfracasse8178 what’s pathetic is the ship only had enough lifeboats for 53% of the people onboard.
@@Grayqboufan Why? Even in this case there was not much sence to have more.
@@superdingo9741 not much sense to have more? So you’re ok with people designing ships without the capacity to keep everyone on board safe in the event of disaster? You’re saying it’s ok for 47% of the people onboard to be left to die by design?
It is bone chilling how scary the last 15-20 minutes of the sinking are, and how fast she went down.
"We've dressed up in our best, and are prepared to go down like gentlemen. I am willing to remain and play the man's game if there are not enough boats for more than the women and children. Tell my wife I played the game straight out and to the end. No woman shall be left aboard this ship because Ben Guggenheim is a coward."
What a Boss.
That is class!
Imagine doing that in todays age where we have to ask "What is a woman?", alot of people would instantly switch their identy hahaha
@@danielcarlsen8975 LOL I FIND THE "SWITCH IDENTITY" FUNNY HAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA
@@danielcarlsen8975 hilarious.
guys guys
the
The joke here is that
the joke is
that
TRANSGENDER LMFMAF0OAOFOAOFOAOFODOASF
I'm an animator and can I just say how much of a good job you've done on this? I'm honestly stunned at the accuracy, dedication and detail.
I've been obsessed with the Titanic since I was a child and you've done such a service to the memory of the ship, crew and passengers who perished.
I don’t know why I keep rooting for the titanic, I know how it ends.
A sad reality..
So impressing! My grandfather's uncle went down with the Titanic, 3rd class passenger from Sweden. This has made me really fascinated of everything about it. It's crazy that so many more people could have been saved if they used the boats properly... Thank you for an incredible simulation!
May I ask what his name was? Perhaps if more people knew his name, he won't be forgotten.
@@Shadywolf09 yes I’d love to know his name too
@@Shadywolf09 His name was Karl Johan Salander, thank you
@@annasalander4316 Oh, I see him now.
Born July 25, 1887 in Eldsberga, Halland, Sweden.
8 siblings.
He was a gardening student in England and Germany. Travelled as a third passenger of the Titanic with intent to join his brother, Gustaf, in Minnesota. His ticket number was 7266.
@@Shadywolf09 thank you so much! I don’t know much about it, but I really want to know more. Everything about it just makes me shiver - what a destiny… I can’t believe being there and experiencing that
It kind of amazes me how long it took them to start lowering lifeboats. It’s also a shame that most went out not at full capacity. On todays cruise ships, you’d be looking at probably a 45 minute wait time max. That is if there wasn’t mass panic. I imagine this is the major reason we didn’t see more survivors.
They started trying to get people onto lifeboats within 30 minutes of striking the iceberg. They left at low capacity simply because people did not want to get on. Loading at full capacity would not have saved more lives because of how long it took to lower. Not all the lifeboats even left the ship before she sank.
By all accounts, there wasn't a mass panic until close to the very end. Because the ship sank so gradually, many people didn't even realize it was going down at all, or were under the impression that another ship would easily come by and pick them up. They lowered the lifeboats because people were simply refusing to board them at first.
@@Firemarioflower So then not all boats left the ship, because they couldn't get the collapsibles off in time.
@@hutch1197crazy…I guess people really believed the titanic was unsinkable 😢
Even if you made it to a lifeboat, at that point you still didn't know if you were going to survive. In the middle of the cold, dark ocean with nobody nearby for hours. And the sheer luck that the waters were calm. The Atlantic has never been known for its calm demeanor.
The calmness of the water was one of the contributing factors in the accident. Calm waters kept the ocean waves from breaking at the base of the iceberg, which would have alerted the lookout crew to the presence of the iceberg much sooner.
On the lifeboat you knew you were most likely going to survive. It happened all so fast, alot of people were not even considering that they were going to die. Even the ones in the water didn't expect to float there for so long without help that they freeze to death.
@@thecensoredmuscle563 it’s one of those out of the frying pan and into the fire. You’re dead square in the middle of the ocean, I doubt anyone felt safe in the lifeboats
It's amazing that it doesn't look so bad the first two hours. Most passengers probably believed the ship would stay afloat long enough for help to arrive. It's not until the upper part of the bow plunges it's clear the ship is going to sink soon and time is running out.
Several passengers, once aboard Carpathia, said they were told the ship would be fine for at least 12 hours if not longer before other rescue ships came. It wasn't until they were on-board, saw no Titanic anywhere, and the debris floating nearby that it began to slowly dawn on them that she'd gone down.
@@TitanicAnimations Maybe it was because there was a sinking that happened before the Titanic, which lasted for 12 hours to sink, so they though that was what going to happen to the Titanic.
@@kostan55 tragic event. Baffles minds today.
When you read some people refuse to board lifeboats you can confirm this.
That also fascinates me. Also the calmness in the first minutes after the collision. Nobody was really alarmed or worried.
I think seeing the underwater pictures of the Titanic as a kid definitely contributed to my fear of the ocean that I still have as an adult
Right!
Same.
This also ruined cruise ships for me right off the bat
@@Nikkiluv112 same
I'm terrified of oceans. I can't even look at them on maps!
Eva Hart came to my school and delivered a lecture to us sixth formers in '82.
It was fascinating. I met her afterwards and thanked her for such a moving story.
One thing I will never forget from her lecfure; she was asked repeatedly to speak about Titanic over the years, and she always resisted. Finally, she gave in, to the producers of "A Night To Remember", and agreed to act as an advisor - with the caveat that (and I quote her words from that lecture back in 82) - that they didn't try to "replicate the noises the people made as they drowned"
Rest in Peace Eva x
How sad😢may she rest in peace
@@xceli559May she be reborn in a kinder life
Can’t even imagine how terrifying it must be for everyone there. My heart hurts imaging myself in their shoes. Rest In Peace to the lives lost that morning
You'll be alright. Your heart will go on.
Agreed...I can't even imagine
@@TheMDistortion wow I just... wow
Not complete without the dude who falls on the propellers and does a mega back flip into the Atlantic.
guitaro5000 Lmao 😂
Is it bad that that was my favorite part of the movie?
M0ns7er Z3r0 not at all.
The noise made when he hits the screw is simply sickening
Some say he's still falling...
When the band starts playing that cheerful music to keep people calm @42:10 it's about the saddest thing I've ever heard...
Its crazy to think about how slowly it sank, and how fast it was at the end
That always gets me too. I wonder if they thought they had more time based on the rate it was sinking. In those last minutes things accelerated so much it must have been shocking. I can’t even imagine the horror. It’s disappointing to see so many people cracking jokes in the comments.
@@uribheidi well the humor is to help cope with the tragedy and horror this depressing situation.
@@uribheidi It lulled the majority of passengers into a false sense of security. The thinking was that even if Titanic were in trouble, she would clearly stay afloat long enough for help to arrive. But that last 20 minutes was astounding. It went from slight panic to unreal terror.
The boat deck had a lot of areas for water to down flood. Funnel bases. Ladders down to the boiler rooms and engine room. Deck hatches. Grand staircase. Into public rooms from the boat deck. Once the forecastle went under her fate was sealed. At that point several tons of seawater started coming in from above all at once.
@@thesoftparade1990 Couldn't have said it any better. At that point I cannot begin to think of the panic that had to be setting in.
RIP to the 1,500 people who lost their lives 107 years ago today.
Those idiots that banned Titanic from having search lights...
@@nehorlavazapalka , who is this, now?
@@colinmontgomery5492 they are long dead
@@nehorlavazapalka , what good would a searchlight have been that night?
a 20 kW light would have illuminated that berg from 2 km, Titanic needed just slightly more than 1 km to stop, factoring crew reaction time in
it wouldn't have crashed and lights were allowed after the accident, so the British joined the civilized world... only that it cost 1500 their lives
Can't even imagine how unbelievably terrifying this would be once you accepted what was happening. A lot of people onboard never thought it was going to sink even when they were loading the lifeboats.
i think one of the most eery moments of this entire video is the 44:00 mark, where if you look at the lights in rooms right where the waterline is, you can notice how they slowly begin to disappear, and you start to notice that the ship really is sinking. of course it can probably be noticed before, but with the band playing in the background, it makes this whole section far more horrifying.
Mom: Okay only one single video and then go to bed.
Me:
Play it on .25 speed for extreme lulz
A comment from 2007.
Also I’m HMHS Britannic plz make a Britannic sinking real time remastered
anything gets likes these days
@@TitanicAnimations lmao
The desperation in those morse code messages is truly heartbreaking and eerie
They should make a movie about this. It would do good in theaters
I agree! Hopefully James Cameron will direct it as well
kyle Dove oh really??
Mirani Kawanapu oh yes it truly would be amazing if he directed it and if Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet acted in it!
@@awesommender354 sarcasm right? Lol i watched the movie when I was 5 and I balled my eyes out. Whether because I realized what had happened or if i was emulating emotions from around me... awesome movie anyways
Roberta Green yes. I was being sarcastic.
I can’t believe I watched this entire video in one sitting. I’ve never been so bored and fascinated at the same time.
Titanic: We're sinking help help help help help help help help help
Frankfurt: *What's the matter with you?*
TITANIC-CQD CQD CQD HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG LOADING WOMEN AND CHILDREN INTO THE LIFEBOATS REQUIRE IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE. FRANKFURT-WHATS THE MATTER WITH YOU? YOUR SUCH A DRAMA QUEEN. HOWS THE WEATHER? TITANIC-CALM AND CLEAR OLD MAN.
Olympic: What weather have you had
When this scene popped up, i felt bad laughing :')
The guys on that german ship did not speak english. I bet it was Quiet a shock for them when they came home and read the newspaper. "ohhh, so that happend " xD
Carpathia: do you need assistance?
Lots of respect to the stewards who knew they were doomed but continued working to keep passengers calm knowing they wouldnt receive their last paychecks. Respect to the captain, crew, and engineers who went down with the ship instead of taking life boats.
The captain is the reason they sank!
@@2012farfar Surely the Captain was being dumb. But he still respected the rule of the sea at the time. "Woman and children first" and that the captain will go down with their ship unless all passengers are evacuated safely.
@@2012farfar yes, but the Marconi operators already received an iceberg warning before they struck the iceberg, but they ignored it.
If Titanic would be in 2021, they wouldn’t be a tragedy because the ice berg melted because of climate change because of humanity :\
Why respect to the crew? It wasnt their fault and they shouldve got on the boat just like everyone else
As tragic and terrifying as this is, there’s something fascinating about it, isn’t there? All of the tragedy’s in history, there’s just something about the Titanic that captures our imagination. Over a century later and here we are.
maybe coz of the movie?
I think it’s because it was the “unsinkable” ship that it so fascinates us. It was after all, nature that took her down.
I was just thinking that, then one swipe down the comments later and you say it perfectly
Totally think the '97 movie helps! But there's a reason it's been made into so many movies, documentaries, books, etc. in the first place.
I personally think it's a combination of a few things: The size of the ship, which was huge. The loss of life, also pretty huge. Decent amount of very wealthy people were on board. And the cockiness of touting it as "unsinkable", then being proven wrong on the maiden voyage... Just a perfect storm of tragedy really, it's very sad.
(Added reason for myself: I live in Halifax, Nova Scotia where a lot of people who died in the tragedy were buried, as it's near the sinking site.
The cemetery my Great Grandma is in has quite a few Titanic victims buried in it. We also have some artifacts from the Titanic in our museum that's located not far from the cemetery.)
I think because it’s the ocean, the most known unknown in human imagination. One that’s easier for our tiny minds to imagine and fear than the greater unknown of the universe. Titanic being the most recent and biggest marine tragedy. Hence the fascination.
I think what attracts us so much about Titanic is that it has all the ingredients of a novel. It also happened at a time that was left far behind in time but photographic documents and videos came to exist. We have images of some of the real passengers, their officers and the ship itself as it left port. All this, adding the series of errors and misfortune they had, make this catastrophe something that will never leave any generation unmoved. My condolences and memories for all those who perished that tragic night. A very good recreation. Greetings
INTERIOR SCENES
7:14 - 7:30 Water entering Boiler Room 6
14:59 - 15:14 Deeply flooded Boiler Room 6
15:44 - 16:00 Water entering Orlop Deck (just below mail room)
17:14 - 17:30 Orlop Deck below mail room almost completely submerged
17:59 - 18:15 D-deck Landing (not flooding at the moment)
20:15 - 20:30 Peering into Cargo Hatch No. 1 (Water on G-deck)
20:44 - 20:59 Water entering 1st class baggage room on G-deck
26:15 - 26:30 Water now flooding F-deck (G-deck still flooding)
30:00 - 30:14 Water enters Squash Court on G-deck
35:19 - 35:59 Water nearing E-deck, F-deck almost submerged
45:19 - 46:00 Bulkhead on E-deck collapses, E-deck flooding
1:07:00 - 1:07:21 Water going down the stairs from E to F deck
1:15:00 - 1:15:30 Water flooding E-deck at Scotland Road
1:35:14 - 1:35:30 Boiler Room 5 bulkhead gives way, rapid flooding
1:39:59 - 1:40:14 Water begins to creep up Grand Staircase at E-deck
1:44:30 - 1:44:59 Boiler Room 4 is abandoned. Water one foot deep
2:09:00 - 2:09:14 Water begins flooding D-deck Reception Area
2:14:00 - 2:14:59 Reception Area and Dining Room on D-deck rapidly flood
I hope some of you find this comment useful.
TenPinTre24 1:15:00-1:15:30 you mean
@@thescpearrapemaster6204 Yeah, that's what I had originally typed but RUclips was being a brat and decided to mess stuff up. Thanks for catching that. Fixed!
Thanks!!!
@Random Stuff Hours.
@Random Stuff Yeah, about two hours. I have no life.
This animation made me realize something. The way the split actually happened, as it was more subtle than what the movie makes you believe, and it happened in near pitch black darkness, it’s no wonder there were conflicting reports back then that if the Titanic sunk whole or split in two. Really a terrifying experience that would have been. And yet, you see her hang on just enough for all her life boats deploy, even though they only saved less than half of the passengers. You don’t see that with the Lusitania, or heck, even the Costa Concordia to deploy all of its lifeboats before they sank or capsized.
If the breakup happened that way, there would be no reports of a breakup at all, it's way too subtle.
The breakup may have been more visible, but fast and in the darkness, so many would not have seen it.
although with costa they didn''t have as many deaths anyways, im not sure but i think they got help much faster then titanic did, and had 32 ldeathes out of 3 thoasand people
If the captain of the Costa Concordia had been on Titanic he'd have been one of the first to get into a lifeboat. Apparently as Concordia sunk the captain basically "did a runner" so to speak and got himself off in a lifeboat and to shore (which was nearby). There are recordings of radio chatter with the harbourmaster basically telling him to "get back on and help people". Most of the men on Titanic (other than Ismay who was disgraced for life) accepted that they weren't going to get a boat and so went down with Titanic.
@@danielmorris6523 Interesting enough a similar thing happened in a cruise ship (unfortunately I don't remember the name) but the actual crew of the ship left all people behind and didn't notify anyone about the ship being in the brick of sinking, the only ones who took action and saved everyone was the band that had being hired for the shows 😮, I couldn't believe the story but it's true.
@@lohaye3260 that is the Oceanos, incredible story
Imagine how the survivors must have felt, knowing they were all alone out there after the titanic was completely gone, not knowing if help would ever get there.
This Morse code exchange is wild
Titanic: Help I'm sinking
Boat 1: who's sinking?
Titanic: me! Send help
Boat 2: what's the matter?
Titanic: struck Berg, sinking
Boat 1: who struck a Berg?
Titanic: me, send help. Sinking
Boat 2: oh hey Titanic. Do you need help?
Boat 3: who needs help?
I fell asleep to this and then thought I was getting murdered when It broke in half
LMFAO
Sounds like you got the full experience then!
I fell asleep to this too. But my phone died before the video finished 😂
I swear I’m not a Scarab LMAOOAO
Not this one but with another video exactly like this one with more terrifying sound I watching at night and I was starting to be sleepy so I decided to put the video on screen saver and sleep at this sound.
2:13:37
Carpathia: "MPA to MGY. All our boats are ready. We are coming as hard as we can OM. Double watch on engine room. Have your lifeboats ready when we arrive!"
How the radio operators of Carpathia tried to instill hope is quite moving.
The captain of the Carpathia ran full power to Titanic, turned off electricity and heat in the cabins. It’s an amazing story how quickly they were able to make it.
I just read on wikipedia that they broke the ships speed record that night
@@Sheepdog_vr i guess they were putting themselves under a big risk ending up hitting icebergs too.
You're a passenger on the deck of the Carpathia. You've just finished dinner, you and about 100 people are roaming top side. All of the sudden, crews begin readying the lifeboats.
-"What the hell is going on? A drill?"
-"No the Titanic just sent an SOS, they're sinking!"
That's gotta be chilling for you to be told you're on you're way to Rescue survivors of the Unsinkable Ship, which is now sinking. Honestly,
@K MGY to MPA: That's what she said!
MPA to MGY: Keep making jokes like that and we'll turn around.
Titanic: we're sinking
other ships: what's the matter?
Titanic: WE'RE SINKING!
other ships: Yes, but what's the matter?
XD
Olympic and carpathia were the only ships who actually wanted to save titanic even if they were far away
@@abdulhaleemdomado3132 i mean the Titanic sister Lusitania sank too
@@anunknownperson4018 titanic and Lusitania are not sister ships. Different design and Company.
@@anunknownperson4018 But Titanic took about 2 hours and 45 minutes to completely sink while Lusitania took only 18 minutes to completely sink.
2:42:05 That break up itself must've killed so many at the back. Such an abnormally quick motion for a huge ship
I can't even imagine how terrifying it must have felt being at the end of the ship knowing there's nowhere else to go
2:34:30 titanic: "we are sinking fast"
2:34:42 then virginia is essentially like have you tried turning it off and on again
finest of tech support
10/10 Services
Technically what they said was "we can't understand you", which explains their blase reaction
LordofFullmetal tech-nically
There is at least 3 ads in this video! This is not realtime
Apparently maurice moss' grandad was on the Virginia doing the late shift that night. Joking aside, terrible AND avoidable tragedy. God rest their souls. Somehow, though, you just think some things are destined to happen.
Bless the Baltic. They really tried their best to get there as soon as possible
If only the Californian had their sense of urgency
Billis Lopez not necessarily urgency, but it only they cared at all
@Soul thank you for educating me
@Soul fuck that. You put them on your damn ship and you pull as many out of the damn water as you can. If you have to force 15 people in a hold, that's what you fucking do.
you don't need to worry about provisions, get people out of the fucking water ASAP. Other ships will be coming too, you can transfer people as need be when the other ships come. As soon as they saw the first rocket, turn around and fucking investigate, pull your radio operator on his ass, and get shit ready.
I think this is one of the most realistic real-time simulations that I have come across online. You have done such an amazing job in recreating Titanic's final hours. I feel a sense of dread when I watch this. The smooth-as-glass ocean reflecting the stars and the Titanic's lights... the distant sounds of Wallace Hartley's band playing... the sounds of the passengers and the morse code echoing into the cold night... the sounds of the dying ship. You feel a sense of helplessness when you watch everything unfold before your eyes. I understand that Titanic: Honor and Glory's supporters have been attacking your work but they have to understand that no one has claim over history. Anyone is entitled to recreate the disaster with whatever theory they believe is accurate. There will never be a 100% accurate portrayal on the disaster because we weren't there. Thank you for working hard during the last five years to make this happen. Well done!
Many thanks :)
I feel exactly the same way.
@@TitanicAnimations I think james Cameron and his team pretty much surmised the stern sank faster, then it did in his original movie, and it never stood on end, as long as it did...but still a chilling video!
Why can't people appreciate this beautiful rendering of the tragedy and the work that went into it, as well as enjoy the Honor and Glory Titanic simulator? They're both made by people that obviously put a lot of hard work into it.
I agree. THG did a great job with their real time simulation but this one is better and more accurate.
Could you imagine being on the most luxurious ship of the time, toasting and dancing…and a few hours later, it’s sinking while ragtime music blares as you walk/run down flooded hallways. For some reason, that ambiance and picture is so uncomfortable