James Cameron's commentary; So here you will see 3 scenes in a row that were taken out in a big chunk. 1st is in the film. But here Quartermaster Hitchens is berating everybody to row faster. A real fear of suction that people in lifeboats had. So again we are following a historical thread as reported by Molly Brown and Hitchens after the fact. Of course Molly was very critical and really portrayed him as a coward, which he probably was. It's well-known captain Smith did change his mind and recall some boats back to the ship to take more people. With the big-brass megaphone which was actually found in the debri field of the Titanic wreck site. Hitchens 'It's our lives not theirs' and they rowed on. So this is a scene as a Titanic history buff I really wanted to see to life but ultimately again, it was to digressive from the main storyline of Jack/Rose survival. Bernard Hill is an excellent Captain Smith. This is another historical setpeace. The first class passengers gathering in the gymnasium to stay warm. You have John Jacob Astor cutting open a life jacket and showing Madeline Astr the Cork inside to alleviate her fears, which was well-reported. Here is the rising tension we r going to handoff from Calories and LoveJoy to the Chief Baker Charles John Joughin. Historical tidbit here; Testified he threw about 50 deck chairs into the water but also he was drunk the entire time.
@@Lazyeye3 Saw all the deleted scenes videos on RUclips, but no James Cameron commentary that is present on DVD so I transcribed them all in a number of hours and then went about spamming all the videos i could find.
Actually, the captain already lost his authority. The captain is incapacitated, as he is in distress on a sinking ship, and cannot give orders to the lifeboats that have departed the ship.
@@tshelby123 Some honored men on Titanic died trying to save as many people as possible, officer William Murdoch for example, but yeah, I know not everyone has huge balls like that.
El hombre que usa el silbato en esta escena es el oficial Henry Wilde y el murió congelado sosteniéndose en un pedazo de madera con el silbato en la boca y cuando Rose lo vio simplemente se lo quito para poder salvarse
This confrontation on Boat 6 reportedly did happen but also in real life Boat 2 actually followed the orders, Fourth Officer Boxhall pulling Boat 2 around the stern to the Starboard Gangway door which was where boats were supposed to pick up more people but pulled away from doing so. There’s debate on why as in 1912 during the inquries on the sinking Boxhall stated the gangway door was closes but in an interview in the 1960s, Boxhall stated the gangway door was packed with people waiting to be picked up and he didn’t move in fearful the boat would be swamped… I’m in the belief he was telling the truth in the later interview, lying during the inquiry to save himself from being ostracized and shamed
It was probably removed for pacing and the fact that a very similar scene occurs later between molly brown and the guy. But non the less it’s authentic to what likely happened so I’d have liked it in. This and the scene where rose goes to meet jack and walks into third class
Yup! The crewman is 100% correct. Captain Smith is incapacitated because he's on a sinking ship and cannot give orders to the lifeboats that have casted off.
The actor who played Robert Hitchens did a really good job. He was scared, panicky, and overall thinking it was best to save those already in the boat.
Life boats weren't intended to "save everyone" anyway. And Titanic had more than legally required. The life boats really were meant to ferry people to other ships. If the sea was really bad, it wouldn't have mattered anyway. Luckily the sea was calm, but it was a moonless night, nowhere near as bright as in the movie Modern lifeboats are much more sophisticated and there should be room for everyone
The quartermaster Hitchens (the guy in charge of the lifeboat) may have been kind of a dink but he's 100% in the right here, going back you run the risk of getting sucked against the ship and not being able to get away thus getting sucked down with it, or getting swamped by the mobs of people trying to get in the lifeboat. This is 100% on the officer who allowed the boat to be launched partially full, which I'm assuming is Chief Officer Wilde, (the one with the whistle) he put Hitchens in charge of the boat and ordered them to be lowered partially full.
Lifeboat 6 was launched by 2nd officer Lightoller and captain Smith himself at around 1 AM. Lightoller ordered Hichens to take charge of the lifeboat. At that Lightoller was around the aft port lifeboats.
@@memez2551 I rewatched the scene where rose leaves the boat Ruth and Molly are in, the boat in question, and you can definitely hear Lightoller's voice ordering them to "lower away" so you are correct. My point still stands that fault lies on the officer who ordered the boat launched partially full. I believe I was getting confused with the scene where Rose jumps from the lowering boat in which case I'm fairly certain it's Wilde guiding them down
When you realise that both the person who steered the ship when it collided with the Iceberg (Robert Hichens who is also the guy commanding the boat here) and the guy who first spotted it (Fredrick Fleet who you can see behind Ruth and Molly) were in this boat I would've been scared to sit in that lifeboat if I would have known😂
Imagine how tired and worn out their arms must have been from all that rowing especially being in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean -- miles from shore . Not to mention how cold the air was . Not fun
They should've kept these deleted scenes. This one is based on real reported events, and they even rediscovered that brass megaphone held by the captain, lying on the sea floor along the debris near the wreck.
It doesn’t matter if you’re in charge of the lifeboat if the captain calls you back to the ship you go back I read that that boat only had 12 seats occupied
The only fool here is the Captain... Should'a ensured boats are full right from the start. "Incharge of this boat" did right thing. They would've gone down due to suction with the ship once they were that far out. Mind you there were plenty of panicking people who would've taken down the boat in chaos
Totally false. The suction thing is a myth, and there were plenty of lifeboats still on the ship and being lowered, none of which got swamped by any panicking crowds. Going back would have been safe.
How is it the captain's fault that he couldn't have been near all of the 20 lifeboats at once and count the people in them to make sure they were all full?
Captian smith said:come back, come back to the ship! Boat 6 come back to the ship! This is the captian! This is the captain! Come back to the ship! The fools.
Unfortunately the guy had a point as horrible as it sounded he wasnt willing to risk the lives of everyone on the life boat for a few passengers on the ship
Don’t blame him. It’s too risky going back and the captain deserves 100 percent of the blame for going too fast and ignoring iceberg warnings. I think Hitchens no longer respected captain smith because the captain was asleep when the ship hit which looks very bad from a moral perspective.
0:46 and 0:53 until 0:56 When that woman asks to go back, we must go back. That gentleman at 0:57 until 1:05 is dumb! If that gentleman is smart and trusts her. This can save more people's lives. The reason why most passengers die is because of that gentleman's fault for not trusting her.
As much as I like this for accuracy it slows the film down. We are already heavily invested in Jack and Rose at this point and cutting away for 90 seconds kinda slows the momentum. This was actually some of the test audiences complaints they wanted to see more of Jack and Rose and any other parts of the sinking they didn’t like. I kinda agree. Audiences had the same issue with the Jack and Lovejoy fight they thought it was just too much and it slowed the momentum. Cameron fought on that scene for awhile too keep it but originally decided the audience knows best and completely cut it out and it works better not their in my opinion.
Even as someone who always wants to see more on display of these kinds of catastrophes, I can sense how much it would have disturbed the momentum of the movie.
"LOWER AWAY, LEFT AND RIGHT TOGETHER" "COME BACK- COME BACK, COME BACK TO THE SHIP! BOAT 6!" *gunshots* "CO- CO- CO- COME BACK, COME BACK TO THE SHIP! BOAT 6!" *more gunshots* "LOWER AWAY, LEFT AND RIGHT TOGETHER" "COME BACK, COME BACK TO- COME BACK, COME BACK TO THE SHIP! BOAT 6!"
It is because when the ship is sinking and going inside water, it creates the surrounding water to move towards it and create a SUCTION. If there are more people, the boat might not be able to outrun the Suction and thus go down with Titanic.
@@Firemarioflower you're right and it worked. But I was just telling the thoughts of the employees of Titanic responsible for evacuation at the real time.
TBF both Molly Brown & Robert Hitchens the guy who was behind the wheel when Titanic hit the iceberg had a point. Molly was right to suggest they go back for more, particularly as they still had plenty of room in the boats. But on the other hand Hitchens wasn't wrong saying that going back for more could be dangerous even if he was as an asshole saying it as well as firmly saying its their lives now.
Dang they should of kept that scene like they could of saved more but still unlikely because they could’ve been brought down with it or had the boat tipped over Anyone know if that actually did happen tho?
As a film maker myself let me explain why James didn't keep this in he film. The whole story in a whole is about two things. The ship and J&R. Having too much character based analysis going on would streer the audience away from the disaster...this scene felt flat and didn't really hold any weight.
He was right not to go back it was there lives at that moment in time it was the captains decision to speed up the ernigines and lit up last boilers up they had iceberg warnings on that day and night before titanic hit the iceberg so the man in the lifeboat was 100% right not to go back
Movies aren't the best sources for facts. The last boilers werent lit. The ship was going normal service speed of 21½ knots. Since they got ice warnings, they took the south route. It was standard practice to keep going unless you saw something serious. When they saw the berg, it was too late. Two important warnings didn't get to the bridge. All other warnings didn't have icebergs in their direct path.
Your captain told you to go back to your ship, that’s an order! In my opinion Robert Hichens was a coward! Even after Titanic he was a messed up person and even wet to jail for attempted murder. Molly Brown later called him a bully and a coward as well.
0:57 He's disobedient! Hichens should be fired by the other passengers, going far away as first is likely insubordinate to the Titanic, and it's disobedient.
They could have turned back and allowed more people from the forward gangway. I agree with Molly Brown…they could have taken on 40 more souls at least!
James Cameron's commentary; So here you will see 3 scenes in a row that were taken out in a big chunk. 1st is in the film. But here Quartermaster Hitchens is berating everybody to row faster. A real fear of suction that people in lifeboats had. So again we are following a historical thread as reported by Molly Brown and Hitchens after the fact. Of course Molly was very critical and really portrayed him as a coward, which he probably was. It's well-known captain Smith did change his mind and recall some boats back to the ship to take more people. With the big-brass megaphone which was actually found in the debri field of the Titanic wreck site. Hitchens 'It's our lives not theirs' and they rowed on. So this is a scene as a Titanic history buff I really wanted to see to life but ultimately again, it was to digressive from the main storyline of Jack/Rose survival. Bernard Hill is an excellent Captain Smith.
This is another historical setpeace. The first class passengers gathering in the gymnasium to stay warm. You have John Jacob Astor cutting open a life jacket and showing Madeline Astr the Cork inside to alleviate her fears, which was well-reported. Here is the rising tension we r going to handoff from Calories and LoveJoy to the Chief Baker Charles John Joughin. Historical tidbit here; Testified he threw about 50 deck chairs into the water but also he was drunk the entire time.
God how did you make this comment
@@Lazyeye3 Saw all the deleted scenes videos on RUclips, but no James Cameron commentary that is present on DVD so I transcribed them all in a number of hours and then went about spamming all the videos i could find.
Wdym????
@@Lazyeye3 could u elaborate
That was impressive OP, well done! 😅
And slowly the captain sees authority and control slipping from his hands
Actually, the captain already lost his authority. The captain is incapacitated, as he is in distress on a sinking ship, and cannot give orders to the lifeboats that have departed the ship.
Don’t blame them not coming back, if they’d come back the crew might have been replaced
the ship - at least - sinks fastly under his command
In a life-and-death situation every person for they self
@@tshelby123 Some honored men on Titanic died trying to save as many people as possible, officer William Murdoch for example, but yeah, I know not everyone has huge balls like that.
RIP Bernard Hill 1944-2024
Yeah, I can't believe he died
@@RedToxicHoodiewho
@@JackAndersonOG The one who played Captain Edward Smith
@@RedToxicHoodieoh yeah thanks
"Come back to the ship", the captain said calmly.
😩
"Now rode"
Robert Hichens - the helmsman - said calmly with a cheerful tone in his voice
Poor Captain😢 A man of honor😞🙏💖🕯️RIP, Captain
The actor of the captain actually died this year.
@@wallaceandgromit6383 Oww, I didn't know this😭🙏 To rest in peace😭💖🙏🕯️
@@wallaceandgromit6383 He's now with his fathers, in whose mighty company he wouldn't feel ashamed.
"the fools" truely
Best line from him and its in a deleted scene. RIP
Yep,that one crew on lifeboat 6 was a fool
He should've shouted loudly rather than calmly
Fun fact: That's the same whistle Rose uses to save herself near the end.
Ik it was mr wilde whistle,rose took it from mr wilde when he finally dies of hypothermia
El hombre que usa el silbato en esta escena es el oficial Henry Wilde y el murió congelado sosteniéndose en un pedazo de madera con el silbato en la boca y cuando Rose lo vio simplemente se lo quito para poder salvarse
Es verdad!!! El oficial no pudo subirse a un bote y fue un héroe😢@@DeadthHood
@@DeadthHoodthat scene always bothered me though. How was she even able to blow the whistle, shouldn't it have been frozen?
The acting in the sailor in the lifeboat is..really good. He’s mad, yet it feels like he’s wanting to go back as well, but knows he can’t.
1:08 Look at Ruth. Even she struggles with her conscience.
She was one who reported this event happening IRL as well.
Captain Smith and Mr Andrews❤😢
And mr Wild
I’m glad they care about the other people.
They should have kept this scene
Ye
I liked it
True!
Haha noo horrible acting
They should have kept all the scenes that they deleted
I love how Andrews points out this ignoring of orders
This confrontation on Boat 6 reportedly did happen but also in real life Boat 2 actually followed the orders, Fourth Officer Boxhall pulling Boat 2 around the stern to the Starboard Gangway door which was where boats were supposed to pick up more people but pulled away from doing so.
There’s debate on why as in 1912 during the inquries on the sinking Boxhall stated the gangway door was closes but in an interview in the 1960s, Boxhall stated the gangway door was packed with people waiting to be picked up and he didn’t move in fearful the boat would be swamped… I’m in the belief he was telling the truth in the later interview, lying during the inquiry to save himself from being ostracized and shamed
Boxhall was a more honest man. Hichens certainly was not
1:05 NOW ROOOOOOOAH
lmfaoooo
What he says in here?? 0:28
@@Kleber932come on…puhll….PUUUHLLL!
@@ViciousFriendlyFish didn't know this word
What did he said on 00:59
"come back! Come back to the ship!" he said
1:19 rewatching everyone celebrating during the 2020 New Year’s Eve countdown
It was probably removed for pacing and the fact that a very similar scene occurs later between molly brown and the guy. But non the less it’s authentic to what likely happened so I’d have liked it in. This and the scene where rose goes to meet jack and walks into third class
1:12 - This is the Captain! This is the CAPTAIN!! COME BACK TO THE SHIP!!
Yea we watched the video
"WHERE WAS GONDOR WHEN TITANIC SANK!?"
no,thank you,we are not crazy
What did the captain say?
Rest in peace, Bernard Hill 🙏🏻✝️🕊💙
This is the captain this is the captain come back to the ship come back
Girl: there is room for more!
Captain: COME BACK TO THE SHIP!
Boat dude: no dont come back
Captain: fools
The names of those people are listed in the description of the video.
The woman was so awesome! She actually has empathy
@@gatsbygoodwood2575 she wanted to save the remaining passengers after the ship sunk
@@patrickisebola6390if they would return, that boat would sink with the ship together
@@igorm6944 it’d probably take longer than expected I guess
00:52 this person sit on the crow nest while Titanic hits that Iceberg
Fredrick Fleet
Hichens, man in charge was also at the wheel
He wasn't wrong, they might have been swamped and lost the boat.
Yup! The crewman is 100% correct. Captain Smith is incapacitated because he's on a sinking ship and cannot give orders to the lifeboats that have casted off.
@@85MBakeror Theo couldve saved far More lifes
Yeah that is more likely , the suction of the sinking boat is not as strong as some people like to claim .
But as depicted there was lots of time. Also, boats that were launched much later didn't get sucked down.
@UncoolNegated It was risky, and he didn't want to take it.
This scene builds so much character. They should have kept it
The actor who played Robert Hitchens did a really good job. He was scared, panicky, and overall thinking it was best to save those already in the boat.
Yes, that’s right! Come back to the *SINKING SHIP!* If we’re going down, we’re taking you all with us!
Sounds like the Boomer mentality of present times.
they had plenty of time to come back, pick some people just by standing nearby of the ship and go away
😂
@@grocerygoat06 You got some bitterness over something going on there?
😅
Life boats weren't intended to "save everyone" anyway. And Titanic had more than legally required. The life boats really were meant to ferry people to other ships. If the sea was really bad, it wouldn't have mattered anyway. Luckily the sea was calm, but it was a moonless night, nowhere near as bright as in the movie
Modern lifeboats are much more sophisticated and there should be room for everyone
They really should have kept this scene
1:13
Dumbledore Said Calmly
RIP Bernard Hill
The quartermaster Hitchens (the guy in charge of the lifeboat) may have been kind of a dink but he's 100% in the right here, going back you run the risk of getting sucked against the ship and not being able to get away thus getting sucked down with it, or getting swamped by the mobs of people trying to get in the lifeboat. This is 100% on the officer who allowed the boat to be launched partially full, which I'm assuming is Chief Officer Wilde, (the one with the whistle) he put Hitchens in charge of the boat and ordered them to be lowered partially full.
Lifeboat 6 was launched by 2nd officer Lightoller and captain Smith himself at around 1 AM. Lightoller ordered Hichens to take charge of the lifeboat. At that Lightoller was around the aft port lifeboats.
@@memez2551 I rewatched the scene where rose leaves the boat Ruth and Molly are in, the boat in question, and you can definitely hear Lightoller's voice ordering them to "lower away" so you are correct. My point still stands that fault lies on the officer who ordered the boat launched partially full. I believe I was getting confused with the scene where Rose jumps from the lowering boat in which case I'm fairly certain it's Wilde guiding them down
@@WSHNC yep that’s correct. That is Wilde.
@@WSHNC Lighttoller didn't allow men to board, if he did, like Murdoch, plenty more lives would be saved.
Robert Hitchens was also the one controlling the ship while it was about to hit the iceberg
When you realise that both the person who steered the ship when it collided with the Iceberg (Robert Hichens who is also the guy commanding the boat here) and the guy who first spotted it (Fredrick Fleet who you can see behind Ruth and Molly) were in this boat
I would've been scared to sit in that lifeboat if I would have known😂
He was only thinking about himself he was too scared to back
Molly was a true dudette i can respect
Imagine how tired and worn out their arms must have been from all that rowing especially being in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean -- miles from shore . Not to mention how cold the air was . Not fun
“1:21”
- Captain Edward J. Smith
He left the rest of those people for dead and probably got away with it.
0:28 😡😡😡😡😡😡😡
Anngery!!!
Imagine someone on the lifeboat saying "Unsinkable my bum!"
'Fools', I'd have called them bastards.
Ruth: "My daughter chose to abandon her mother. That was her choice!"
They should've kept these deleted scenes. This one is based on real reported events, and they even rediscovered that brass megaphone held by the captain, lying on the sea floor along the debris near the wreck.
Captain Smith Try Call Lifeboat 6 Robert Hichens Rowing Margaret Brown Tries Paddle And Captain Smith Wont Hear It.
What does this incoherent nonsense mean? And did you really have to give yourself five likes with five sock accounts?
It doesn’t matter if you’re in charge of the lifeboat if the captain calls you back to the ship you go back I read that that boat only had 12 seats occupied
0:36 Roblox Shipwrecked
Shipwrecked be like:
The only fool here is the Captain... Should'a ensured boats are full right from the start. "Incharge of this boat" did right thing. They would've gone down due to suction with the ship once they were that far out. Mind you there were plenty of panicking people who would've taken down the boat in chaos
Totally false. The suction thing is a myth, and there were plenty of lifeboats still on the ship and being lowered, none of which got swamped by any panicking crowds. Going back would have been safe.
How is it the captain's fault that he couldn't have been near all of the 20 lifeboats at once and count the people in them to make sure they were all full?
Captian smith said:come back, come back to the ship! Boat 6 come back to the ship! This is the captian! This is the captain! Come back to the ship! The fools.
No way he just passed a few days ago?? Rest in peace 🙏
That's the man who ring the bell in woman behind
hello tell me and download such a film also without tracks you can the same I want to watch it
Me with Captain: Come back to Ship
Crew: No back
Me: have sexy ladies for you
Crew:idk
Captain: Fools
😭
0:50 No, Smith is talking to you, guys. Insubordination if you don't listen to what the captain has to tell you.
So many cutter scenes for Titanic but it was still a good movie
They actually found that megaphone under water
"Fool of a Hitchens!"
"come back to the ship" the captain says calmly
yes you do have a lot more room in the lifeboat
captain: COME BACK, COME BACK TO THE SHIP
crew:idc
captain:the fools
Unfortunately the guy had a point as horrible as it sounded he wasnt willing to risk the lives of everyone on the life boat for a few passengers on the ship
Don’t blame him. It’s too risky going back and the captain deserves 100 percent of the blame for going too fast and ignoring iceberg warnings. I think Hitchens no longer respected captain smith because the captain was asleep when the ship hit which looks very bad from a moral perspective.
The actor who played hitchens would be Perfect for the role of Admiral Günther Lütjens in any future Bismarck movie!
0:46 and 0:53 until 0:56 When that woman asks to go back, we must go back. That gentleman at 0:57 until 1:05 is dumb!
If that gentleman is smart and trusts her. This can save more people's lives.
The reason why most passengers die is because of that gentleman's fault for not trusting her.
As much as I like this for accuracy it slows the film down. We are already heavily invested in Jack and Rose at this point and cutting away for 90 seconds kinda slows the momentum. This was actually some of the test audiences complaints they wanted to see more of Jack and Rose and any other parts of the sinking they didn’t like. I kinda agree. Audiences had the same issue with the Jack and Lovejoy fight they thought it was just too much and it slowed the momentum. Cameron fought on that scene for awhile too keep it but originally decided the audience knows best and completely cut it out and it works better not their in my opinion.
Even as someone who always wants to see more on display of these kinds of catastrophes, I can sense how much it would have disturbed the momentum of the movie.
Audience doesn't know best! Hate them for ruining the movie like that!
paul, brightwell
Esse sem coração 😢😭😿
Pov you fell to steer away from the ship so you're just gonna escape
see,no one in the boat supported that woman,do not say "fools" to them but to yourself,captain
Almost Heroes.
What about them?
- They will be dealt with.
- By who?
- All right, they escaped.
Shipwrecked in a nutshell.
Lol
"LOWER AWAY, LEFT AND RIGHT TOGETHER"
"COME BACK- COME BACK, COME BACK TO THE SHIP! BOAT 6!"
*gunshots*
"CO- CO- CO- COME BACK, COME BACK TO THE SHIP! BOAT 6!"
*more gunshots*
"LOWER AWAY, LEFT AND RIGHT TOGETHER"
"COME BACK, COME BACK TO- COME BACK, COME BACK TO THE SHIP! BOAT 6!"
@ *Lifeboats either floating in the air or being launched in the water after being swamped by half the server*
Why release boats with 17 people on board in the first place. The kettle spoke to the pan.
It is because when the ship is sinking and going inside water, it creates the surrounding water to move towards it and create a SUCTION. If there are more people, the boat might not be able to outrun the Suction and thus go down with Titanic.
@@Ajais-l7s What kind of bullshit is that, as lifeboat 11 was overfilled and made it off fine, in the LATER STAGE of the sinking
@@Firemarioflower you're right and it worked. But I was just telling the thoughts of the employees of Titanic responsible for evacuation at the real time.
@@Ajais-l7s Oh. Sorry for being so rude. I misunderstood. My bad.
0:52 is that Frederick fleet? Behind margaret brown?
yes
Yes, as the real one was also in No.6
Shouldn’t have been deleted from the movie
The music trill when he accepts they are abandoning them
Whats the song called???
Sabrepulse - The Wanting
TBF both Molly Brown & Robert Hitchens the guy who was behind the wheel when Titanic hit the iceberg had a point.
Molly was right to suggest they go back for more, particularly as they still had plenty of room in the boats.
But on the other hand Hitchens wasn't wrong saying that going back for more could be dangerous even if he was as an asshole saying it as well as firmly saying its their lives now.
Dang they should of kept that scene like they could of saved more but still unlikely because they could’ve been brought down with it or had the boat tipped over
Anyone know if that actually did happen tho?
As a film maker myself let me explain why James didn't keep this in he film. The whole story in a whole is about two things. The ship and J&R. Having too much character based analysis going on would streer the audience away from the disaster...this scene felt flat and didn't really hold any weight.
Come back to the ship 0:36
Had to be Roblox Shipwrecked
Where was gondor when titanic sank
Captain: Where was Boat 6 when the ship sank??
Is that Mark Lindsey Chapman on the left of the captiain?
That’s right. He played the role of chief officer Henry Tingle Wilde, the second in command man of Titanic.
@@memez2551 handsome man 😊
@@memez2551 he’s handsome
@@alishataylor6017 Henry and Mark are very nice and handsome men indeed
@@memez2551 totally. Henry’s story is so sad losing his wife & twin boys a year & half before his own death
I swear bro dosent listen to orders 💀
When last I looked, Edward Smith, not Robert Hichens, was captain of the Titanic.
I don’t Robert Hichens on the titanic in this scene
Smith was the captain and Hichens was the quartermaster
@@memez2551 and the quartermaster isn’t on the titanic in this scene isn’t he
@avi_perosn3931 he’s the person that yells at the people in his boat
@@memez2551 i know so what's your point
I would of thrown him over board and went back
Sure you would.
@@trpimirkarlovic838 you think I wouldn’t
@@stevenmcaulay165no you wouldn’t
@@stevenmcaulay165 You wouldn't even make it to the lifeboat, most likely.
You would be that guy who got his balls molested by fishes.
He was right not to go back it was there lives at that moment in time it was the captains decision to speed up the ernigines and lit up last boilers up they had iceberg warnings on that day and night before titanic hit the iceberg so the man in the lifeboat was 100% right not to go back
Movies aren't the best sources for facts.
The last boilers werent lit. The ship was going normal service speed of 21½ knots.
Since they got ice warnings, they took the south route. It was standard practice to keep going unless you saw something serious. When they saw the berg, it was too late. Two important warnings didn't get to the bridge. All other warnings didn't have icebergs in their direct path.
The unsinkable Molly Brown
Your captain told you to go back to your ship, that’s an order! In my opinion Robert Hichens was a coward! Even after Titanic he was a messed up person and even wet to jail for attempted murder. Molly Brown later called him a bully and a coward as well.
0:57 He's disobedient! Hichens should be fired by the other passengers, going far away as first is likely insubordinate to the Titanic, and it's disobedient.
He should be arrested and a disgrace to the disaster, that coward!
@@MassimoCalderaro-u8h Oh hoho , you should look at his biography. This is not the last wrongdoing in his miserable life.....
What's wrong with Hichens?
It's obvious he cared more for saving his own hide.
Robert desobediente coitado do Eduardo 😢😭
1:21 They're insubordinate!
"The Fools" 😂😂😂😂
Captain captain of what ship the one that is going too sink
They could have turned back and allowed more people from the forward gangway. I agree with Molly Brown…they could have taken on 40 more souls at least!
Bro i swear this scene was in the film or am I tripping 😂😂
It was partially in. Not the entire scene
@@jd0879False. A similar scene was included but it was a separate scene from this one.
Just realized this is the Quartermaster.
The helmsman!
@@Firemarioflower check the pinned comment you wuss.
Do paul brightwell still alive or not ?
Please tell if u know please 🙏🏻
That seaman is very smart
"The fools" was the wrong line, I think. Deserved to be cut.
Exactly..how dare the man whose carelessness caused the collision, would actually call someone foolish.