I will never thank James Cameron enough for the priceless tribute he created to the Titanic and her people. A sad part of history, but the beginning of the immortal life of the legendary ship and all her heroes.
"Titanic" she will remain immortal in our hearts , a million thanks to the great legend Mr James cameron for bringing the memories alive ........ You are great Sir ........
I always felt worse for the crew. Simply because they knew they were going to die but still carried out their duties to save as many people as they could. I'd hate to imagine being in that situation, trying to do an already stressful and difficult job of getting people on the lifeboats, while most of them are panicking for their lives. While on top of all that having to come to terms with the fact that they were almost guaranteed to die. If that's not bravery or heroism i don't know what is.
This is partially true, but not for Murdoch, Lightoller etc. with respect to "save as many people as they could". They could have made the lifeboats full and save about 400 more people than they really did. But of course one must concede that it was an extremely stressful situation and they were obviously not trained enough for this, for the same reason as why there were not enough lifeboats on board. The chance that an emergency could require to evacuate the whole ship was not taken seriously.
Crews view during this video: 0:34 Captain Smith with 1st officer Murdoch 0:38 Murdoch with Junior officer Moody 0:55 happy captain Smith with smily officer Murdoch 1:08 2nd officer Charles Lightoller with captain 1:21 1st officer Murdoch, 2nd officer Lightoller and backwards Junior officer Moody with 4th officer Boxhall 1:30 lookout Frederick Fleet and Reginald Lee 1:34 Murdoch, Moody and helman Robert Hichens 1:53 chief engineer Joseph Bell 2:09 designer of the Titanic Mr. Andrews 2:26 Murdoch inform captain about the iceberg 2:37 Mr. Andrews with captain, 1st officer and chief officer Wilde 2:38 Andrews called a crew meeting and says that the Titanic will sink 2:53 Ismay with Andrews 3:05 chief officer Wilde with Andrews 3:13 confused Smith with Lightoller and Wilde 3:40 5th officer Lowe 3:48 Andrews arguing with Lightoller about the boats 4:09 officer Murdoch with fictional character Cal and after that Murdoch with Ismay in the boat 4:20 Murdoch is shooting at people (that never happened but ok) 4:36 Wilde tries to stop Murdoch 4:53 captain's death 5:09 death Wilde 5:14 Lowe is coming back for survivors
i’ve always felt so bad for the crew and the officers. they knew there was a very likely chance that they could die, but they still did their jobs, loading lifeboats and saving passengers. whenever i watch the movie, i only cry for the officers and crew. especially moody, he was so young, only 24 when he died.
@@saiffaiz It's a tough call really. Any other sea captain would've done the exact same during that time, it's just really unfortunate how it happened to Titanic. Some things couldn't be helped on board such as not having access to the binoculars due to a last minute officer change before embarking. It's easy to say they should've slowed down or stopped now, but at the time I doubt any captain at sea would've. Just makes it so much more tragic.
@@SSilva-pu9fi Again we're not too entirely sure of the reasons. But I also read that lighting the last 4 boilers had no effect on the speed. Of course the decisions made get bought into the spotlight because of the tragedy, but at the time it would've been completely normal for a captain to do that under the circumstances. You can blame the sinking on all sorts of reasons and all of them are probably valid, but I don't think there's one that can take the entire blame, more just a bunch of things piled together.
I knew about Titanic before they found her on the bottom, before they made the 3 hour movie, that could have been shorter. I have always been mesmerized by man's stupidity to break records and risk lives. The Olympic was scrapped in 1935, the Britannic was a hospital ship during WW1 and hit a mine and sank with little loss of life.
Lightolle is a hero of titanic. Miss Molly Brown was too. She really did a lot to help calm passengers, row the life boat she was in, and just all around a very decent human being.
Also he was an officer of the Royal Navy in WWI. There he earned the Distinguished Service cross twice. Also never forget Violet Jessop. She worked as a Stewardess and nurse and was an board and survived when 1. RMS Olympic collided with HMS Hawke 2. RMS Titanic collided and sank by the iceberg 3. HMAS Britanic collided and sank by a mine.
@@midknightfalconfan No, he wasn‘t: The plan was that the boats were launched with half of it‘s capsize. Then they should go to the maingates in the hull and take the more passengers. But, and no one know why, these doors were never opened....
4 of the Titanic Officer survived the Titanic Those being Second Officer Charles Lightoller 5th Officer Harold Lowe 4th Officer Joseph Boxhall And 3rd Officer Herbert Pitman The others were lost in the sinking of Titanic The following being Captain Edward Smith Age: 62 Chief Officer Henry Wilde Age: 39 First Officer William Murdoch Age: 39-40 6th Officer James Moody Age: 24 (And there’s more I just don’t know all of them) Oldest of the crew being Edward Smith The youngest being James Moody… They worked there hardest and stayed until the very end Murdoch being the one in charge of The starboard or right side of the ship and the one responsible for saving the most Men And Wilde being the one who was actually put in charge of the port or left side of the ship Lightoller took control of the Port side and Collapsible boat B Lowe was the only officer to go back for survivors And Boxhall helped the Carpathia find the Titanic survivors by lighting off a flare he had found in his lifeboat May all the crew on the Titanic Rest In Peace They are truly the hero’s of this disaster And may all the people who lost there lives also Rest In Peace This is a great video and I appreciate you doing this to show appreciation to the crew of titanic Have a good day/night And remember to stay safe
And the most important person Chief Engineer Joseph Bell and the remaining engineers and engine crew who stayed to ensure power is available till last moment. All of them went down with Titanic🚢🚣😵😢
When I watched this movie for the first time, I did not know the end of it, and I was 9 years old. I remember that I did not sleep at night. Very touching and inspiring. What a feeling. Until this moment, I have the same feeling. I cannot control the feelings that float to my eyes.❤
The most senior officer that survived, went on save men at Dunkirk during the Battle of France as was portrayed as the elderly man in the film ‘Dunkirk’.
Cant believe its been 109 years since the titanic sank at this day at April 15th and this moment 2:20 a.m. RIP to everyone who lost there lives on the titanic especially the crew members. We will never forget this tragedy.
Yes I agree. So many things could have been done differently to maybe prevent this from happening. How do that many people die in one night and it not being wartime because of so many reckless decisions?
I have thinking,was'nt it stupid to have the pedal to the metal @ night with ice about?I mean there was a another ship not far away that had stopped for the night.
I truly believe Titanic's officers and crew did the best they ever could have done, every lifeboat they lowered lessened their chances of survival, they gave their lives for those who did survive.
Murdoch made the capital mistake of REDUCING the engines and then reversing them, actually preventing the ship from turning quickly and avoid the iceberg BY ACTUALLY leading it into the iceberg instead! Honestly, he should have just reversed the engines and let the ship just 'touch' the iceberg at slowest speed possible, then reverse the engines to back up the boat a mile or so, and then surround it and continue on their merry way! Of course, this scenario would only work if the reversing of the engines would be sufficient to counteract the inertia of the boat strongly enough to enable the Titanic to just 'gently' touch the iceberg frontally, NEVER exposing the weakest place, it's sides! But no, Murdoch made the STUPIDEST mistake he could possibly do, stopping, THEN reversing the engines instead of full throttling them to make the turn much quicker, instead causing the worst scenario of three possible ones: a) making the turn quicker, would have avoided the tragedy, b) hitting it dead on would have prevented it from sinking, and consequently, the tragic loss of life, and c), what actually happened, making every wrong decision and actually exposing the broad side of the ship to the iceberg! It is very unfortunate he killed himself, because he would have had a LOT OF EXPLAINING to do, probably be imprisoned for it! Esmay was guilty of wrongly thinking the Titanic was unsinkable and therefore, was dismissive of the reports of icebergs and the dangers that cold water could do to the ships' hull!
@@rijoenpial You're very correct, at the time it would seem like the best maneuver to anyone in the moment. But with a little bit of freetime and a wondering mind, you'll come to realize how much that decision doomed them. I remember in grade 4 we were learning about the titanic and ironically I was a titanic junky at the time. Every kid in the class said that they made the right decision to reverse the left engine and keep the right one going. I was the only one, but the teacher said I was the only one that was right and made a lil presentation of it. And although murdoch made a dumb mistake I wouldnt discredit him too much. He was top of his class and was ready to be transferred to a captain very soon. However, he at least made some redemption on the titanics sinking by saving a lot of people (In the real turn of events, not movie based). I think he was uninformed of the bulkhead flaw. And not to mention bruce ismay the head of white star line was on the ship and threatened the captains position if he didnt make full steam ahead despite the captain wanting to slow down. All in all, it was a mixture of a bad company and poor training on the crew and staff and unclear knowledge of the ships main structure.
@@rijoenpial Well with option A), even if they had stayed on all full ahead, there is no guarantee it would have missed the iceberg, nor could murdoch have known how far the iceberg extended under the ship, this was definitely the best option though, I suspect it would have still struck the iceberg but whether the damage would have been breached 5 compartments or not we cannot know, it might have, and the ship would have sank slower maybe allowing the rescue ship to arrive in time. Option B) Standard practice is to evade obstacles not crash into them, had he done that, he would have probably been severely punished even got prison for it, as its sheer negligence of duty not to mention the hundreds of deaths he would have 100% caused in the bow compartments when they crushed in. As for C) Murdoch simply dotted the I's and crossed the T's, he just had the misfortune of being the final domino in the sequence of events. Murdoch reversing the engines definitely wasted precious manoeuvring time to evade the iceberg. I would say maybe, reversing the port side engine while leaving the other two engines full ahead might have allowed Titanic to evade it enough, but, its all conjecture.
I can’t even begin to imagine what was going through the minds of those 2 men in the crows nest. They look and just seemingly out of nowhere that huge iceberg appears. They’re frantically hoping and praying titanic misses it. Sadly it doesn’t. Every officer, crews below deck, and any other personnel of the titanic that night are heroes. God bless every victim who gave the ultimate sacrifice that night. Passengers and crew
Sadly it really was out of nowhere. The still ocean meant no breakers and there was a haze due to refraction so it was like a veil was ripped away pretty much at the last
@ladybugmom10. That's Jonny Phillips, a versatile English actor who's done many movies, British TV shows, short films (some as actor, some as director) He excells at Shakespeare, and is seen a lot on stage in England and Scotland. He's got that RADA-trained baritone voice so necessary for live theatre.
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Nobody cares to talk about the late James horner who gave soul to the film. The haunting music 🎵 of Titanic pulled even a layman to feel the saddest tragedy
Took a vacation with my family last year. Road trip kinda thing. Stopped by Pigeon Forge Tennessee to visit the Titanic museum there. That 28* water numbed my hand inside of 60 seconds. Literally takes your breath away. My hand was burning for a half an hour after that.
This Captain lived in his role in this film, can't imagine the emotion and guilt that the real captain was going through when the accident happened, iceberg sir at 2:25, he also acted awesome although he was in few frames, his suicide will make people love him
‘TITANIC’, I guess, was not just that grand ship. It was all those husbands and fathers and brothers and sons who gave the kisses of their final goodbyes that night, to their women and children and sisters and mothers, perhaps knowing that they would never meet again. All men, women and children, who embarked on the finest voyage of their lifetime on the ‘Ship of Dreams’, and ended up freezing to death in the cold dark endless waters of the North Atlantic that night. The captain of the ‘Queen of the Ocean’, the most senior of the White Star Line at the time, proudly in his last voyage before retirement after forty years of service, having to make possibly the most difficult decisions he would ever have to make in his life, having to take actions he never thought he’d have to take, in those two gruesome hours- once the reality strikes , right from having to ‘call for help for the ‘unsinkable’ ( as ironic as it sounds), attempting to save as many of his people on board as he could with half the number of life boats, right down to his decision to go down with his ship; the officers and the crew of Titanic, who were to be known in their careers to have served the finest ship afloat on her maiden voyage, instead going down in history as epitomes of heroism who fought till their last breath to save its people in those most chaotic three hours, the creator of the ‘unsinkable’ deciding to go down with possibly the best creation of his lifetime, the mammoth labours of the boiler room and engine room heroes to keep the power on and buy as much time as possible for the ship till the very end, the wireless operators who kept on calling for assistance for their ship right till they went down, the band that ‘played on’ amidst the cries and wails, and, the ‘Titanic’ herself, ‘the greatest afloat’ even after that massive brutal hit that breached five of her watertight compartments which were known to be her biggest strength, holding on for whole two hours and forty minutes, till she finally founders.. Despite it ending up as the greatest maritime disaster that the world ever witnessed, still, altogether with all the ‘strength’ that the ship carried ( of which the rest of the world got to know with its sinking), I see enough reason why it was ‘altogether’ called the ‘Titanic’.. RIP the great vessel and the 1500 souls who went down that night..
If they ever remake titanic , i hope they focusing more to the real passengers's story from vip to low class passengers, engine room's staff, boiler room's staff, the architect, captain n the officer's story ...they all deserved their own appreciation than jack n rose as fictional characters
PRAYING for ALL SUFRIENDO ~~~~ maybestofloveflourish ⚘⚘♥️⚘⚘♥️⚘💚⚘⚘💚⚘⚘🧡⚘⚘💛 Keep praying as All kind prayers need in world ahorita!👼AMO 🙌 PAŻ🙌 FÉ 🙌👼😇👼🙌👼LOVE♡=♡♡=♡=♡=>
Thank you James for this masterpiece and for bringing her back to life with all of her passegers and crew members. We can all agree that Legends never die❤
I always thought less of Lightoller because he was sending out boats so empty. At least Murdoch had the common sense to fill the boats up with men if there was room and no other women/children were in sight.
If you read his transcript it's so he could fill them with floating people. But also people not wanting to get in didn't help. I guess he thought that would change when they are wet.
@@justinlynch3 Yeah, it really sucks that a lot of crew members then and even today misread that order as only Woman and Children when in reality it is get as many women and children first and if there is any available space, let the men in as well.
Lightoller wasn’t the only one sending the lifeboats out so underfilled and he was really expecting the people he helped into the lifeboats to help more people into them after they were lowered since he feared that the weight of filling them to capacity would cause them to break off of their ropes before reaching the water, but unfortunately, those people did not have the courage to do so. Lightoller at least filled the overturned Collapsible B lifeboat to capacity and had absolutely no problem with those survivors on it being only men.
26 years of experience overshadowed Captain smith's commonsense. He thought that seeing the iceberg from a distance, we would turn the ship, and avoid collision, But the ship was too big, and the rudder was small, how could he take such a sharp turn, all his experience was wasted.
Actually 32 years with White Star line, he was actually following a standard practice which was to not slow down but rather travel through the ice field and put the danger behind you as fast as possible. He had also altered course further south to avoid ice. Heinsight is 20/20 and no one besides sceptics could have predicted the events outside of fiction.
The rudder was NOT too small. The same size rudder served the Olympic well for many years. The same for the Britannic. IF there was a problem with size it would have been detected by the Olympic before Titanic was launched…. Look at the size of rudders on modern ships… Ships just do not make sharp turns. It can’t happen….
Aw that's adorable, you actually think a treasure hunter remarks in a movie the writer openly admits to at times thinking more like a storyteller than a historian was right about the design or engine capabilities of the ship. Actual historians of the ship have outright said that if they had just 30 SECONDS more they would've avoided the iceberg, which was spotted and disappeared into the darkness in not even 40 seconds. Think about that the difference between life and death was JUST 30 seconds, less if you have the berg hit but do non-fatal damage.
Lightoller was VERY lucky. He for sure would've been among the dead had it not been for that boiler explosion. He is my favorite in the movie. SO handsome 😊❤
My favorite clip in the movie is the one of Lightoller sliding down that funnel rope, "Cut the falls now! Cut 'em loose!" & Gracie hands him the knife.
this video represents very clearly, that that night for them, maybe there was no tomorrow, Captain Smith accepted his death, as his commanders were there to keep calm
I am crying right now because it’s 😭 I thit not watch it before 😢r.I.p that people that died and whil he just killed somebody and then he feels so selfish so he killed he’s self😢 3:12
It was in the year 1912, when this great ship Titanic, the most modern at that time, was sinking in the north of the Atlantic ocean. It was not because of a careless mistake of the crew, they had just no luck against the big ice in the night, the well-known danger was only discovered too late; more than about 1500 of the 2300 passengers found finnally a cruel death in the cold ocean and had no chance to be saved.
some of these if not all those officers in this video are by far top of the deck hero's while the engineers firemen electrictions are below deck hero's
I live in Southampton, quite near the docks and regularly see these huge cruise ships, there are streets in town centre where nearly every house lost someone working aboard Titanic sometimes several people, so sad that it was preventable, other ships had slowed or stopped when they received ice warnings but Titanic was full speed at night when the water was eerily calm making bergs difficult to see, apparently Carpathia had to navigate several bergs coming to the rescue………… they were far to arrogant about the ship believed it was unsinkable…. So many lives lost 💔
The Carpathia indeed had several icebergs in her path during her dash for the Titanic. Captain Rostron had ordered extra lookouts to keep an extremely close watch for icebergs while going beyond the maximum speed the Carpathia was built to go and with that, they successfully dodged every one of them.
No próximo de 15 de abril de 2023, Titanic fará 111 anos de naufrágio. Será um dia muito triste, pra aqueles que se foram naquela noite fria e gelada!!! 😢
I will never thank James Cameron enough for the priceless tribute he created to the Titanic and her people.
A sad part of history, but the beginning of the immortal life of the legendary ship and all her heroes.
Also ushered in a new era of maritime safety. Imagine a cruise ship with life rafts for less than half of all personnel in the modern era.
😊g
"Titanic" she will remain immortal in our hearts , a million thanks to the great legend Mr James cameron for bringing the memories alive ........ You are great Sir ........
yes❤❤❤
I always felt worse for the crew. Simply because they knew they were going to die but still carried out their duties to save as many people as they could. I'd hate to imagine being in that situation, trying to do an already stressful and difficult job of getting people on the lifeboats, while most of them are panicking for their lives. While on top of all that having to come to terms with the fact that they were almost guaranteed to die. If that's not bravery or heroism i don't know what is.
Navy you train for duty in the final moments.
Alot of the crew didn't know,they knew they'd hit something but didn't know it was going to sink till after boiler room 5 had flooded.
Thats true dedication for their jobs.
Really don't know what anybody thought most lifeboats were nowhere near full.Why?can never train properly for the real thing.R.I.P.
This is partially true, but not for Murdoch, Lightoller etc. with respect to "save as many people as they could". They could have made the lifeboats full and save about 400 more people than they really did. But of course one must concede that it was an extremely stressful situation and they were obviously not trained enough for this, for the same reason as why there were not enough lifeboats on board. The chance that an emergency could require to evacuate the whole ship was not taken seriously.
"The money can't save u and me ", in this moment is so true
Yes
The saddest part is when first officer Murdoch committed suicide. I agree with u@ dark B3IIs for the comment u posted.
Killed Tommy - ""Basterdo""
But today's era money is everything
There's only 1 that can save you
Crews view during this video:
0:34 Captain Smith with 1st officer Murdoch
0:38 Murdoch with Junior officer Moody
0:55 happy captain Smith with smily officer Murdoch
1:08 2nd officer Charles Lightoller with captain
1:21 1st officer Murdoch, 2nd officer Lightoller and backwards Junior officer Moody with 4th officer Boxhall
1:30 lookout Frederick Fleet and Reginald Lee
1:34 Murdoch, Moody and helman Robert Hichens
1:53 chief engineer Joseph Bell
2:09 designer of the Titanic Mr. Andrews
2:26 Murdoch inform captain about the iceberg
2:37 Mr. Andrews with captain, 1st officer and chief officer Wilde
2:38 Andrews called a crew meeting and says that the Titanic will sink
2:53 Ismay with Andrews
3:05 chief officer Wilde with Andrews
3:13 confused Smith with Lightoller and Wilde
3:40 5th officer Lowe
3:48 Andrews arguing with Lightoller about the boats
4:09 officer Murdoch with fictional character Cal and after that Murdoch with Ismay in the boat
4:20 Murdoch is shooting at people (that never happened but ok)
4:36 Wilde tries to stop Murdoch
4:53 captain's death
5:09 death Wilde
5:14 Lowe is coming back for survivors
@ 1:21 - backward it's moody talking with lowe ☺️
@@lattestraycat also you can see 3rd officer pitman walking past them and Chief Officer Henry Wilde
Классно, но есть настоящая версия, что офицер застрелился, и режиссëру кажеться, что это был Уильям Мердок (1й офицер)
i’ve always felt so bad for the crew and the officers. they knew there was a very likely chance that they could die, but they still did their jobs, loading lifeboats and saving passengers. whenever i watch the movie, i only cry for the officers and crew. especially moody, he was so young, only 24 when he died.
They did not follow the safety protocol,travelling on a moonless light in a high risk area
@@saiffaiz It's a tough call really. Any other sea captain would've done the exact same during that time, it's just really unfortunate how it happened to Titanic. Some things couldn't be helped on board such as not having access to the binoculars due to a last minute officer change before embarking. It's easy to say they should've slowed down or stopped now, but at the time I doubt any captain at sea would've. Just makes it so much more tragic.
@@matten5532Why though? Just because of the pressure to make headlines?
@@SSilva-pu9fi Again we're not too entirely sure of the reasons. But I also read that lighting the last 4 boilers had no effect on the speed. Of course the decisions made get bought into the spotlight because of the tragedy, but at the time it would've been completely normal for a captain to do that under the circumstances. You can blame the sinking on all sorts of reasons and all of them are probably valid, but I don't think there's one that can take the entire blame, more just a bunch of things piled together.
@@matten5532 My dad told me that they should have struck the iceberg in the middle. It would have allowed them time as the iceberg served as a bank.
when i first saw titanic, i got interested in it. but now, as i got older, i began to know how this film meant. it really was sad knowing its real
ok
Me too same I was really very interested about titanic I fully seacherd in the google about it
I knew about Titanic before they found her on the bottom, before they made the 3 hour movie, that could have been shorter. I have always been mesmerized by man's stupidity to break records and risk lives. The Olympic was scrapped in 1935, the Britannic was a hospital ship during WW1 and hit a mine and sank with little loss of life.
Titanic mencanta yo lo miro el titanic te a mo
@@ramiritoqac what
Lightholler is one of my heroes. He survived and then saved soldiers from the shores of Dunkirk in WW2 in his private boat.
Really? Wow I never knew that.
Lightolle is a hero of titanic. Miss Molly Brown was too. She really did a lot to help calm passengers, row the life boat she was in, and just all around a very decent human being.
Also he was an officer of the Royal Navy in WWI. There he earned the Distinguished Service cross twice.
Also never forget Violet Jessop. She worked as a Stewardess and nurse and was an board and survived when
1. RMS Olympic collided with HMS Hawke
2. RMS Titanic collided and sank by the iceberg
3. HMAS Britanic collided and sank by a mine.
Uhh Lightholler is responsible for 300-500 deaths because he was launching lifeboats half full.
@@midknightfalconfan No, he wasn‘t: The plan was that the boats were launched with half of it‘s capsize. Then they should go to the maingates in the hull and take the more passengers.
But, and no one know why, these doors were never opened....
This Tribute is very very good. I sit here and cry.
Yes❤❤
4 of the Titanic Officer survived the Titanic
Those being Second Officer Charles Lightoller
5th Officer Harold Lowe
4th Officer Joseph Boxhall
And 3rd Officer Herbert Pitman
The others were lost in the sinking of Titanic
The following being
Captain Edward Smith
Age: 62
Chief Officer Henry Wilde
Age: 39
First Officer William Murdoch
Age: 39-40
6th Officer James Moody
Age: 24
(And there’s more I just don’t know all of them)
Oldest of the crew being Edward Smith
The youngest being James Moody…
They worked there hardest and stayed until the very end
Murdoch being the one in charge of The starboard or right side of the ship and the one responsible for saving the most Men
And Wilde being the one who was actually put in charge of the port or left side of the ship
Lightoller took control of the Port side and Collapsible boat B
Lowe was the only officer to go back for survivors
And Boxhall helped the Carpathia find the Titanic survivors by lighting off a flare he had found in his lifeboat
May all the crew on the Titanic Rest In Peace
They are truly the hero’s of this disaster
And may all the people who lost there lives also Rest In Peace
This is a great video and I appreciate you doing this to show appreciation to the crew of titanic
Have a good day/night
And remember to stay safe
Murdoch was 39.
What about pittman?
And the most important person Chief Engineer Joseph Bell and the remaining engineers and engine crew who stayed to ensure power is available till last moment. All of them went down with Titanic🚢🚣😵😢
wow, this is the thing, that makes you cry
don't cry live and learn from this nothings impossible and that means a ship that can take damage and stay a float can still sink it's not impossible
Sometimes heros don't wear capes, sometimes they wear sails, those officers are real life heros❤😢
❤❤❤
That’s right😊
they sank Titanic in their arrogance
true talk
When I watched this movie for the first time, I did not know the end of it, and I was 9 years old. I remember that I did not sleep at night. Very touching and inspiring. What a feeling. Until this moment, I have the same feeling. I cannot control the feelings that float to my eyes.❤
ICE BERG RIGHT AHEAD!!!!
The most senior officer that survived, went on save men at Dunkirk during the Battle of France as was portrayed as the elderly man in the film ‘Dunkirk’.
Second officer Lightoller
Cant believe its been 109 years since the titanic sank at this day at April 15th and this moment 2:20 a.m. RIP to everyone who lost there lives on the titanic especially the crew members. We will never forget this tragedy.
Sit down!!!
The saddest part of the Titanic disaster is that it was so preventable. A tragic end for so many families. May they rest in peace.
Yes I agree. So many things could have been done differently to maybe prevent this from happening. How do that many people die in one night and it not being wartime because of so many reckless decisions?
I have thinking,was'nt it stupid to have the pedal to the metal @ night with ice about?I mean there was a another ship not far away that had stopped for the night.
They really tought that the Titanic was unsinkable
Ameen sumameen
@@jerrystuch6723 yup just like the sinking og wilhelm guslav under ww2 (1945)
I truly believe Titanic's officers and crew did the best they ever could have done, every lifeboat they lowered lessened their chances of survival, they gave their lives for those who did survive.
though the life boats were not at full capacity due to fear that it will collapsed because of weight.
I think that they all knew that they were doomed.
Murdoch made the capital mistake of REDUCING the engines and then reversing them, actually preventing the ship from turning quickly and avoid the iceberg BY ACTUALLY leading it into the iceberg instead! Honestly, he should have just reversed the engines and let the ship just 'touch' the iceberg at slowest speed possible, then reverse the engines to back up the boat a mile or so, and then surround it and continue on their merry way! Of course, this scenario would only work if the reversing of the engines would be sufficient to counteract the inertia of the boat strongly enough to enable the Titanic to just 'gently' touch the iceberg frontally, NEVER exposing the weakest place, it's sides! But no, Murdoch made the STUPIDEST mistake he could possibly do, stopping, THEN reversing the engines instead of full throttling them to make the turn much quicker, instead causing the worst scenario of three possible ones: a) making the turn quicker, would have avoided the tragedy, b) hitting it dead on would have prevented it from sinking, and consequently, the tragic loss of life, and c), what actually happened, making every wrong decision and actually exposing the broad side of the ship to the iceberg! It is very unfortunate he killed himself, because he would have had a LOT OF EXPLAINING to do, probably be imprisoned for it! Esmay was guilty of wrongly thinking the Titanic was unsinkable and therefore, was dismissive of the reports of icebergs and the dangers that cold water could do to the ships' hull!
@@rijoenpial You're very correct, at the time it would seem like the best maneuver to anyone in the moment. But with a little bit of freetime and a wondering mind, you'll come to realize how much that decision doomed them. I remember in grade 4 we were learning about the titanic and ironically I was a titanic junky at the time. Every kid in the class said that they made the right decision to reverse the left engine and keep the right one going. I was the only one, but the teacher said I was the only one that was right and made a lil presentation of it.
And although murdoch made a dumb mistake I wouldnt discredit him too much. He was top of his class and was ready to be transferred to a captain very soon. However, he at least made some redemption on the titanics sinking by saving a lot of people (In the real turn of events, not movie based). I think he was uninformed of the bulkhead flaw. And not to mention bruce ismay the head of white star line was on the ship and threatened the captains position if he didnt make full steam ahead despite the captain wanting to slow down.
All in all, it was a mixture of a bad company and poor training on the crew and staff and unclear knowledge of the ships main structure.
@@rijoenpial Well with option A), even if they had stayed on all full ahead, there is no guarantee it would have missed the iceberg, nor could murdoch have known how far the iceberg extended under the ship, this was definitely the best option though, I suspect it would have still struck the iceberg but whether the damage would have been breached 5 compartments or not we cannot know, it might have, and the ship would have sank slower maybe allowing the rescue ship to arrive in time.
Option B) Standard practice is to evade obstacles not crash into them, had he done that, he would have probably been severely punished even got prison for it, as its sheer negligence of duty not to mention the hundreds of deaths he would have 100% caused in the bow compartments when they crushed in.
As for C) Murdoch simply dotted the I's and crossed the T's, he just had the misfortune of being the final domino in the sequence of events.
Murdoch reversing the engines definitely wasted precious manoeuvring time to evade the iceberg. I would say maybe, reversing the port side engine while leaving the other two engines full ahead might have allowed Titanic to evade it enough, but, its all conjecture.
I can’t even begin to imagine what was going through the minds of those 2 men in the crows nest. They look and just seemingly out of nowhere that huge iceberg appears. They’re frantically hoping and praying titanic misses it. Sadly it doesn’t. Every officer, crews below deck, and any other personnel of the titanic that night are heroes. God bless every victim who gave the ultimate sacrifice that night. Passengers and crew
Sadly it really was out of nowhere. The still ocean meant no breakers and there was a haze due to refraction so it was like a veil was ripped away pretty much at the last
This song is so sad it’s perfect for the show 😢😭😢😭
it is so sad to see a beautiful thing being swallowed by the water :( rip titanic and the souls who we're taken
Me?
@@andycastellanos225 dont worry, he is having a bad day.
@@rafiqahmed5968The apostrophe causing the emotional crisis is still there after two years, like the evidence on/below the ocean floor.
I can literally understand old officer's feeling.😔
The actor who played the 2nd officer really did an amazing job. I wonder if he’s in anything else.
Yes , he is a great actor
@ladybugmom10. That's Jonny Phillips, a versatile English actor who's done many movies, British TV shows, short films (some as actor, some as director) He excells at Shakespeare, and is seen a lot on stage in England and Scotland. He's got that RADA-trained baritone voice so necessary for live theatre.
Every time I see the numerous stars shining over the Titanic, I think that it is all angels who pave the way for the crashed passengers 🌌🌟⭐🌟⭐🌟⭐🌟⭐🌟🌌
Yeah there R👼👶👼👶 BEAUTIFUL ANGELS 🌟
AS GLORIOUS AS
⭐⭐S H I N I N G⭐⭐
BEAUTIFUL STARS!🌟
AND LOVING CARING🌟 ANGELS🌟🌟 ON THE EARTH PLANE TOO!🌟🌟GODBLESSALLGOOD
ALL BEAUTIFUL 1🌟ALL KIND! CARING! LOVN!🌟 AMO!🌹💚🌹💚🌹💚🌹♡♡=♡=♡♡=♡♡=)=>>
Nobody cares to talk about the late James horner who gave soul to the film. The haunting music 🎵 of Titanic pulled even a layman to feel the saddest tragedy
Took a vacation with my family last year. Road trip kinda thing. Stopped by Pigeon Forge Tennessee to visit the Titanic museum there. That 28* water numbed my hand inside of 60 seconds. Literally takes your breath away. My hand was burning for a half an hour after that.
Siempre te recordaremos
🚢✨👨✈️👨✈️👨✈️
😭😭😭😭😢😭😭
A beautiful tribute video.
Man this edit is amazing. Thank you for putting this together!
This Captain lived in his role in this film, can't imagine the emotion and guilt that the real captain was going through when the accident happened, iceberg sir at 2:25, he also acted awesome although he was in few frames, his suicide will make people love him
Режиссура клипа заслуживает уважения. Очень часто пересматриваю. Спасибо!
I find it hard to believe it's been 109 years
I have a child I'm all you have in this world😨
‘TITANIC’, I guess, was not just that grand ship. It was all those husbands and fathers and brothers and sons who gave the kisses of their final goodbyes that night, to their women and children and sisters and mothers, perhaps knowing that they would never meet again. All men, women and children, who embarked on the finest voyage of their lifetime on the ‘Ship of Dreams’, and ended up freezing to death in the cold dark endless waters of the North Atlantic that night. The captain of the ‘Queen of the Ocean’, the most senior of the White Star Line at the time, proudly in his last voyage before retirement after forty years of service, having to make possibly the most difficult decisions he would ever have to make in his life, having to take actions he never thought he’d have to take, in those two gruesome hours- once the reality strikes , right from having to ‘call for help for the ‘unsinkable’ ( as ironic as it sounds), attempting to save as many of his people on board as he could with half the number of life boats, right down to his decision to go down with his ship; the officers and the crew of Titanic, who were to be known in their careers to have served the finest ship afloat on her maiden voyage, instead going down in history as epitomes of heroism who fought till their last breath to save its people in those most chaotic three hours, the creator of the ‘unsinkable’ deciding to go down with possibly the best creation of his lifetime, the mammoth labours of the boiler room and engine room heroes to keep the power on and buy as much time as possible for the ship till the very end, the wireless operators who kept on calling for assistance for their ship right till they went down, the band that ‘played on’ amidst the cries and wails, and, the ‘Titanic’ herself, ‘the greatest afloat’ even after that massive brutal hit that breached five of her watertight compartments which were known to be her biggest strength, holding on for whole two hours and forty minutes, till she finally founders.. Despite it ending up as the greatest maritime disaster that the world ever witnessed, still, altogether with all the ‘strength’ that the ship carried ( of which the rest of the world got to know with its sinking), I see enough reason why it was ‘altogether’ called the ‘Titanic’.. RIP the great vessel and the 1500 souls who went down that night..
It's a red herring stating binoculars (glasses at the time) would have helped.
They have a limited field of view, in dark night's it's harder to see.
I LOVE TiTANiC
It would have been possible that the crew could have seen the outline of the iceberg further. Apparently they could smell ice?
I could watch this movie 10x a day n never get tired of c ING it
Thank you James Cameron, the world will be forever indebted to you.
If they ever remake titanic , i hope they focusing more to the real passengers's story from vip to low class passengers, engine room's staff, boiler room's staff, the architect, captain n the officer's story ...they all deserved their own appreciation than jack n rose as fictional characters
Amazing music, extremely sombre.
Hard to believe that movie is already 27 years old.😢
I tried to port round it but she hit because I can't drive titanic properly😰😥😢😭
Still WOW? This piece of history and culture! 😍👍👍🤝🙏
Whoever edited this did a fab job! This movie is a masterpiece and will remain etched in my heart forever. Thanks to James Cameron.
If its,true that was so sad
Never feel boring watching this film.
At the ending 🌹reunion with jack is a wonderful gesture from JC love to watch that scene❤❤❤
I have a child I'm all she has in the world
Rip
Captain Smith
Murdoch
Moody
Wilde
and many more heroes
Murdoch did NOT SHOOT HIMSELF!
no he was probably washed out to sea by the wawe when the ship evened out
@@swannywardle
Rip Chief engineer Joseph Bell
❤️❤️BEAUTIFUL MOVIE❤️❤️
😭😭😭 I CAN'T STOP THE TEARS IN MY EYES 😭😭😭😭
I FEEL SO BED ⭕ END SO SAD
😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
PRAYING for ALL SUFRIENDO ~~~~
maybestofloveflourish
⚘⚘♥️⚘⚘♥️⚘💚⚘⚘💚⚘⚘🧡⚘⚘💛
Keep praying as All kind prayers need in world ahorita!👼AMO 🙌 PAŻ🙌 FÉ 🙌👼😇👼🙌👼LOVE♡=♡♡=♡=♡=>
Wow great video and an amazing film r.i.p to all who died on titanic you're never be forgotten!!!
this brings a tear to my eye.😢 before i thought it was a deleted scene or something but then..
Thank you James for this masterpiece and for bringing her back to life with all of her passegers and crew members. We can all agree that Legends never die❤
They did their best, given the circumstances. In moments of extreme crisis, I’ve found people often do.
I always thought less of Lightoller because he was sending out boats so empty. At least Murdoch had the common sense to fill the boats up with men if there was room and no other women/children were in sight.
If you read his transcript it's so he could fill them with floating people.
But also people not wanting to get in didn't help. I guess he thought that would change when they are wet.
The Captain's order was Women & Children First, Lightholler probably mistook the command as Women & Children Only.
@@justinlynch3 Yeah, it really sucks that a lot of crew members then and even today misread that order as only Woman and Children when in reality it is get as many women and children first and if there is any available space, let the men in as well.
Lightoller wasn’t the only one sending the lifeboats out so underfilled and he was really expecting the people he helped into the lifeboats to help more people into them after they were lowered since he feared that the weight of filling them to capacity would cause them to break off of their ropes before reaching the water, but unfortunately, those people did not have the courage to do so. Lightoller at least filled the overturned Collapsible B lifeboat to capacity and had absolutely no problem with those survivors on it being only men.
I'm going to cry 😢
"She's made of iron sir"
"Sure she..can.."
I liked this composition.....
Humankind and our projects ........
My hero
Captain Smith
Henry Wilde
Murdoch
Andrews
Murdoch's Face when He musst tells Titanic hit the Iceberg
6th officer lowe was my favourite he was welsh and that was my nationality.
He was the 5th officer actually, the 6th officer was officer moody (RIP)
@Joba Phett he was 5th officer bro
This is amazing but so sad🥺
The real heroes
Right
✨
May their souls rest in peace ❤
I know,right this was a,really sad
26 years of experience overshadowed Captain smith's commonsense. He thought that seeing the iceberg from a distance, we would turn the ship, and avoid collision, But the ship was too big, and the rudder was small, how could he take such a sharp turn, all his experience was wasted.
Actually 32 years with White Star line, he was actually following a standard practice which was to not slow down but rather travel through the ice field and put the danger behind you as fast as possible. He had also altered course further south to avoid ice. Heinsight is 20/20 and no one besides sceptics could have predicted the events outside of fiction.
The rudder was NOT too small. The same size rudder served the Olympic well for many years. The same for the Britannic.
IF there was a problem with size it would have been detected by the Olympic before Titanic was launched….
Look at the size of rudders on modern ships…
Ships just do not make sharp turns. It can’t happen….
He was sleeping when it happend captain smith so not his decision moron
Aw that's adorable, you actually think a treasure hunter remarks in a movie the writer openly admits to at times thinking more like a storyteller than a historian was right about the design or engine capabilities of the ship.
Actual historians of the ship have outright said that if they had just 30 SECONDS more they would've avoided the iceberg, which was spotted and disappeared into the darkness in not even 40 seconds. Think about that the difference between life and death was JUST 30 seconds, less if you have the berg hit but do non-fatal damage.
The eeriness of this haunts you.
Wonderful tribute.
I will never forget this ship.
Lightoller was VERY lucky. He for sure would've been among the dead had it not been for that boiler explosion. He is my favorite in the movie. SO handsome 😊❤
And if it weren’t for the guidance he gave to the men who were on the upturned Collapsible B lifeboat with him
Ill watch this on 4/14 = April 14
My favorite clip in the movie is the one of Lightoller sliding down that funnel rope, "Cut the falls now! Cut 'em loose!" & Gracie hands him the knife.
Une merveille de technologie à fini ça jeune carrière par une triste fin tout ça par cupidité d un armateur hommage aux passagers disparus 🇨🇵😪😪😪😪😪
Piekne I smutne współczuję im z całego serca 🤗💝Seba podziwiam🏋🏋🏋🏋🏋
this video represents very clearly, that that night for them, maybe there was no tomorrow, Captain Smith accepted his death, as his commanders were there to keep calm
And they got into despair, Sad to see all that they went through in just one night, 😥
She was doomed from the get go. Her and those to be 'lucky' enough to sail along. In memoriam.
This is the best movie in the history' of the cinema
It only we could go back in time!
Titanic i miss you🚢😢😢❤❤❤❤
Yes❤❤
Of all the movies that i had seen titanic is my favorite movies
I wanted to see Mr Andrews' last scene, when he stops the clock (and mark his time of death, accepting it)
He wasn't stopping the clock, he was adjusting the time to be accurate, always the perfectionist.
Murdoch’s actor looked like lightoller, lightollers actor actually looked like Murdoch.
I am crying right now because it’s 😭 I thit not watch it before 😢r.I.p that people that died and whil he just killed somebody and then he feels so selfish so he killed he’s self😢 3:12
It was in the year 1912, when this great ship Titanic, the most modern at that time, was sinking in the north of the Atlantic ocean. It was not because of a careless mistake of the crew, they had just no luck against the big ice in the night, the well-known danger was only discovered too late; more than about 1500 of the 2300 passengers found finnally a cruel death in the cold ocean and had no chance to be saved.
The film Titanic is genuine because there is a person who is an expert inventor. Technology that can see history.
I hope you remember this movie.. it's been a year now...
It's feels too good to sail in any boat or ship and at the same time very scary if there's wind or situation like this.
Una pelicula fantastica que ya es historia por siempre
R.I.P to Bernard Hill “captain smiths “ 2024
E um grande filme! Já vi pelo menos duas vezes na RTP
Everyone needed titanic in their lives
Such a good video. Brave people they were
Me I salute to the Titanic hed captain. He tried to very hard to save the people. 😭 It's very sad story.
Great watch......... Thanks for posting....
Thanks for the video 🤧
Thanks for your love and support
some of these if not all those officers in this video are by far top of the deck hero's while the engineers firemen electrictions are below deck hero's
It's so good❤❤❤❤👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍🚢🚢🚢🚢🚢❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂😍😍😍
I live in Southampton, quite near the docks and regularly see these huge cruise ships, there are streets in town centre where nearly every house lost someone working aboard Titanic sometimes several people, so sad that it was preventable, other ships had slowed or stopped when they received ice warnings but Titanic was full speed at night when the water was eerily calm making bergs difficult to see, apparently Carpathia had to navigate several bergs coming to the rescue………… they were far to arrogant about the ship believed it was unsinkable…. So many lives lost 💔
The Carpathia indeed had several icebergs in her path during her dash for the Titanic. Captain Rostron had ordered extra lookouts to keep an extremely close watch for icebergs while going beyond the maximum speed the Carpathia was built to go and with that, they successfully dodged every one of them.
Gewaltige. Schauspieler!!!!
Great trailer for the movie, well done. James Cameron couldn’t have done it better himself, tell your editor good job.
Good
Man i am still crying to watch this
hidden meaning at 0:26.Titanic in big to us.but not to ocean.
No próximo de 15 de abril de 2023, Titanic fará 111 anos de naufrágio. Será um dia muito triste, pra aqueles que se foram naquela noite fria e gelada!!! 😢
I feel so bad 😭😭
Best movie
Women and Children, he said. ❤ That's a real man.
Yes❤❤
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