Contents

Nothing On Earth Could Come Between Them

1997



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Titanic (1997)  

Directed by 
James Cameron    
  
Writing credits 
James Cameron    
  
Cast (in credits order) verified as complete  
Leonardo DiCaprio ....  Jack Dawson  
Kate Winslet ....  Rose DeWitt Bukater  
Billy Zane ....  Caledon 'Cal' Hockley  
Kathy Bates ....  The Unsinkable Molly Brown  
Frances Fisher (I) ....  Ruth DeWitt Bukater  
Gloria Stuart ....  Rose Dawson Calvert  
Bill Paxton ....  Brock Lovett  
Bernard Hill ....  Captain Edward John Smith  
David Warner ....  Spicer Lovejoy  
Victor Garber ....  Thomas Andrews  
Jonathan Hyde ....  J. Bruce Ismay  
Suzy Amis ....  Lizzy Calvert, Rose's grand-daughter  
Lewis Abernathy ....  Lewis Bodine  
Nicholas Cascone ....  Bobby Buell  
Dr. Anatoly M. Sagalevitch ....  Anatoly Milkailavich  
Danny Nucci ....  Fabrizio De Rossi  
Jason Barry ....  Tommy Ryan  
Ewan Stewart ....  First Officer William Murdoch  
Ioan Gruffudd ....  Fifth Officer Harold Lowe  
Jonathan Phillips (I) ....  Second Officer Charles Lightoller (as Jonny Phillips)  
Mark Lindsay Chapman ....  Chief Officer Henry Wilde  
Richard Graham (I) ....  Quartermaster George Rowe  
Paul Brightwell ....  Quartermaster Robert Hichens  
Ron Donachie ....  Master at Arms  
Eric Braeden ....  John Jacob Astor  
Charlotte Chatton ....  Madeleine Astor  
Bernard Fox (I) ....  Col. Archibald Gracie  
Michael Ensign ....  Benjamin Guggenheim  
Fannie Brett ....  Madame Aubert, Mr. Guggenheim's mistress  
Jenette Goldstein ....  Irish Mommy  
Camilla Overbye Roos ....  Helga Dahl  
Linda Kerns ....  3rd Class Woman  
Amy Gaipa ....  Trudy Bolt, Rose's chambermaid  
Martin Jarvis ....  Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon  
Rosalind Ayres ....  Lady Lucile Duff Gordon  
Rochelle Rose ....  Countess of Rothes  
Jonathan Evans-Jones ....  Band Leader Wallace Henry Hartley  
Brian Walsh (II) ....  Eugene Daly, the Bagpipe Player  
Rocky Taylor ....  Bert Cartmell  
Alexandrea Owens ....  Cora Cartmell (as Alexandre Owens)  
Simon Crane ....  Fourth Officer Joseph Boxhall  
Edward Fletcher ....  Sixth Officer James Moody  
Scott G. Anderson ....  Lookout Frederick Fleet  
Martin East ....  Lookout Reginald Lee  
Craig Kelly (II) ....  Harold Bride, Junior Wireless Operator  
Gregory Cooke ....  John 'Jack' George Phillips, Senior Wireless Operator  
Liam Tuohy ....  Chief Baker Charles Joughin  
James Lancaster ....  Father Thomas Byles  
Elsa Raven ....  Ida Straus  
Lew Palter ....  Isidor Straus  
Reece P. Thompson III ....  Irish Little Boy  
Laramie Landis ....  Irish Little Girl  
Amber Waddell ....  Cal's Crying Girl  
Alison Waddell ....  Cal's Crying Girl  
Mark Rafael Truitt ....  Yaley  
John Walcutt ....  1st Class Husband  
Terry Forestal ....  Chief Engineer Joseph Bell  
Derek Lea ....  Leading Stoker Frederick Barrett  
Richard Ashton (II) ....  Carpenter John Hutchinson  
Sean M. Nepita ....  Elevator Operator  
Brendan Connolly ....  Scotland Road Steward  
David Cronnelly ....  Crewman  
Garth Wilton ....  1st Class Waiter  
Martin Laing (I) ....  Promenade Deck Steward  
Richard Fox (I) ....  Steward #1  
Nick Meaney ....  Steward #2  
Kevin Owers ....  Steward #3  
Mark Capri ....  Steward #4  
Marc Cass ....  Hold Steward #1  
Paul Herbert (III) ....  Hold Steward #2  
Emmett James ....  1st Class Steward  
Christopher Byrne ....  Stairwell Steward  
Oliver Page ....  Steward Barnes  
James Garrett (IV) ....  Titanic Porter  
Erik Holland ....  Olaf Dahl  
Jari Kinnunen ....  Bjorn Gunderson  
Anders Falk ....  Olaus Gunderson  
Martin Hub ....  Slovakian Father  
Seth Adkins ....  Slovakian 3 Year Old Boy  
Barry Dennen ....  Praying Man  
Vern Urich ....  Man in Water  
Rebecca Jane Klingler ....  Mother at Stern  
Tricia O'Neil ....  Woman  
Kathleen S. Dunn ....  Woman in Water  
Romeo Francis ....  Syrian Man  
Mandana Marino ....  Syrian Woman  
Van Ling ....  Chinese Man  
Bjřrn Olsen ....  Olaf Gunderson  
Dan Pettersson ....  Sven Gunderson  
Shay Duffin ....  Pubkeeper  
Greg Ellis (II) ....  Carpathia Steward  
Diana Morgan (II) ....  News Reporter  
Kris Andersson ....  Dancer  
Bobbie Bates ....  Dancer  
Aaron James Cash ....  Dancer  
Anne Fletcher ....  Dancer  
Ed Forsyth (V) ....  Dancer  
Andie Hicks ....  Dancer  
Scott Hislop ....  Dancer  
Stan Mazin ....  Dancer  
Lisa Ratzin ....  Dancer  
Julene Renee ....  Dancer  
Lorenz Hasler ....  Member of Titanic Orchestra 'I Salonisti' (Violin) (as I salonisti)  
Thomas Füri ....  Member of Titanic Orchestra 'I Salonisti' (Violin) (as I salonisti)  
Ferenc Szedlák ....  Member of Titanic Orchestra 'I Salonisti' (Cello) (as I salonisti)  
Béla Szedlák ....  Member of Titanic Orchestra 'I Salonisti' (Double Bass) (as I salonisti)  
Werner Giger ....  Member of Titanic Orchestra 'I Salonisti' (Pavo) (as I salonisti)  
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Adam Barker (II) ....  Cyril Evans, S.S. Californian's wireless operator (scenes deleted)  
James Cameron ....  Brief cameo in steerage dance scene (uncredited)  
Chris Cragnotti ....  Victor Giglio, Manservant to Mr. Guggenheim (uncredited)  
Aimee Amanda Garten ....  Young Female First Class Passenger (uncredited)  
Jo Lynn Garten ....  Older Female Second Class Passenger (uncredited)  
Samantha Hunt ....  Fiddle player, Steerage Musicians (as Gaelic Storm)  
Tony Kenny ....  Deckhand (uncredited)  
Shep Lonsdale ....  Steerage Musicians (as Gaelic Storm)  
Don Lynch (II) ....  Frederick Spedden (uncredited)  
Patrick Murphy (IV) ....  Steerage Musicians (as Gaelic Storm)  
Ellen O'Brien ....  Frozen woman with baby (uncredited)  
Stephen Twigger ....  Steerage Musicians (as Gaelic Storm)  
Francisco Váldez ....  Man being combed for lice (uncredited)  
Stephen Wehmeyer ....  Steerage Musicians (as Gaelic Storm)  
  
Produced by 
James Cameron    
Pamela Easley   (associate)  
Al Giddings   (co-producer)  
Grant Hill   (co-producer)  
Jon Landau    
Sharon Mann (II)   (co-producer)  
Rae Sanchini   (executive)  
  
Original music by 
James Horner    
  
Additional music by 
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart    
  
Cinematography by 
Russell Carpenter    
  
Film Editing by 
Conrad Buff IV    
James Cameron    
Richard A. Harris    
  
Casting 
Suzanne Crowley    
Mali Finn    
Gilly Poole    
  
Production Design by 
Peter Lamont    
  
Art Direction 
Martin Laing (I)    
Bill Rea    
  
Set Decoration 
Michael Ford (I)    
  
Costume Design by 
Deborah Lynn Scott   (as Deborah L. Scott)  
  
Make-up Department 
Laura Borselli ....  key make-up: crowd  
Greg Cannom ....  special age make-up  
Tina Earnshaw ....  key make-up artist  
Simon Thompson ....  key hair stylist  
  
Production Management 
Thomas Clary ....  digital production manager: POP Film (uncredited) 
Grant Hill ....  unit production manager  
Jon Landau ....  unit production manager  
Sharon Mann (II) ....  unit production manager  
Anna Roth ....  unit production manager  
  
Assistant Director 
Kathleen 'Bo' Bobak ....  second assistant director  
Josh McLaglen ....  first assistant director  
Joaquin Silva ....  second assistant director  
Sebastián Silva ....  assistant director  
  
Sound Department 
Tom Bellfort ....  supervising sound editor  
Christopher Boyes ....  sound designer  
Tammy Fearing ....  foley editor  
Lora Hirschberg ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Tom Johnson (I) ....  sound re-recording mixer  
David Kelson ....  additional sound mixer  
Scott Levy (I) ....  sound re-recordist  
Shannon Mills ....  sound effects editor
assistant sound designer  
Gary Rydstrom ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Thomas W. Small ....  foley supervisor  
Gary Summers ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Mark Ulano ....  production sound mixer  
  
Special Effects 
Victor Abbene ....  chief lighting technician: visual effects and additional photography  
Michael Backauskas ....  visual effects editor: Digital Domain  
Glen Baumbach ....  assistant visual effects editor  
Lee Berger (I) ....  visual effects producer: miniature unit, VIFX  
Shawn Broes ....  visual effects editor (uncredited) 
Mark A. Brown ....  chief technologist: VIFX  
Bryan H. Carroll ....  visual effects editor  
Camille Cellucci ....  visual effects producer  
Tim Conway (II) ....  motion control camera operator  
Andrea D'Amico ....  digital visual effects producer: POP film  
Rob Doolittle ....  visual effects offline video editor (uncredited) 
Crystal Dowd ....  visual effects producer digital domain  
Joe Dubs ....  digital artist  
Thomas L. Fisher ....  special effects  
Jason Gaudio ....  assistant visual effects editor  
Chris Holt ....  associate visual effects producer: Light Matters  
Adam Howard ....  visual effects supervisor: POP Film  
Tony Kenny ....  special effects  
John Kilkenny ....  visual effects producer: Digital Domain  
Robert Legato ....  visual effects supervisor  
Brad Lipson ....  gaffer: special effects  
Erik Nash ....  visual effects director of photography: Digital Domain  
Christopher C. Pearson ....  first assistant camera: visual effects  
Donald Pennington ....  special effects supervisor  
Nick Plantico ....  special effects  
Kelly Port ....  lead visual effects artist  
Linda Renaud (I) ....  assistant visual effects editor  
Eugene P. Rizzardi ....  model crew chief  
John E. Sasaki ....  digital compositor  
Tom Seymour ....  special effects crew  
Dennis Skotak ....  special effects artist  
Greg Stewart ....  special effects  
K. Susan Thurmond ....  visual effects co-ordinator  
James Trois ....  special effects  
  
Stunts 
Noby Arden ....  stunts  
Joni Avery ....  stunts  
Mike Avery ....  stunts  
Rick Avery ....  stunts  
Andy Bennett ....  stunts  
Sandy Berumen ....  stunts (as Sandra Berumen) 
Simone Boisseree ....  stunts  
Glenn Boswell ....  stunts  
Janet Brady ....  stunts (as Janet S. Brady) 
Charlie Brewer ....  stunts  
Jill Brown ....  stunts  
Bobby Burns (II) ....  stunts (as Bobby Andrew Burns) 
Debbie Lee Carrington ....  stunts  
Jorge Casares ....  stunts  
John Casino ....  stunts  
Clarke Coleman ....  stunts (as Clarke C. Coleman) 
Simon Crane ....  stunt co-ordinator  
Justin Crowther ....  stunts  
Mark De Alessandro ....  stunts  
Vince Deadrick Jr. ....  stunts (as Vincent P. Deadrick, Jr.) 
Leon Delaney ....  stunts  
Lisa Dempsey ....  stunts  
Paul Eliopoulos ....  stunts  
Annie Ellis ....  stunts  
Dana Dru Evenson ....  stunts  
Dane Farwell ....  stunts  
George Fisher (III) ....  stunts  
Cindy Folkerson ....  stunts  
Terry Forestal ....  stunts  
Lance Gilbert ....  stunts  
Troy Gilbert ....  stunts  
Gary L. Guercio ....  stunts  
Alfredo Gutierrez ....  stunts  
Rusty Hanson ....  stunts  
Anita Hart ....  stunts  
Marcia Holley ....  stunts  
Terry Jackson ....  stunts  
Matt Johnston ....  stunts  
Kim Kahana Jr. ....  stunts (as Kim K. Kahana Jr.) 
Josh Kemble ....  stunts  
Jamie Keyser ....  stunts (as Jamie A. Keyser) 
Svetla Krasteva ....  stunts  
Steven Lambert ....  stunts  
Jamie Landau ....  stunts  
Trisha Lane ....  stunts  
Derek Lea ....  stunts  
Kurt D. Lott ....  stunts (as Kurt Lott) 
Johnny Martin (I) ....  stunts  
Julio Martínez ....  stunts  
Sean McCabe ....  stunts  
Dustin Meier ....  stunts (as Dustin J. Meier) 
Julie Michaels ....  stunts  
Ray Nicholas ....  stunts  
Bernabe Palma ....  stunts  
Jim Palmer ....  stunts  
Jaroslav Peterka ....  stunts  
Diane Peterson ....  stunts  
Tim Rigby ....  stunts  
Terry Rippenkroeger ....  stunts  
Denise Lynne Roberts ....  stunts  
Mario Roberts ....  stunts  
Mic Rodgers ....  stunts  
Danny Rogers ....  stunts  
Lee Sheward ....  stunts  
Lincoln Simonds ....  stunts  
Erik Stabenau ....  stunts  
Cris Thomas-Palomino ....  stunts  
Nancy Thurston ....  stunts (as Nancy Lee Thurston) 
Tim Trella ....  stunts  
Victoria Vanderkloot ....  stunts  
Raleigh Wilson ....  stunts  
Lawrence Woodward ....  stunts  
Nancy Young (I) ....  stunts (as Nancy L. Young) 
Glen Yrigoyen ....  stunts  
  
Other crew 
Mike Amorelli ....  rigging gaffer  
Bernd Angerer ....  digital animator: Digital Domain  
Tim Bailes ....  marine consultant  
Roger Barton (II) ....  associate editor  
Andy Bass ....  assistant music engineer  
Peter Baustaedter ....  digital matte painter: Digital Domain  
Hugo Baylon ....  location assistant  
Miles Bellas ....  digital artist  
Daniel Boccoli ....  apprentice editor  
Paul Bolton ....  electrician  
Bob Bornstein ....  music preparation  
John Bratton ....  set dresser  
David Broberg ....  first assistant film editor  
C. Mitchell Bryan ....  model maker  
James Cameron ....  camera operator 
camera operator camera operator: Titanic deep dive camera (uncredited) 
Robert Catron ....  assistant to Grant Hill  
Alan Chan ....  digital artist: Digital Domain  
Bundy Chanock ....  set medic: San Francisco unit  
Robert Cheung ....  lighting technician  
Hugo Chew ....  transportation co-captain  
Patrick Clancey ....  supervising compositor: The Post Group (uncredited) 
Laureen Clarke ....  construction office co-ordinator  
Marc Cole ....  camera operator: "a" camera second unit 
camera operator: "a" camera second unit 
steadicam operator (as Marcus Cole)
(as Marcus Cole) 
Keith Collea ....  video playback operator  
Tim Collins ....  best boy rigging grip  
Rick Courtney ....  production assistant  
David Crawford (II) ....  inferno compositor: POP Film  
Judith Crow ....  3-D digital effects supervisor  
David Crowther ....  assistant editor  
Rafael Cuervo ....  assistant unit manager  
Charles Darby ....  digital matte supervisor  
Don Davis (I) ....  additional orchestrator  
Chris Dawson ....  motion control camera operator  
Sandy DeCrescent ....  orchestra contractor  
Karl Denham ....  digital artist  
Caleb Deschanel ....  camera operator: Halifax camera
director of photography: Modern Sequences  
Céline Dion ....  vocalist: "My Heart Will Go On"  
Hank Driskill ....  digital ocean software  
Rick Dunn ....  digital compositor  
James Durante ....  assistant editor  
Charles Dwight Lee ....  supervising art director  
Fernanda Echeverria ....  housing co-ordinator  
Michael Edland ....  digital artist  
Jonathan Egstad ....  digital compositor  
Duncan Ferguson ....  special engineer  
Michael J. Fowler ....  computer playback  
Peter Francis (II) ....  set designer  
Aalbers Frank ....  digital artist on set extensions  
Jammie Friday ....  digital compositing supervisor  
Louis G. Friedman ....  production executive  
Gian Ganziano ....  avid supporter: VIFX  
Randy Gerston ....  music supervisor  
John Gibson (V) ....  digital artist: Digital Domain  
Nathalie Gonthier ....  2-D animator  
Jonathan Greber ....  digital transfers  
Bryan Grill ....  lead compositor  
Dylan M. Gross ....  aerial camera  
Claas Henke ....  key compositor: Digital Domain  
Jim Henrikson ....  supervising music editor  
Nicole Herr ....  digital compositor  
Jeff Heusser ....  digital compositing supervisor: CIS Hollywood  
Tony Hinnigan ....  musician: cello solo  
Lynne Hockney ....  choreographer
1912 etiquette coach  
James Horner ....  music producer
orchestrator  
Evan Jacobs ....  miniatures: vision crew unlimited  
Will Jennings ....  lyricist: "My Heart Will Go On"  
Lance Julian ....  marine co-ordinator  
Jeffrey Kalmus ....  color grading supervisor  
Michael Kanfer ....  2-D digital effects supervisor  
Marty Katz ....  production consultant  
Tina Kerr ....  extras casting director  
Richard Kilroy ....  matte artist (uncredited) 
Hilary Klym ....  set builder  
Nicole Kolin ....  location manager  
Zsolt Krajcsik ....  digital artist: Digital Domain
digital artist  
Richard E. Kruder ....  tool crib gang boss (uncredited) 
Paul Kruhm ....  location supervisor: EastWest Locations  
Sissel Kyrkjebř ....  vocalist (as Sissel) 
Lesley Langs ....  assistant music editor  
Mark A. Lasoff ....  digital effects supervisor  
Mary Leitz ....  lead digital compositor  
Kenneth Littleton ....  digital effects supervisor  
Dave Lockwood ....  compositing artist: Digital Domain  
Don Lynch (II) ....  historian  
David Marquette ....  assistant music engineer  
Ken Marschall ....  visual historian  
Ed W. Marsh ....  documentarian  
Ivan Martin del Campo ....  producer's production assistant  
Dominic Masters ....  set designer  
Laura McDermott ....  digital effects co-ordinator  
W. Regan McGee ....  2-D animator  
Gordon McIver ....  grip  
Douglas Miller (II) ....  miniatures: vision crew unlimited  
Glen David Miller ....  digital artist  
Marcus Q. Mitchell ....  software engineer: Digital Domain  
Paul Mitcheltree ....  key rigging grip: Halifax  
Lloyd Moriarity ....  key grip  
James Muro ....  steadicam operator: "a" camera  
Karen M. Murphy ....  digital effects producer  
Shawn Murphy ....  music scoring mixer
music recordist  
Dan Muscarella ....  color timer  
Ken Musgrave ....  digital ocean software  
Edis Mustafovski ....  electrician  
Howie Muzika ....  lead rotoscope artist  
Marco Niro ....  set designer  
Mike O'Neal (II) ....  data integration team leader: Digital Domain  
Warren Paeff ....  assistant editor  
George Palmer ....  vfx camera unit: key grip  
Rocco Passionino ....  character integration artist  
John Paszkiewicz ....  camera operator: additional photography  
Richard A. Payne ....  digital set extension team lead  
Cristin Pescosolido ....  digital compositor: Cinesite  
Darren Poe ....  digital artist: Digital Domain  
Corinne Pooler ....  digital artist  
Alan Precourt ....  technical assistant (uncredited) 
Brennan Prevatt ....  digital artist  
Steven Quale ....  second unit director  
Gig Rackauskas ....  production supervisor  
Joe E. Rand ....  music editor  
Carla Raygoza ....  assistant production co-ordinator  
David Rennie ....  assistant editor  
Deedra Ricketts ....  extras casting  
Edwin Rivera ....  digital compositing supervisor: VIFX  
Margo Romano ....  assistant accountant  
Amy Rosen ....  music co-ordinator  
Jim Rothrock ....  digital ocean software  
Ken Ryan (II) ....  production accountant  
Fran Saidman ....  housing co-ordinator  
Hector Salomon ....  transportation co-captain  
Steve J. Sanchez ....  2-D animator  
Gayle Sandler ....  production accountant  
David Santiago (I) ....  data integration team leader: Digital Domain  
Perry Santos ....  assistant to James Cameron  
Aaron Schneider (I) ....  cameraman: second unit  
Candice Scott ....  digital effects compositor  
Umesh Shukla ....  character integration supervisor: Digital Domain  
Lisa Spence ....  digital effects co-ordinator  
Nick Spetsiotis ....  assistant marine co-ordinator  
Chris Springfield ....  data integration leader: Digital Domain  
John M. Stephens ....  cameraman: second unit  
Daryll Strauss ....  software engineer: Digital Domain  
Ward Swan ....  electric: Halifax unit  
Fred Tepper ....  digital ship model lead  
Jerry Tessendorf ....  computer graphics water developer (uncredited) 
Jim Thomson ....  editor: Avid  
John Trapman ....  camera operator: Wescam camera  
Aristomenis Tsirbas ....  digital artist
simulation sequence animator  
Roy Unger ....  cameraman: second unit  
Fernando Uriegas ....  production assistant on set: Mexico City
production co-ordinator: Mexico City  
Grant Viklund ....  digital technical assistant (uncredited) 
Carey Villegas ....  night compositing supervisor  
Jon Warren (II) ....  miniatures: vision crew unlimited  
Tamara L. Watts ....  digital effects producer: Digital Domain vendors (uncredited) 
Chuck Weiss ....  video assist  
Paolo deGuzman ....  digital rotoscope/textures: Digital Domain (uncredited) 

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TITANIC
                     A film review by Steve Rhodes
                      Copyright 1997 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****):  ****

TITANTIC, writer and director James Cameron's much anticipated and sometimes ridiculed $200,000,000 epic, arrives shortly into the theaters so the question naturally arises, whether the film is worth it? As a business proposition, it seems hard to see how it can ever break even, but as a movie it is nothing short of wonderful.

If you've already neatly categorized it as yet another disaster movie a la VOLCANO or THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE, think again. The movie is both a great love story told with the disaster as a backdrop and a portrayal of one of the world's most memorable disasters made real and personal by seeing it through the eyes of two young lovers. In either case, it is filmmaking at its best.

When we entered the press screening, my wife asked the publicity rep if there would be an intermission since the film runs three and a quarter hours long. He said no but that the time would go by so fast she'd never notice the length. Amazingly, he was right. TITANIC is one of the few long films that doesn't suffer because of it.

The lush picture, filmed by Russell Carpenter in 70mm, opens in the present with two diving subs exploring the wreck of the Titanic on the bottom of the ocean. Fortune hunter Brock Lovett (Bill Paxton) leads the expedition looking for the world's most valuable diamond necklace that went down with the ship, known back then as "the ship of dreams." The necklace's hundred-year-old former owner, Rose DeWitt Bukater (Gloria Stuart), finds Brock to tell him her story.

Although almost all of the movie happens in flashback, one of the engineers shows the elderly Rose exactly how the ship was sunk. Using a computer simulation, the movie takes the time to explain what will happen later, which adds immensely to making a lucid story out of what would have otherwise been hopelessly confusing.

After twenty minutes, the story makes its jump to the past as the Titanic leaves on her maiden voyage. In a classic movie theme, the two parts of the ship, first class and steerage (third-class) exist in sharp contrast. The strength of the script is the way it paints the differences between rich and poor without excessive moralizing.

Entering the ship on its day out is Rose along with her millionaire fiance, Cal Hockley, played with perfect snobbishness by Billy Zane. And thanks to a last minute winning poker hand, an itinerant artist named Jack Dawson gets himself into a little shared cabin in third class. Even with her own promenade deck, Rose feels trapped on the ship, what with an upcoming marriage to a man she loathes. In contrast, Jack can barely contain his euphoria at being on board.

After Jack saves Rose from committing suicide, they start a brief but impassioned love affair. Never tawdry and rarely explicit, their romance has the power to sweep the audience into the story. Leonardo DiCaprio in his best performance ever plays Jack with confidence and charisma. In so many ways, small and large, he makes all the right decisions in his approach to the part. When he confronts Cal, for example, he remains composed and polite and yet subtly undermines every one of Cal's supercilious put-downs.

Kate Winslet gives a wonderfully captivating performance as young Rose. The chemistry between these two Academy Award nominees, him for WHAT'S EATING GILBERT GRAPE and her for SENSE AND SENSIBILITY, is nothing short of astonishing. From the scene where he embarrasses her by repeatedly asking if she loves her finace to the beautiful one of them hanging off the ship's bow to the one where she embarrasses him by asking him to paint her nude, they dazzle the screen with a pair of mesmerizing performances. If the film breaks after an hour and a half, which is how long Cameron wisely waits to have the iceberg show up, you will still get one of the best films of the year.

Peter Lamont's sets are more than authentic. One scene, for example, starts with the planning-to-retire captain, played with insouciance by Bernard Hill, having his tea on deck. It then shifts to the ship's massive gears and then to the bright-hot boiler room filled with sweating muscular men shoveling in the coals. The handsome interior common rooms of the ship resemble a palace more than an ocean liner.

Easily the most fascinating part of the story is what happens after the iceberg hits and before the battle with the water begins in earnest. At first, since the iceberg tears a series of little gashes in the hull, not some big gaping hole, the passengers view the hit as more of curiosity than anything else. What a lark. We've struck an iceberg. Now let's get back to our brandy and cigars.

The ship's musicians play like troopers through it all, even after the panic sets in. After all, they see it as their duty to calm the passengers. When the musicians are about to die, they politely thank each other for the pleasure of being able to play together, and they mean it. Their civility borders on insanity, but it is touching nevertheless.

The story is so rich that my description has merely touched the surface. There are more than enough characters to love and to hate, and all of the casting is dead-on.

Special effects work best when their presence becomes almost undetectable. In TITANIC, for which he created a nine-tenths scale model of the entire ship, Cameron strove for accuracy at all costs. The most dramatic moment in the film happens when the ship breaks in two, and the front section becomes vertical in the water. People are flung like ants either into the water to be shortly frozen to death or into other parts of the ship to be crushed immediately.

Besides being romantic and dramatic, the script includes liberal doses of humor. From the many deliciously subtle verbal put-downs to the physical comedy, as when Jack teaches Rose to spit like a man, the show elicits laughter in addition to perhaps a few tears.

"It's good-bye for a little while," a less than confident father tells his little girl since it was indeed women and children first. "This boat's for mommies and children. There'll be a boat in a little while for daddies." Basically there was a design decision to have fewer than half of the necessary life boats -- it made the decks look too crowded otherwise.

Perhaps the sinking is best summarized by one of the Guggenheim's on-board the ship. In the dining room with the lifeboats gone and the ship certain to sink, he is offered a life jacket by one of the crew. "No thanks," the elegantly attired Guggenheim replies. "We're dressed in our best and would prefer to go down like gentlemen. But we would like a brandy."

TITANIC runs 3:14. It is rated PG-13 for tastefully and delicately presented sex and nudity and would be fine for kids twelve and up.


Have I Seen This Movie: Yes
And What Did I Think?: Titanic was overly hyped way too much and whenever a film has a lot of hype, it produces tons of critics who love to bash the movie. Some people loved Titanic, others hated it. When I first saw it in the theater, I must say that I did love it. Titanic actually does live up to the hype and has a beautiful and compelling story. It's not just about a ship sinking, we all knew the outcome before we went to see the movie. It rather tells the story of Jack and Rose, 2 people from different worlds who meet on board and develop an instant love affair. True, the movie leading up to the iceberg hit could get a little slow at times, and perhaps Titanic could be edited down a bit, but it helps serve to learn about the two characters. My favorite part was after the iceberg hit, where the action really picks up. The effects were fantastic and pretty erie to see some of the people die. And yes, it was sad at the end when we learn Jack's fate. Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet give great performances and are surrounded by some nice supporting cast memebers as well. Titanic was a nice blend of love story and adventure and deserves to be the biggest moneymaker of all time. I give Titanic 5 out of 5 stars.
Review written June 8, 1999

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