"Titanic" (1997) Movie Reaction | First Time Watching

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Pillow Hero

Pillow Hero

Күн бұрын

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Movie Reaction,First Time Watching,Movie Reactions,reaction,Titanic, Titanic reaction, James Cameron, Leonardo DiCaprio

Пікірлер: 553
@jesuismila9673
@jesuismila9673 5 ай бұрын
Titanic is not the kind of film where you completely cry at the final scenes. Titanic is the film that you cry over from the very beginning, when you watch it a second, third, and other times, because you return to the ship with Rose. To Jack.
@monk4ever
@monk4ever 4 ай бұрын
Boooooo 👎
@tristanrcox
@tristanrcox 4 ай бұрын
I agree
@kristinaburton214
@kristinaburton214 4 ай бұрын
I never thought about it that way, thats beautiful
@SassySoda
@SassySoda 4 ай бұрын
My mum cried right at the start when we first saw it in the movies when it came out. She said it's coz she knew the ship was going to sink.
@the3musketeers2468
@the3musketeers2468 4 ай бұрын
REALLLLL
@gwenalyn1410
@gwenalyn1410 2 ай бұрын
The part that gets me the most is where older Rose is saying, “a women’s heart is a deep ocean of secrets” and, “he saved me, in every way that a person can be saved” “he only exists now, in my memory” those parts are so beautifully worded I started bawling
@touchanddie
@touchanddie 23 күн бұрын
Exactly, for 15-23 years old it’s like nothing. But when you get older you understand the whole point of these remarks. Especially, nowadays when everyone is so fixed up on something temporary like TikTok or Insta. There is more than these fleeting posts and expressions- something more valuable
@SeverStreams
@SeverStreams 5 ай бұрын
The people towards the end were trying their hardest to keep the lights on as long as possible on the ship. The electrical breakers were popping out due to the sea water and they kept manually pushing them back inside in order to keep the lights on. They acted selflessly to help others evacuate and gave people the best chance of survival.
@gokulgopan4397
@gokulgopan4397 4 ай бұрын
Most of them were last sighted at the aft well deck during the final moments, very late of course.
@tjjordan4207
@tjjordan4207 4 ай бұрын
It was also the crew who managed to keep the ship afloat for an hour more, all in order to save as many lives as they could. They made a movie solely about that some time back. I can't remember the name.
@dankefurnichts
@dankefurnichts 3 ай бұрын
most important to keep the power alife was also helping that the bilge pumps alive what slowed down the sinking.
@-nicht.der.dulli-
@-nicht.der.dulli- Ай бұрын
Only some fireman survived the entire crew in the engine room died
@LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac
@LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac 7 күн бұрын
If I didn’t know better, I’d swear that she ship was sunk by the sheer weight of those men’s balls.
@bellemane5839
@bellemane5839 4 ай бұрын
The girl reactor (I’m sorry, I don’t know her name) crying when Jack and Rose were in the backseat of the car is honestly one of the sweetest things I’ve ever seen. 🥰
@babbisp1
@babbisp1 Ай бұрын
"Girl reactor" makes her sound nuclear 😂 [Also, 23:09]
@TheFairyintheFishBowl
@TheFairyintheFishBowl 4 ай бұрын
Jack told her to live her life…to have lots of babies and do things…he made her PROMISE! She was honouring his dying wish for her by marrying …it’s what he wanted for her! ❤
@qwerykk1410
@qwerykk1410 4 ай бұрын
but her heart still belongs to Jack. He means the man that comes after jack in her life he's never gonna win her heart and that's the problem with this kind of stories that i too never liked.
@totally5694
@totally5694 4 ай бұрын
@@qwerykk1410 you can love more than one person in your life. she almost was forced into a loveless marriage, I highly doubt she just married the next best man without having feelings for him.
@sassylittleprophet
@sassylittleprophet 4 ай бұрын
Yeah, he wanted her to be happy, even if that wasn't with him.
@bartondonnelly5293
@bartondonnelly5293 4 ай бұрын
The close-ups of Jack sketching Rose is Really James Cameron drawing her. He wrote and directed the film.
@AFoxGuy
@AFoxGuy 4 ай бұрын
She also died in the way he said she would, in a warm bed.
@Stogie2112
@Stogie2112 5 ай бұрын
Rose was 17 when she boarded Titanic in 1912, so she was 101 when she boarded the research vessel in 1996.
@Reformist101
@Reformist101 4 ай бұрын
kate winslet was 21 when titanic was filming
@SassySoda
@SassySoda 4 ай бұрын
Imagine living through all those eras though... Getting to see the 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s... Must have been amazing! And terrifying at times.
@Stogie2112
@Stogie2112 4 ай бұрын
@@SassySoda ... All the more reason for young people to listen to old people, for old people have experienced things that young people can't even imagine.
@Brannas86
@Brannas86 4 ай бұрын
And? The character wasn't 21. People play characters younger than themselves all the time.​@Reformist101
@tjjordan4207
@tjjordan4207 4 ай бұрын
She was close to turning 101 within a month ahead but judging by the fact that she was still on the vessel when she passed, she didn't make it to that age.
@whimsical82
@whimsical82 4 ай бұрын
I saw this movie twice in theaters and never had an experience like it since. Everyone was crying. Absolutely everyone.
@Aka_daka
@Aka_daka 5 ай бұрын
The actress that played the old lady did such a amazing job telling the story don't think you can act much better than that.
@niravgosar2029
@niravgosar2029 4 ай бұрын
It was not the people screaming that was the scariest part but when it got completely quiet
@davidart0128
@davidart0128 4 ай бұрын
The reason she throws the necklace into the sea- you see that she went on to have an extraordinary, beautiful life without the help of Cal. She also does it as a reflection of where her heart truly rests- where she first genuinely falls in love with a soul that she longed to be like.
@Karamarika
@Karamarika Ай бұрын
It's also incredibly selfish. She has denied her children and grandchildren of the wealth that could come from that necklace. She also deprived the explorer from the satisfaction of finally finding it, leaving him forever incomplete. I suppose it is in line with her leaving her mother poor and alone, thinking her daughter is dead. And let's not forget that she then spends her afterlife with Jack, leaving her husband high and dry. Rose makes a lot of very selfish decisions.
@davidart0128
@davidart0128 Ай бұрын
@@Karamarika To each their own. The explorer is consumed by trying to find this one thing that will make him materialistically rich. Not to mention- she doesn't deprive her family of anything other than- once again- being materialistically rich. The point of the movie is that life is too short to be so focused on things that are only temporary. Money may get you the THINGS that you want, but it's not the answer to all of the problems we experience.
@ianloeb1672
@ianloeb1672 Ай бұрын
@@davidart0128that statement may have once held a candle at one point but not anymore money makes everything run in todays world and we now need it just to have a roof over our heads or to have our next meal so no that statement is long dead she was just being selfish
@El_Deini
@El_Deini Ай бұрын
@@Karamarika I think about it like this: -Return the necklace that is precisely called "the heart of the sea" to where it belongs. -Having sold the necklace would mean that he owes Cal something. -Her mother only wanted her to get married to save her economic situation and social status. -There is a deleted scene of the explorer talking to Rose's granddaughter where she tells him that she is sorry he didn't find the necklace and he responds "I never really felt that way" referring to understanding the Titanic. and there is also a deleted scene that makes sense of why Rose throws away the necklace.
@gingerty9628
@gingerty9628 Ай бұрын
​@Karamarika I saw this movie at a drive in theatre when it came out and I never could understand why she didn't give it to her daughter. And also her meeting jack in the end and not her husband.
@RS-bn1ty
@RS-bn1ty 4 ай бұрын
Gloria Stuart, who played old Rose died in 2010. I feel like at the end of the movie it’s obvious Rose died and connected with the people of titanic and Jack that night so she still would have been 100 years old. Gloria Stuart passed at the age of 100. I find this kind of crazy!
@adrianamedeiros6350
@adrianamedeiros6350 4 ай бұрын
I loved this lady🌹
@mgdonner312
@mgdonner312 4 ай бұрын
maybe kate also will lived at 100
@andresramirez5858
@andresramirez5858 4 ай бұрын
Yeah, actually, Old Rose was 101 when she supposedly died at the end of the movie, and Gloria also passed away at that age. One of the curiosities surrounding the mysticism of the Titanic in every ways Also respect for Bernard Hill, the captain who went down with the ship as a true seaman, who passed away yesterday 🫡 RIP Captain Smith
@Foxtrotalex
@Foxtrotalex 4 ай бұрын
I find it strange that when she died she didn't go see her husband who she had a family with (she says it in the movie), she just wants leonardo DiCaprio lollol
@redips123gaming3
@redips123gaming3 4 ай бұрын
My great great grandfather was on the Titanic he was part of the crew he was British so am I he survived I found a picture of him at the Titanic memorial in Southampton,England good looking guy anyway just a little fact about my family
@yanki198
@yanki198 4 ай бұрын
amazing
@JeanPierreAlvaR
@JeanPierreAlvaR Ай бұрын
we´d like to read all the stories he could tell you as possible
@redips123gaming3
@redips123gaming3 Ай бұрын
@@JeanPierreAlvaR unfortunately he is not with us anymore although I would have loved to meet him in person
@shainewhite2781
@shainewhite2781 5 ай бұрын
Winner of 11 Oscars including Best Picture. Its one of the highest grossing films ever made, $2.2 billion dollars at the box office.
@Chris-vk2zw
@Chris-vk2zw 5 ай бұрын
And I imagine it will make more and more with theatrical re-releases.
@RobertWilletts-yk1yv
@RobertWilletts-yk1yv 4 ай бұрын
But the only best picture film not to be nominated for best original screen play
@melodramatic7904
@melodramatic7904 4 ай бұрын
And I am still salty that it didn't get ANY acting noms.
@RobertWilletts-yk1yv
@RobertWilletts-yk1yv 3 ай бұрын
@@melodramatic7904 Wasn't Gloria Stuart nominated for supporting actress and Kate Winslow for best actress.
@thecoolj45221
@thecoolj45221 3 ай бұрын
​@RobertWilletts-yk1yv yeah they were nominated
@Marvin-tu7od
@Marvin-tu7od Ай бұрын
23:02 - 34:00 - 37:39 - 43:04 - 44:16 the moments when the girl (and all of us who love the movie) are crying. We all loved your reaction, and even after having seen the movie dozens of times, we keep crying.
@ivankazantcev7382
@ivankazantcev7382 3 күн бұрын
21:57 She started with a drawing
@TokusaMarudzi
@TokusaMarudzi 4 ай бұрын
40:15 they were trying to keep electricity as long as possible, to have lights etc. True heroes, who had no chance to survive :(
@JamesCarmichael
@JamesCarmichael 3 ай бұрын
Not to mention keeping the wireless on as long as possible. If the Califorian woke up their wireless operator they could have found out what was happening and they were only 12 miles away.
@ryanhelton1865
@ryanhelton1865 Ай бұрын
@@JamesCarmichaelyea but they wouldn’t have made it in time to save anyone. Possibly would have made it around the same time as Carpathia. They’d stoped for the night meaning almost of her boilers apart from one’s keeping electrics running were out of steam pressure. It would take at least 1-2 hours to build that pressure back up. By time the ship would start moving Titanic would b gone.
@JamesCarmichael
@JamesCarmichael Ай бұрын
@@ryanhelton1865 Right. Fair.
@JohnG500
@JohnG500 4 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Leonardo doesn’t actually draw Rose. The director, James Cameron is the one who actually draws Rose. James Cameron also directed Terminator, Aliens, and the Avatar movies. Also, James went down to the actual titanic site in a submarine and that’s the footage you see. He also went down to the Mariana Trench, the deepest part of the ocean, in 2012. He’s one incredible man.
@DougRayPhillips
@DougRayPhillips 3 ай бұрын
And they used the film footage of the wreck to create the lookalike sets. The dummy upper deck was only 100 feet shorter than the real thing. Then all those interiors as well. Part of the $200 million budget.
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
nobody actually thought leonardo was actually drawing her lol. also only a little bit of footbage was actually usded in the movie. most of the scenes are actually a dummy set in a tank
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
@@DougRayPhillips most of the wreck footage is fake of a small titanic wrackage in a tank
@missjenna6449
@missjenna6449 15 күн бұрын
He wrote the movie as an excuse to go down to see Titanic more times. That’s dedication.
@dustan4527
@dustan4527 4 ай бұрын
It’s so sad when rose snaps out of the shock realizing jack is dead. .. it’s just most painful
@rickykrebs6048
@rickykrebs6048 4 ай бұрын
She was so invested and I was here for every second! Love this movie
@scouseofhorror104
@scouseofhorror104 4 ай бұрын
It's okay, 'ugly crying' is not only expected watching Titanic, it's compulsory! Me every time!
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
lol
@ichchhagupta6421
@ichchhagupta6421 4 ай бұрын
No matter how many times you see this movie it brings same emotion every time. The last seen always have you pouring your eyes out.😊
@SaraRoseVaughan
@SaraRoseVaughan 4 ай бұрын
I'm just an enthusiast, but I've been researching and studying the disaster and ship for most of my life. I'm just here to do a little fact-checking on the real event since many people equate facts with the movies (which are pretty inaccurate). I'm just going to name a few of the bigger misconceptions frequently thrown around by these movies. 1. Titanic was not poorly made and no cuts were made to save money. Her rivets, for 1912 standards, were perfectly fine. She was built to the same standards as her older sister, Olympic, who survived the first world war and even rammed and sank a U-boat. When Olympic was scrapped in 1935, her hull was in great condition. 2. Titanic carried more lifeboats than required by British maritime law. The law for a ship her size was a minimum of 16 boats. She actually carried 20, but sank too quickly for all of them to be lowered by the davits as intended. There was never a time during the sinking when the ship was devoid of lifeboats- except for her final plunge. 3. Third class was never locked below decks, at least not intentionally. Those scary iron gates only existed to keep passengers away from machinery. Passenger barriers were usually waist-high gates, ropes, or plain doors. There was an emergency door connecting the grand staircase to Scotland road. If Titanic (1997) was accurate in this regard, Rose wouldn't have had to stumble around as much as she did. 4. Titanic was never built for speed and was never intended to break a speed record. She was going full speed the night she sank, but that was common practice for a passenger liner with a tight schedule to keep. They had not seen any danger and weather was perfect. Too perfect. It was actually that 'perfect' weather that caused the iceberg to remain hidden over the horizon in a cold-weather mirage. No ship of the time could have survived the damage Titanic received. 5. Personal gripe. I'm tired of these Titanic movies acting like third class passengers were treated like flea-ridden paupers housed in darkness. They had running water, heating, electricity, cabin stewards, access to a hospital, and three meals a day. They had clean, comfortable cabins with luxuries many of them likely had never encountered before. Their tickets were far cheaper than a first class ticket, but your average third class ticket would cost around $700 today per person. It was an expensive endeavour to travel across the Atlantic, and the White Star Line focused on making their shipping line the most luxurious choice with whom to travel. 6. In regards to the book Futility; or The Wreck of the Titan, while it is very similar, and was when originally written, to Titanic, many of it's creepiest similarities were retroactively added following Titanic's sinking. Titan was also not an Olympic class ship. 7. Bruce Ismay was not the villain. He was chairman of the White Star Line, inheriting the position after this father's death in 1899. He was an excited, but reserved, man with a passion for building ships bigger and better. With the Olympic class, he spared no expense. On Titanic, he was a passenger, not an officer. During the sinking, he helped lower lifeboats and nearly put himself in a panic trying to get everyone off. When he did leave the ship, and there's evidence Officer Murdoch issued him into the boat, he did so when the deck was very empty and seemingly all women were gone. He did not realise that hundreds of women and children were still on board, either on the port side of the ship or on the poop deck. He was made a scapegoat by an enemy of his who owned much of the American media, William Randolph Hearst. Ismay's life was shattered and he would never be the same man again. It's easy to blame him for everything, but no one is perfect and he was just a man trying to run his company as best he saw fit. At the time, Titanic was the safest vessel on the seas, and I'm not just saying that to be dramatic. Her safety features far exceeded anything any other shipping line could offer.
@paulinerobertson6836
@paulinerobertson6836 4 ай бұрын
thank you for these,very interesting.
@jimglenn6972
@jimglenn6972 4 ай бұрын
Very true and also, at the time, the accepted wisdom was to speed up thru the ice danger zone so as to get thru it as soon as possible. It seems odd for us today but they were following the guidelines. Titanic was following a set route. Often you could see other ships on that route. Titanic was unlucky. The lifeboats weren’t supposed to hold people for a long time. They were supposed to ferry people from the stricken ship to a rescue ship but that didn’t happen. At the time, there were no or little practice with the boats and the passengers had none. This was the Captain’s final voyage before retirement and sadly he frozen and provided no leadership. A great movie, though.
@SaraRoseVaughan
@SaraRoseVaughan 4 ай бұрын
@jimglenn6972 Eh, you're sort of right. They did do lifeboat drills, so the crew knew what they were doing. Passengers, not so much. There's also no definitive proof Captain Smith was due to retire after Titanic's completed crossing. It was just a rumour that would never be confirmed. There's also no evidence that he offered no leadership during the sinking, quite the opposite, in fact. I'm certain he felt some shock, but he was active the whole night. There's also some misinformation on Titanic's speed. She wasn't speeding, so to speak, she was just going her usual speed. She and her sisters were never built for speed. She just happened to be so well designed that she was a bit faster than intended. In any case, it wasn't her speed that did her in, but a number of factors such as the weather and lack of moonlight.
@enicole1203
@enicole1203 Ай бұрын
I heard a conspiracy theory about a year or so ago, I wish I could remember the details but it had to do with the identity of the Titanic being swapped with its sister ship the Olympic before sailing, and something about it being for insurance purposes, and it was actually the Olympic that sank. Have you heard that one?
@MargeauxKazda
@MargeauxKazda 3 күн бұрын
Thanks that is so interesting 😮😊
@Elysia63
@Elysia63 5 ай бұрын
Rose: "I'm flying!" Me: That's not flying. That's *standing* ...with STYLE!
@MissTV36
@MissTV36 5 ай бұрын
Never heard that one before.
@Elysia63
@Elysia63 5 ай бұрын
@@MissTV36 Lol
@chalaysamorris1843
@chalaysamorris1843 4 ай бұрын
Toy Story but not....
@Elysia63
@Elysia63 4 ай бұрын
@@chalaysamorris1843 But not what?
@sibis8336
@sibis8336 4 ай бұрын
Me im floating
@gamingwithevan8545
@gamingwithevan8545 2 ай бұрын
The saddest thing about this movie is that its based on a true story. I can’t even imagine what the real passengers, crew, and animals had to endure that night
@tjjordan4207
@tjjordan4207 4 ай бұрын
Something that I later realized about the Diamond (The Heart of the Ocean) is that it was with Rose throughout the tragedy after she put on Cal's coat, especially during the moment she promised Jack that she would survive and live a long happy life. That's why she kept it and never sold it, because it was the reminder of her promise to Jack. Plus, it was the only thing she was wearing when Jack drew her nude. Even Rose admitted that the diamond felt heavy when wearing it for the first time, but that was when it was soulless and meaningless, much like her relationship with Cal. But with Jack, that weight meant something. It went from being a very prized item to being priceless. That's why when she was throwing it into the ocean at the end of the movie, because she knew her end was coming and didn't wish for it to once again become what Cal made it out to be. Also, I love that her new life began at sea, and it ended at sea.
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
which is dumb. that could have provided a lot for her family after her death
@emmalouisedickinson9407
@emmalouisedickinson9407 3 күн бұрын
I love how she through the diamond necklace into the ocean. It's making a physical act for the metaphor, that money/material things are not what's important in life, love, compassion, family and friends, experiences is all that counts at the end. You can't take wealth/material things into death, live life to the full, you only get one shot at life
@pedronavaja4837
@pedronavaja4837 4 ай бұрын
Interesting fact: the chef who held on to the stem of the Titanic along with Jack and Rose actually existed; the amount of alcohol in his system helped him survive the icy north Atlantic waters. His name was Charles Joughin.
@bubbletae0753
@bubbletae0753 4 ай бұрын
@stevenbrown6593they are saying that he was actually real and the story was true
@AlexWood-k1s
@AlexWood-k1s 4 ай бұрын
@stevenbrown6593you’re a doughnut
@tjjordan4207
@tjjordan4207 4 ай бұрын
If only Jack drank what he was drinking.
@JackBright8899
@JackBright8899 Ай бұрын
yeah​@@tjjordan4207
@kens97sto171
@kens97sto171 Ай бұрын
True, In the movie "A Night To Remember" he is shown more.. also the old couple in the bed is explained in that movie.. It also covers the rescue ship.. the Carpathia .. Its a more accurate historical movie.. except they don't show the ship breaking in half.. that was not known for sure at the time, and would have been impossible to film well at that time.. 1958 I think.
@BigGator5
@BigGator5 5 ай бұрын
"Jack, I want you to draw me like one of your French girls. Wearing this..." "All right." "Wearing ONLY this." Fun Fact: After finding out that she had to be naked in front of Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet decided to break the ice, and when they first met, she flashed him. Historical Fact: The scenes set in 1912, i.e. the whole movie except the present-day scenes and the opening and ending credits, have a total length of two hours and forty minutes, the exact time it took for Titanic to sink. Also, the collision with the iceberg reportedly lasted 37 seconds, which is how long the collision scene is in the movie. Table Flipping Fact: It was rumored for many years that the breakfast scene in which Cal violently flips the table was an ad-lib by Billy Zane and Kate Winslet's reactions were real. In an interview for the film's 25th anniversary, Zane clarified that while the decision to flip the table was made the day the scene was shot (which took about half a dozen takes), it would have been "dangerous and inappropriate" to improvise considering the glassware flying about, which could have injured Winslet if it had gone wrong. Food Poisoning Fact: On the final night of shooting in Nova Scotia, one or more criminals mixed dissociative hallucinogen PCP (Angel Dust) into the clam chowder served to the cast and crew. 80 people were taken ill, and more than 50 were taken to the hospital (87-year-old Gloria Stuart was fortunately spared because she had dined elsewhere). Initially, shellfish poisoning was suspected, but when James Cameron noticed that one crew member was demanding to see a priest, the director of photography was leading a conga line, and the assistant director was talking to Cameron over a walkie-talkie while looking straight at him (she even stabbed him in the cheek with a pen when he brought this up to her), he realized that the chowder had been spiked with hallucinogenic drugs. In absence of a purging agent, he forced himself to vomit before the drug took full effect; his blood-shot eyes afterwards frightened other crew members into thinking that it was another side effect of the drug. Bill Paxton felt listless for two weeks after the incident (although PCP's primary effects only last a few hours, the drug itself can take eight or more days to completely metabolize out of the body). The culprit(s) were never caught; some disgruntled crew members who had been fired were suspected, but Cameron himself always believed that it was an ex-crew member who had had an argument with the caterer, and subsequently poisoned the chowder in an attempt to get the caterer fired as well.
@enicole1203
@enicole1203 Ай бұрын
What... the ACTUAL heck
@Altontowersthorpepark
@Altontowersthorpepark Ай бұрын
“When they 1st met,she flashed him” 😭😭
@LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac
@LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac 7 күн бұрын
Another fun fact: Lake Wissota (a manmade reservoir) wasn’t dug until several years later… I want to say 1916 or 1918. My great-grandparents moved from Denmark to about 30 miles from Lake Wissota in the mid 1900s, and my grandpa was the one to tell me this 😆
@LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac
@LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac 7 күн бұрын
That PCP story though holy SH*T thats terrifying and completely fk’ed up
@Traveler89_89
@Traveler89_89 4 ай бұрын
This by far is one of the best reactions to this film I have seen. The tears really found yall. I think we all cried with this film.
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
you base reactions of of tears 🤦‍♂
@bartsimpsonsimpson3367
@bartsimpsonsimpson3367 4 ай бұрын
This is one of the best movies of all time. No matter your age.
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
no its not
@domingocurbelomorales8635
@domingocurbelomorales8635 5 ай бұрын
R.I.P. Bill Paxton, a great actor here and in other films (Aliens, Terminator, Twister, etc.). This movie it´s simply "titanic" as well. I saw it in theathres, with 10 years old, and at least two times more (as others in that time).
@starrysnow7445
@starrysnow7445 4 ай бұрын
Rip Captain Benard Hill 🙏🏿
@monkmode9853
@monkmode9853 3 ай бұрын
Is that Jack ?? He dead now?? I remember watching this when i was like 5-6yo
@AnastasiaSaenz
@AnastasiaSaenz Ай бұрын
@@monkmode9853 Bill Paxton is Mr. Lovett, looking in search of the rare blue diamond (I forgot the name of it) for material reasons - he also starred in True Lies with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis as "Simon/Carlos", the sleazy "car salesman" while Leo DiCaprio, portrays Jack Dawson
@AyAy008
@AyAy008 4 ай бұрын
Saw Titanic for the first time last year during its re-release. I went back to see it two more times the same week and two more times the following.
@pedronavaja4837
@pedronavaja4837 4 ай бұрын
I remember when my friends and I wanted to watch the movie at Universal CityWalk after getting off work right next door at the park. The movie was sold out for every auditorium, and they even had security at every entrance; and most of the auditoriums were playing it for a week!
@AyAy008
@AyAy008 4 ай бұрын
@@pedronavaja4837 AMC City Walk and AMC Burbank 16 are the only movie theaters I go to. If it's for a somewhat popular movie, you're gonna have to buy the tickets online.
@RandomYTUser34
@RandomYTUser34 6 күн бұрын
I watched this in the cinema when it was released. My mind was completely blown. 27 years later, I still watch it, and it gives me so many goosebumps. It's one of my favourite movies of all time. Leonardo Dicaprio and Kate Winslet were insanely good in it, too ❤
@ottocarson
@ottocarson 4 ай бұрын
It's funny watching the different reactions of both of them. He doesn't stop talking and talking, nothing interesting. She doesn't speak, but says it all, she is feeling the movie. At this point 23:06 you can see what I mean. He just watched a film about a ship, she watched the love story she never had and always dreamt of.
@dkuhs
@dkuhs 4 ай бұрын
True 👍
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
🤦‍♂
@cornezane
@cornezane 4 ай бұрын
When my wife and I went to see this movie when it first came out. We were not expecting for it to be this good. We went back a couple of weeks later this time with friends to watch it again.
@InterestsMayVary2234
@InterestsMayVary2234 4 ай бұрын
My husband and I got married the year it came out. We took my parents to see it. It was slightly awkward watching the nude scene with my mother. Lol
@MARS0l
@MARS0l 5 ай бұрын
Such a great reaction. Felt like I was watching it for the first time again too with all the emotions.
@gothicgorey
@gothicgorey Ай бұрын
Watching for first time ? Where you been ?
@erosson27
@erosson27 3 ай бұрын
The crew of the Carpathia risked everything to try and save them..... They should make that into a movie.
@ChrissonatorOFL
@ChrissonatorOFL Ай бұрын
For the engine room, they used a real engine that was a perfect scale to the real engine room, filmed in high speed to add some mass to them. They built an almost full size set of one side of the Titanic inside a tank that allowed them to separate and lower sections into water, as well as a rather large miniature for scenes like the huge helicopter shot after Jack screams "I'm the king of the world!"
@emmalouisedickinson9407
@emmalouisedickinson9407 4 күн бұрын
He did put pressure on the captain in real life to speed up. I always liked how they mixed truth with fiction in this movie.
@jackhambleton882
@jackhambleton882 Ай бұрын
27:54 This line from Cal reflects the social spectrum of 1912 too - he labels the upper classes as the “better half”, and completely disregards the fact that working class people have such little chance of survival compared to people of his class.
@DevolaPopola
@DevolaPopola 5 ай бұрын
24:20 the damage would’ve been less yes, and the ship would likely be afloat after ramming the iceberg head on. but first officer murdoch didn’t know that, nor did he want to even damage the ship if he could just swing around it. it would’ve made no sense without hindsight to just crash into the ice when they see it and still have time to try to turn. murdoch would’ve been fired if not suffered legal punishment if he saw the berg and didn’t turn. it just didn’t work out for them…
@geneaikenii1092
@geneaikenii1092 5 ай бұрын
Great film. Such a good love story. Superb acting. Thank you, guys, for choosing this picture to react to. And your girls tears...beautiful. Be seeing you on the next. Big shoutout from the mountains of Gatlinburg, Tennessee. U.S.A. Much peace and lots of love. Later, y'all.
@brendabonatto
@brendabonatto 4 ай бұрын
My God, what a precious find!!! I always cry at the end, no matter how many times I watch it!!! And I cried watching this again with you guys! I loved the video!!!
@blackpowder99
@blackpowder99 Ай бұрын
I've been fascinated with Titanic my entire life, but when they found it in '85 it might as well been King Tut or a UFO
@kimguerrero8069
@kimguerrero8069 Ай бұрын
I don't even know how many times I watched it more than a couple hundred I'm sure and I still cry to this day it's such a wonderful movie
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
lol
@Atheena83
@Atheena83 24 күн бұрын
I was at the Titanic premiere in cinema 1997 at the age of 14. At that time, no one knew how difficult the film would be for emotions. Grave silence the whole movie, jaws down. Everyone cried at the end! Men and women. I cried even on the way home on the bus :-) After 27 years, nothing has changed. Still the same feelings and chills and tears. Titanic, Green mile and Schindler's list are in my top 5. Beautifully strong films with a point. Masterpieces ❤
@alishamerriman9338
@alishamerriman9338 4 ай бұрын
I still remember hearing that the sunrise in the background when Jack and rose where on the ship was by accident. They have been trying for hours to get the right lighting but it wouldn't work so they called a break. Suddenly it happend and rose noticed she yelled out and everyone scrambled together to get the shot. Unfortunately it was the wrong angle and they took it, pasted it and flipped it which is why the angle looks off
@MarcusN-kp1jn
@MarcusN-kp1jn 4 ай бұрын
One of those movies you can watch several times and somehow still have hope that it won't hit the iceberg, and even if it does, you hope that it won't sink, and even if it does, you hope Jack survives. It tricks my brain every time and therefore has massive rewatchability.
@prodbyed4549
@prodbyed4549 2 ай бұрын
Remember, jack told her to go live her life and have babies. From his point of view, if you truly love someone, you would want them to be happy, with or without you. Jack got on the boat living life as if its his last day, which it was. Rose got on the boat not wanting to live anymore, her dad died and her mom was basically pimping her out to richest man she could find. Its sad, but not everyone wants their partner to just give up hope after they die, they want them to live. Get married again, fall in love.
@PillowHero-jd6ie
@PillowHero-jd6ie 2 ай бұрын
But she never did. Jack is the only one she loves, and he taught her to do what she wants, not what people tell her to do. But then again, she just listens to what he says.
@prodbyed4549
@prodbyed4549 2 ай бұрын
@@PillowHero-jd6ie I think rose felt like she had no control of her life. Jack liberated her from that. Yes, she listened to him but it was her choice to do so, she wasn’t forced. When he died, she could have easily just laid there and died too but when the boat came to find people she got up and chose to live once more, no Jack. That lady with her in the beginning was her granddaughter, so she did find love again. She just didn’t forget Jack. “I won’t let you go”.
@cyberaddictful
@cyberaddictful 26 күн бұрын
It was a phenomenon back then we wanted to watch it over and over again......
@user-te3xh9pn9c
@user-te3xh9pn9c 8 күн бұрын
Rose died in her sleep, warm in her bed and accomplished all the things like jack wanted her to do so. And then they reunited in heaven happily after. I always cry watching this movie no matter how many times I watch it. Best movie ever made. Thanks for James Cameron for this piece of art.
@maxacorn
@maxacorn 4 ай бұрын
the set for titanic was designed to rise and sink into a gigantic tank of water, due to cameron wanting the sinking to accurate. it should be noted than many of the actors and extras were injured, got sick and/or nearly died during the filming of the sinking scenes. crazy, right?
@di3486
@di3486 4 ай бұрын
Imagine going to the movies by yourself to watch this movie. I never cried during a movie so much (maybe Schindler’s list is the only one that tops it).
@domingocurbelomorales8635
@domingocurbelomorales8635 5 ай бұрын
And the specialist, like you said, think that if the Titanic had gone straight probably floated. Turning it, the destiny was to sink.
@mastixencounter
@mastixencounter Ай бұрын
so you would purposely run into an iceberg head on in the middle of the ocean?
@marcuscarana9240
@marcuscarana9240 21 күн бұрын
Adding fictional characters was the best route for this film. The non-fictional passengers represented the actual victims and survivors. The fictional characters Rose and Jack represented the non-fictional sense of love, lost and survival those passengers went through. While the passengers were there to represent actual people. Jack and Rose were there to represent what those passengers would have felt.
@jediahpesu6673
@jediahpesu6673 24 күн бұрын
I found myself crying just reacting to your reactions. Bless you both!
@LukeLovesRose
@LukeLovesRose 4 ай бұрын
Titanic is one of the three great romantic epics in film history. In my opinion, Titanic ranks right up there with Gone With The Wind and Casablanca. It was and is the greatest movie-going experience of my life. Thats after Lord of The Rings, Avatar and the entire MCU saga.
@Stogie2112
@Stogie2112 5 ай бұрын
Director James Cameron intentionally left the ending open, so that audiences could decide for themselves if Rose passed away that night or if she was asleep and dreaming of Jack. My view is that she was dreaming of Jack. She had never mentioned Jack to anyone for over 80 years. After finally reliving her experience of Titanic and her love of Jack, how could she not dream of him that night?
@PillowHero-jd6ie
@PillowHero-jd6ie 5 ай бұрын
More seems like she has joined all other members on Titanic...
@dylanluffy334
@dylanluffy334 5 ай бұрын
​@@PillowHero-jd6ie you are wonderful I love your KZbin channel watch 12 years a slave and Philadelphia they are wonderful films and Breveheart too
@myTERAexperience
@myTERAexperience 5 ай бұрын
​@@dylanluffy334 😅 at first thought u said ud been watching them for 12 years, i was like wut. 😂
@Stogie2112
@Stogie2112 5 ай бұрын
@@myTERAexperience .... Methinks "dylan" is allergic to using punctuation. 😉
@etgamer0771
@etgamer0771 4 ай бұрын
​@@PillowHero-jd6ieNo bro cats never act like dogs cats that type of animal which is sit on your bed to nothing like laziness but other side dogs super active they give you 100% attention
@SkylarkWestern
@SkylarkWestern 12 күн бұрын
The guy didn’t even blink once and the girl boiled her eyes out crying lol
@jeonprincess2862
@jeonprincess2862 18 күн бұрын
😂😂😂Oh my God, you wouldn't believe how I feel now. I watch the entire video and see that the man's facial features only changed once, but the woman's changed 100 times. That made me laugh a lot.
@Shellene2024
@Shellene2024 5 күн бұрын
My favourite part of this movie is when Rose known as Kate Winslet discovered herself in the picture on the TV ! That was my favourite scene !!!
@charles7836
@charles7836 5 ай бұрын
I've watched from a couple of sources that James Cameron had the ship recreated and constructed at about 80% the actual size of Titanic, to use for the film. I just don't know how true it is.
@gokulgopan4397
@gokulgopan4397 4 ай бұрын
One side of the ship was recreated. The set was 90% size of the original ship. There are so many behind the scenes footages of the film. They also built a 1/20 size miniature model for the larger shots that show the whole ship.
@eembers
@eembers 5 ай бұрын
Ohhhhhh I’m so happy to see you two again! Looking forward to crying along with you ❤️
@PheebsandHen
@PheebsandHen 2 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this at the cinema when it first came out, I was about 12 and absolutely in love with Leonardo DiCaprio. I saw it 8 times in the cinema and remember seeing so many other teenage girls weeping. It was a real phenomenon and I had hundreds of Titanic posters in my bedroom. Remember when it first came out, nobody knew Jack dies. Many of the characters in the film were real, like Molly Brown, Mr Ismay and the Captain who did go down with the ship. There was some artistic licence and difference to how they were in real life.
@flyleelee5351
@flyleelee5351 Ай бұрын
I was 11, seeing it in the theater
@brittanygidley1291
@brittanygidley1291 4 ай бұрын
so the scene where he says sit on the bed, the couch, that wasn’t part of the script he messed up, they kept it in. so the guy in this that’s trying to find the necklace, he was in twister, he sadly passed away tho. 7:41 i love her lol she plays in other movies including misery. the scene with the mom talking to her kids in their bed gets me cause i have a daughter and she’s only 9, and then the baby scene in the water is sad too. i know the love story didn’t really happen in the real titanic, i believe that the people laying in the bed the old couple someone said something about them owning macys? idk i saw it somewhere.
@InterestsMayVary2234
@InterestsMayVary2234 4 ай бұрын
They were named Strauss, and you're right, they owned Macy's.
@steven2640
@steven2640 5 ай бұрын
No woman can fight tears watching this film for the first time. It's almost like what 'Rudy' does to men.
@MrTroyi07
@MrTroyi07 4 ай бұрын
Trust me, men neither
@tracyleesmith781
@tracyleesmith781 18 күн бұрын
My sister lost her fiancee that year due to leukemia & he was 22 years old. She told me this after we saw this movie at the theater. So, luckily, they had a baby & her fiancee asked me to be a godmother when i was 16 before he passed away. I took that promise that i wouldn't ever stop my duty to look after her & guide her. Thanks to this movie bc my sister was abled to move on & live a happy life. And me on the other hand, 26 years later watching my niece grew up & just had a baby boy named after her deceased father, it was a honor. And her father's spirit is very proud. ❤
@Cloudetower
@Cloudetower 23 күн бұрын
LMfao my son saw this for the first time this summer and it took him a week to recover.Randomly he would stare in to nothing and and be like "the ship sank"
@esthergift8373
@esthergift8373 13 күн бұрын
So sad! 😢
@jeanpierre9164
@jeanpierre9164 Ай бұрын
O diretor sabe como emocionar. Um filme histórico até os dias atuais. Assisto toda vez que passa na TV.
@Kefloof
@Kefloof Ай бұрын
She was 17 when she boarded the ship. Even if Jack was her first love it would be so unhealthy if she never had another relationship for her entire life until dying at 101
@jcarlovitch
@jcarlovitch 5 ай бұрын
Running straight into it would have been better is the biggest myth. The inertia of a ship that heavy hitting an iceberg of that size would have buckled the whole length of both side and broke the ships back causing it to sink much faster and the amount of blunt force injuries caused to the crew and passengers would have easily exceeded the deaths that did occur. Furthermore, the officer of the deck would have to be insane not to try and avoid a collision.
@iKvetch558
@iKvetch558 5 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/jIaxemt9o7miesk
@trudim6024
@trudim6024 5 ай бұрын
I was going to say something similar. This point has come up several times on Reddit etc. Apparently there were around 200 workers sleeping in the front section of the ship. There’s no way that Murdoch (or any officer) would deliberately sacrifice all of those people in that moment. They also couldn’t have anticipated the severity of the damage that would come from scraping along the side.
@gokulgopan4397
@gokulgopan4397 4 ай бұрын
Not just that, but the 12 of 15 vertical watertight doors at tank top level were automatic. The rest of them above were manually closing horizontal doors. Crew response would be delayed due to the sudden impact shock. This might give time for the bow to flood.
@nightland02
@nightland02 22 күн бұрын
I think they used miniature models to do the water damage scenes it was really cool how they took it and brought it to life!
@myTERAexperience
@myTERAexperience 5 ай бұрын
I loved the photos at the end, showing she lived her life doing anything and everything. Kept her promise. Have you two seen Bullet Train yet? It's recommended!
@no.idkmyname
@no.idkmyname Ай бұрын
jack wanted to live , rose wanted to die . jack died for rose and rose lived for jack
@itt23r
@itt23r 4 ай бұрын
I like the alternate ending where Rose goes back to the ship after she dies and Cal is there too with his gun to chase her and Jack around again like he did before.
@EdgarPina-dn4hc
@EdgarPina-dn4hc 4 ай бұрын
14:44 thank you for noticing, not CGI at all, when movies were actually movies and not animation as today.
@steven2640
@steven2640 5 ай бұрын
To be fair to the story Jack did tell her to move forward in her life, be happy, get married, have children. They were young and only knew each other a few days. It would be a miserable existence to never find love again after almost 90 years.
@PillowHero-jd6ie
@PillowHero-jd6ie 5 ай бұрын
Well, she actually didn't since she thought about him and came to him in the end.. I believe Jack was her only love. She was ready to sacrifice herself only to be with him a little longer
@steven2640
@steven2640 5 ай бұрын
@@PillowHero-jd6ie You make a good point. lol
@ansal2525
@ansal2525 5 ай бұрын
Back then, It was easily understood why Rose threw the diamond into the ocean. It's terrible when people say "My God! Why did she threw such a valuable diamond."
@jonnyhandsome5193
@jonnyhandsome5193 4 ай бұрын
I loved their reactions. They are so sweet. They reminded me my first time I saw the movie in the cinema
@iKvetch558
@iKvetch558 5 ай бұрын
There is a great channel called Ocean Liner Designs that has done a bunch of videos about Titanic. They have done one about the few things that this movie got wrong, and they have made another one regarding what might have happened if Titanic hit the iceberg straight on...spoiler alert, she probably would not have sunk. 👍
@Amsayy
@Amsayy 4 ай бұрын
Love our friend Mike Brady from ocean liner designs
@cvdm9663
@cvdm9663 5 ай бұрын
Loved this reaction.
@user-pw8zd7ns3p
@user-pw8zd7ns3p 22 күн бұрын
I'm probably one of a minority of women who don't care at all about Jack or Rose, but I will develop a serious headache crying for literally everyone else on that ship and in the water as soon as the musicians start to play their last song. I was five when I saw it, it's the first film I remember going to see at the cinema, and Tommy has always been my favorite character. The officers rank next on the list (but that didn't happen until I was much older. Those uniforms ❤❤)
@neontyler6663
@neontyler6663 4 ай бұрын
*A FVCKING MASTERPIECE!* i’ll pay for another life to watch this film for the first time again. 😭🥺❤️ God even this day this film never fail to make me cry 😭
@TheProphegy
@TheProphegy 3 күн бұрын
I want to give her a big hug. Very sad film, one of the best.
@billoftheuniverse3932
@billoftheuniverse3932 4 ай бұрын
the lady is so empathic. She looks so worried int he 2nd half. Like she doesn't already know.
@Swissswoosher
@Swissswoosher 4 ай бұрын
What is really interesting is that, while people start panicking early on in this movie, I’m reading a survivors account, which states that people were very calm in real life, even as the lifeboats were lowered.
@NutellaToast-q7z
@NutellaToast-q7z Ай бұрын
Its so cute shes crying 😭❤️
@superhayes256
@superhayes256 4 ай бұрын
The part that broke me was when she said she doesn’t even have a picture of Jack. Can you imagine not being able to ever look at a photo of someone who saved your life and had such a huge impact on you? Just heartbreaking.
@94djanek
@94djanek 5 ай бұрын
24:10 thanks that you noticed itxD this is way i Like to watch movie without maincharacters or after the sighting "Fun" facts: 1. Eric braeden (character: John Jacob Astor) went as a child on Board of ship gustloff. He Survived the biggest ship desaster (gustloff 1945) 2. Making of movie cost more than Real Titanic 3. Charles Joughin (man at the end while ships sunks in White clothes) was one of the kitchen members. He drank so much Alcohol that His Body could handle the coldnes and he survived
@nephateracoke643
@nephateracoke643 14 күн бұрын
james cameron did such a good job on this movie.
@manofuentes
@manofuentes 21 күн бұрын
La reacción de chica me conmovió tanto como la pelicula entera...
@wesleypeters4112
@wesleypeters4112 4 ай бұрын
Third-class passengers were not kept below decks during the sinking. No floor to ceiling gates existed in passenger areas in Third Class. Gates no higher than at the waist, existed to separate classes, but these were opened by 12:30am and would have been easy to get through, so much so that a passenger broke the lock on it going up to the next deck. The only floor to ceiling gates that existed on the ship were in storage spaces for the kitchens along Scotland Road and surrounding the cargo holds in the forward part of the ship.
@flightforge30
@flightforge30 4 ай бұрын
the best tearjerker movie ever made... there will be tears in my eyes everytime i watch this.. after watching this then you can go and hear My heart will go on and all the memories of Jack and Rose story will flashes back to your mind and of course their tragic ill-fated love story..
@austinkelly5059
@austinkelly5059 18 күн бұрын
Your wife is adorable,she made me tear up from seeing her reaction
@IndieCindy3
@IndieCindy3 4 ай бұрын
28:58 LMAO! Hate to break it to you, buddy, but she would clearly not go looking to save you in a situation like that. I have seen this movie more times than I can count since I was 12 years old (I'm now 37), and I have never once thought Rose was crazy for trying to save him.
@bestistmate
@bestistmate 5 ай бұрын
Nice to see you back guys
@ievabelodedova1999
@ievabelodedova1999 4 ай бұрын
i always cry when the movie starts, song comes out and it brings back memories that makes me cry, this is the movie i will always cry from the start to middle and to the end. and even 1-2 hours after movie Jack wanted to live Rose wanted to die Jack died for Rose Rose lived for Jack 😭💔
@AshyEkhin
@AshyEkhin Ай бұрын
Rose want to die, Jack want to life. Jack die for Rose and Rose live for Jack❤ The fact that will never die.♡ Miss them so much😢♡
@MartinKoucKotouc
@MartinKoucKotouc 4 ай бұрын
The man who takes child from Jack and tells him in Czech "Co děláš, idiote, nech ho na pokoji" is the Czech actor and stuntman Martin Hub. P.S. He also worked on Saving Private Ryan ... 🇨🇿
@montserratrosalesandrade5022
@montserratrosalesandrade5022 3 ай бұрын
My parents told me about their experience when the movie was on theaters in 1998 (year it released here in mexico) They told me everyone was CRAZY about this movie, it stayed in cinemas for i think more than 6 or 8 full months
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