|
Previous |
Overview | Next
Titanic
Synopsis
A fortune hunter searching for a lost diamond near the wreck of the Titanic
brings something else to the surface... a story from the past in which
the romance between an upper class American woman and a young male passenger
in steerage is fated to end before it has really begun...
Review
When the theatrical release of James Cameron's Titanic was delayed from
July to December of 1997, media pundits speculated that Cameron's $200
million disaster epic would cause the director's downfall, signal the
end of the blockbuster era and sink Paramount Studios as quickly as the
ill-fated luxury liner had sunk on that fateful night of April 14, 1912.
Some studio executives were confident, others horrified, but the clarity
of hindsight turned Cameron into an Oscar-winning genius, a shrewd businessman
and one of the most successful directors in the history of motion pictures.
Titanic would surpass the $1 billion mark in global box-office receipts
(largely due to multiple viewings, the majority by teenage girls), win
11 Academy Awards including best picture and director, produce the bestselling
movie soundtrack of all time and make a global superstar of Leonardo DiCaprio.
A bona fide pop-cultural phenomenon, the film has all the ingredients
of a blockbuster (romance, passion, luxury, grand scale, a snidely villain
and an epic, life-threatening crisis), but Cameron's alchemy of these
ingredients proved more popular than anyone could have predicted. His
stroke of genius was to combine absolute authenticity with a pair of fictional
lovers whose tragic fate would draw viewers into the heart-wrenching reality
of the Titanic disaster. As starving artist Jack Dawson and soon-to-be-married
socialite Rose DeWitt Bukater, DiCaprio and Kate Winslet won the hearts
of viewers around the world and their brief but never-forgotten love affair
provides the humanity that Cameron needed to turn Titanic into an emotional
experience. Present-day framing scenes (featuring Gloria Stuart as the
101-year-old Rose) add additional resonance to the story and, although
some viewers proved vehemently immune to Cameron's manipulations, few
can deny the production's impressive achievements. Although some of the
computer-generated visual effects look artificial, others--such as the
sunset silhouette of Titanic during its first evening at sea, or the climactic
splitting of the ship's sinking hull--are state-of-the-art marvels. In
terms of sets and costumes alone, the film is never less than astounding.
More than anything else, however, the film's overwhelming popularity speaks
for itself. Titanic is an event film and a monument to Cameron's risk-taking
audacity, blending the tragic irony of the Titanic disaster with just
enough narrative invention to give the historical event its fullest and
most timeless dramatic impact. Titanic is an epic love story on par with
Gone with the Wind, and, like that earlier box-office phenomenon, it's
a film for the ages.
DVD Special Features
Interactive Menus
Scene Access
Multiple Language Subtitles
Original Theatrical Trailer
Ratio: 2.30:1
Languages
English plus subtitles in Swedish/Norwegian/Danish/Finnish/Iberian Portuguese/Hebrew/Polish/Czech/Hungarian/Icelandic/Dutch/Greek/English
for the Hearing Impaired.
|