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Titanic

"Nothing on Earth could come between them."

1997-11-18 Drama 3hr 14m

101-year-old Rose DeWitt Bukater tells the story of her life aboard the Titanic, 84 years later. A young Rose boards the ship with her mother and fiancé. Meanwhile, Jack Dawson and Fabrizio De Rossi win third-class tickets aboard the ship. Rose tells the whole story from Titanic's departure through to its death—on its first and last voyage—on April 15, 1912.

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Storyline

101-year-old Rose DeWitt Bukater tells the story of her life aboard the Titanic, 84 years later. A young Rose boards the ship with her mother and fiancé. Meanwhile, Jack Dawson and Fabrizio De Rossi win third-class tickets aboard the ship. Rose tells the whole story from Titanic's departure through to its death—on its first and last voyage—on April 15, 1912.

  • Released
    1997-11-18
  • Revenue
    $2,264,162,353
  • Budget
    $200,000,000
  • Runtime
    3hr 14m
  • Genre
    Drama, Romance
  • Status
    Released
  • Language
    English, Français, Deutsch, svenska, Italiano, Pусский
  • imdb-logo
    7.9
  • Production
    Paramount Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Lightstorm Entertainment

Crew

James Cameron
Director
James Cameron
Writer
James Cameron
Producer

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Cast

Kate Winslet

Kate Winslet

Rose DeWitt Bukater
Billy Zane

Billy Zane

Cal Hockley
Kathy Bates

Kathy Bates

Molly Brown
Frances Fisher

Frances Fisher

Ruth DeWitt Bukater
Victor Garber

Victor Garber

Thomas Andrews
Bill Paxton

Bill Paxton

Brock Lovett
Bernard Hill

Bernard Hill

Edward Smith
David Warner

David Warner

Spicer Lovejoy
Jonathan Hyde

Jonathan Hyde

Bruce Ismay
Lewis Abernathy

Lewis Abernathy

Lewis Bodine
Suzy Amis

Suzy Amis

Lizzy Calvert
Danny Nucci

Danny Nucci

Fabrizio De Rossi
Nicholas Cascone

Nicholas Cascone

Bobby Buell
Jason Barry

Jason Barry

Tommy Ryan
Lew Palter

Lew Palter

Isidor Straus
Eric Braeden

Eric Braeden

John Astor
Ewan Stewart

Ewan Stewart

First Officer Murdoch
Bernard Fox

Bernard Fox

Archibald Gracie
Ioan Gruffudd

Ioan Gruffudd

Fifth Officer Lowe
Jonny Phillips

Jonny Phillips

Second Officer Lightoller
Edward Fletcher

Edward Fletcher

Sixth Officer Moody
Scott G. Anderson

Scott G. Anderson

Frederick Fleet
Martin East

Martin East

Reginald Lee
Gregory Cooke

Gregory Cooke

Jack Phillips
Alexandrea Owens

Alexandrea Owens

Cora Cartmell
Seth Adkins

Seth Adkins

Three-Year-Old Boy
Michael Ensign

Michael Ensign

Benjamin Guggenheim
Anatoly M. Sagalevitch

Anatoly M. Sagalevitch

Anatoly Milkailavich
Martin Hub

Martin Hub

Slovakian Father
Mark Lindsay Chapman

Mark Lindsay Chapman

Chief Officer Wilde
Richard Graham

Richard Graham

Quartermaster Rowe
Paul Brightwell

Paul Brightwell

Quartermaster Hichens
Craig Kelly

Craig Kelly

Harold Bride
Ron Donachie

Ron Donachie

Master at Arms
Charlotte Chatton

Charlotte Chatton

Madeleine Astor
Fannie Brett

Fannie Brett

Madame Aubert
Linda Kerns

Linda Kerns

Third Class Woman
Amy Gaipa

Amy Gaipa

Trudy Bolt
Martin Jarvis

Martin Jarvis

Duff Gordon
Rosalind Ayres

Rosalind Ayres

Lady Duff Gordon
Rochelle Rose

Rochelle Rose

Countess of Rothes
Jonathan Evans-Jones

Jonathan Evans-Jones

Wallace Hartley
Rocky Taylor

Rocky Taylor

Bert Cartmell
Liam Tuohy

Liam Tuohy

Chief Baker Joughin
Simon Crane

Simon Crane

Fourth Officer Boxhall
James Lancaster

James Lancaster

Father Byles
Elsa Raven

Elsa Raven

Ida Strauss
Reece P. Thompson III

Reece P. Thompson III

Irish Little Boy
Laramie Landis

Laramie Landis

Irish Little Girl
John Walcutt

John Walcutt

First Class Husband
Terry Forrestal

Terry Forrestal

Chief Engineer Bell
Derek Lea

Derek Lea

Leading Stoker Barrett
Richard Ashton

Richard Ashton

John Hutchinson
Sean Nepita

Sean Nepita

Elevator Operator
Brendan Connolly

Brendan Connolly

Scotland Road Steward
Garth Wilton

Garth Wilton

First Class Waiter
Richard Fox

Richard Fox

Steward #1
Nick Meaney

Nick Meaney

Steward #2
Kevin Owers

Kevin Owers

Steward #3
Mark Capri

Mark Capri

Steward #4
Marc Cass

Marc Cass

Hold Steward #1
Paul Herbert

Paul Herbert

Hold Steward #2
Emmett James

Emmett James

First Class Steward
Chris Byrne

Chris Byrne

Stairwell Steward
Oliver Page

Oliver Page

Steward Barnes
Erik Holland

Erik Holland

Olaf Dahl
Jari Kinnunen

Jari Kinnunen

Bjorn Gunderson
Anders Falk

Anders Falk

Olaus Gunderson
Barry Dennen

Barry Dennen

Praying Man
Vern Urich

Vern Urich

Man in Water
Rebecca Klingler

Rebecca Klingler

Mother at Stern
Kathleen S. Dunn

Kathleen S. Dunn

Woman in Water
Romeo Francis

Romeo Francis

Syrian Man
Mandana Marino

Mandana Marino

Syrian Woman
Van Ling

Van Ling

Chinese Man
Shay Duffin

Shay Duffin

Pubkeeper
Greg Ellis

Greg Ellis

Carpathia Steward
Diana Morgan

Diana Morgan

News Reporter
Brian Walsh

Brian Walsh

Irish Man
Alexandra Boyd

Alexandra Boyd

First Class Woman (uncredited)
James Cameron

James Cameron

Steerage Dancer (uncredited)
Mike Butters

Mike Butters

Musician / Baker (uncredited)
Bruno Campolo

Bruno Campolo

First Class Man (uncredited)
Kevin De La Noy

Kevin De La Noy

Third Officer Pitman (uncredited)
Tony Kenny

Tony Kenny

Deckhand (uncredited)
Sean Lawlor

Sean Lawlor

Charles Hendrickson (uncredited)
Don Lynch

Don Lynch

Frederick Spedden (uncredited)
Johnny Martin

Johnny Martin

Rescue Boat Crewman (uncredited)
Ryan McClurkin

Ryan McClurkin

Second Class Passenger / Engine Room Crewman (uncredited)
Meghan McLeod

Meghan McLeod

First Class Passenger (uncredited)
Mike O'Neal

Mike O'Neal

Engine Room Crewman (uncredited)
Phil Parlapiano

Phil Parlapiano

Button Accordionist (uncredited)
Steven Quale

Steven Quale

Engine Room Crewman (uncredited)
R. Gern Trowbridge

R. Gern Trowbridge

Drowning Man (uncredited)
Olivia Rosewood

Olivia Rosewood

Mary Marvin (uncredited)
John Slade

John Slade

Ohio Man (uncredited)
Brian McDermott

Brian McDermott

Titanic Gym Instructor Thomas McCawley (uncredited)
Bret Aaron Knower

Bret Aaron Knower

1st Class Passenger/ 3rd Class Passenger/ Stunts
Martin Laing

Martin Laing

Promenade Deck Steward
Rebecca Klinger

Rebecca Klinger

Mother at Stern

Videos and Photos

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Movie Reviews

Reviews for Titanic
reviewer avatar

A Review by John Chard 9

Written by John Chard on 2014-09-25

Beautiful Romance - Tragedy Unbound. It has kind of become the popular thing to kick Titanic, the film and its achievements. It's like th... read more

Beautiful Romance - Tragedy Unbound. It has kind of become the popular thing to kick Titanic, the film and its achievements. It's like the love it garnered on release and the colossal waves it made in the history of cinema, never happened, or as some want you to believe, doesn't matter. I can tell you now that many of my macho fuelled friends will privately, under the influence of liquid refreshments, admit to having affection for the film, but socially in a circle environment? Not a bit of it! I have no such problems admitting my love for the film, I love it as much now as I approach 50, as I did when I sat there in awe at the cinema in 1997. You jump - I jump. Titanic is far from flawless, where even now with the advancements in technology the effects over 15 years later look a touch creaky. While it's true as well that away from Rose and Jack the characterisations are thin on the ground. But this is Rose and Jack's story, fully fleshed out for an hour and half and then framed by the terrible tragedy that unfolds for the next hour and half. The tie-in to the present day is superbly constructed by James Cameron - the search for the diamond - the real life filming of the Titanic wreckage - and the flashback telling of the story by a delightful Gloria Stuart as old Rose, and the sinking of the ship and its aftermath is stunning and heart breaking in equal measure. Never let go. So may scenes and dialogue exchanges stay in the memory for ever. The band playing on, the captain awaiting his fate, the mother ushering her children to sleep before the sea comes to take them, the old boy drinking his brandy as the water rushes in, or just Jack and Rose, polar opposites in society's class structure, making love, making art or just professing that neither will ever let go. It's what makes Titanic the wonderful piece of cinema it is, where beauty and tragedy merge to create something forever memorable. A film that deserved all the accolades and cash till ringing that it once did have. 9/10

reviewer avatar

A Review by Geronimo1967 7

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-08

Set around the ill-fated maiden voyage of the RMS "Titanic", this is essentially a film in two parts. The first, weaker, element features a ... read more

Set around the ill-fated maiden voyage of the RMS "Titanic", this is essentially a film in two parts. The first, weaker, element features a young "Dawson" (Leonardo DiCaprio) who wins a third class ticket to New York on the soon to depart liner. Meantime, the wealthy but unhappy "Rose" (Kate Winslet) is up in the posh cabins with her cold and unfeeling fiancée "Hockley" (Billy Zane) and her equally unpleasant, venally ambitious mother "Ruth" (Frances Fisher). Desperately unhappy, "Rose" considers jumping off the prow of the boat, but luckily the charming young "Dawson" is on hand to talk her down, and so begins their friendship that causes much chagrin amongst her socially elite companions. That friendship culminates in him making a rather provocative drawing of her, the final straw for her boyfriend and his enforcer "Lovejoy" (David Warner). It all looks ominous for both until - part two begins. The ship, speeding along nicely under the command of Bernard Hill's Captain Smith clips the underwater part of an iceberg and now history takes over. James Cameron offers us a purely speculative account of what might have happened as the initially incredulous crew start to realise that maybe it is not just Molly Brown (an excellent Kathy Bates) that's unsinkable! What now ensues are a series of well staged scenarios depicting panic, fear, a fair degree of selfishness and some proper stiff upper lips as the ship has be evacuated and the segregation of the passengers and competencies of the crew start to become life threatening. The visual effects have dated, the smoke from the ship's funnels blows in an strangely symmetrical fashion and the later scenes struggle to convince - but this is really a rather tragic love story with a strong chemistry between the engaging two characters at the top of the bill, and an effective performance from the older "Rose" (Gloria Stewart) who takes on the role of narrator 80 years after the disaster. I still find it uncomfortable to watch the actuality of the wreck, which features occasionally throughout the film - I feel like I am quite literally walking through someone's grave; but it does lend a potent hook upon which this lengthy, but well thought out and constructed drama is presented. Criticisms have been made of it's factual inaccuracies, and it may well play a bit fast and loose with some of the real characterisations - but it's a drama, and to be enjoyed has to be appreciated in that sphere. Big screen is a must, it really does lose a great deal on a television.

reviewer avatar

A Review by Antoine53

Written by Antoine53 on 2023-01-17

Awesome... read more

Awesome

reviewer avatar

A Review by TitanGusang 10

Written by TitanGusang on 2023-02-17

Titanic is simply a masterpiece. This movie has it all. A tremendous score, deep emotion emphasized by fantastic performances, and incredibl... read more

Titanic is simply a masterpiece. This movie has it all. A tremendous score, deep emotion emphasized by fantastic performances, and incredibly gripping and high-stakes action. There is really something for everyone here. Before I continue my praise of the film, I think it has one glaring weakness: the present-day plot. For me, this just did not work all that well. I understand that it was implemented for the main story to have a more emotional impact, but it was not needed. It added almost thirty minutes to the runtime, which could have been used for more character development in the story or to have a more streamlined plot. Not to mention, the acting in this section was lackluster. That might be a hot take, but it was something that I noticed during my watch. Back to the positives. The score is magnificent here. The minute I finished the film, I had an urge to put on this score to be transported back to the Titanic. That does not happen very often to me. The performances are great all around. Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet's chemistry was perfect. They played off each other so well and really sold this emphatic and rapid love the two shared. The movie spends a lot of time building their relationship and the payoff at the end is worth every second. Billy Zane was an over-the-top asshole, and even though it was cheesy at times, it worked for me. The other ancillary cast members did well, including Kathy Bates, Frances Fisher and Bill Paxton. This film is really two movies put into one and both of them work excellently. The first half is a charming and cute love story that spends a lot of time on character development, laying the background for motivations and personalities. While this half may have been my favorite, it is slightly outdone by the second half, which is a gripping and suspenseful survival action story. This section is brutal, showing large scale panic and hysteria while also having some incredibly horrific deaths. The chaos was infectious and very scary to watch. Both halves create a great sense of emotion in the audience and complement each other very well. Overall, this movie had twenty-five years of hype and critical acclaim to live up to, and I am happy to say it passed expectations. Since leaving the theater, I cannot stop thinking about it. Score: 96% | Verdict: Masterpiece On a side note: I did see this movie in 3D during the twenty-five-anniversary re-release. While it was great to see it remastered in 4K, I do think the 3D was poor and unneeded. This did not affect my grade however, since it was not originally designed as a 3D experience, and they 3D did not really take away for my enjoyment.

reviewer avatar

A Review by Prodank 7

Written by Prodank on 2023-09-17

Titanic was enjoyable initially, but the constant TV reruns got old fast. I don't even own a TV anymore, and I'm in no hurry to watch it aga... read more

Titanic was enjoyable initially, but the constant TV reruns got old fast. I don't even own a TV anymore, and I'm in no hurry to watch it again. Still, it's a good movie, deserving of a 7/10 rating.

reviewer avatar

A Review by RalphRahal 9

Written by RalphRahal on 2024-12-19

Titanic (1997), directed by James Cameron, is one of those films that never loses its impact, no matter how many times you watch it. Some mi... read more

Titanic (1997), directed by James Cameron, is one of those films that never loses its impact, no matter how many times you watch it. Some might call it overrated, but it’s hard to deny the emotional weight and the sheer craftsmanship that went into making it. Rewatching it reminded me why it’s stood the test of time, it’s a great mix of story, performances, and technical execution. Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet deliver standout performances as Jack and Rose. Their chemistry is natural and believable, and it’s what drives the story forward. The drawing scene is iconic for many reasons, both on and off the screen. Interestingly, it wasn’t DiCaprio sketching Rose, it was actually James Cameron himself. Cameron, who’s also an artist, added a personal touch to the scene by creating the famous drawing. Behind the scenes, Winslet knew the scene could be awkward since it involved nudity and was one of their first together, so she flashed DiCaprio to help him relax. Even with that, he was nervous and flubbed his line, saying, “Lie on that bed… uh, couch” instead of just “couch.” The mistake stayed in the film, and it adds a little authenticity to the moment. Visually, Titanic is impressive on every level. The production design is meticulous. From the luxurious first-class interiors to the gritty third-class quarters, every set looks authentic and lived-in. The cinematography captures both the intimacy of Jack and Rose’s relationship and the overwhelming scale of the disaster. The sinking sequence is still one of the most intense and well-executed moments in film. Cameron used a mix of practical effects, real sets, and CGI to recreate the chaos, and it all blends seamlessly. The result is a scene that’s visually stunning and emotionally gripping. The final act ties everything together perfectly. Rose’s memories, paired with James Horner’s haunting score, deliver an emotional gut punch. That last shot is unforgettable and leaves you thinking long after the credits roll. Titanic isn’t just about a historical tragedy or a love story, it’s a film about human connection and the choices we make when everything’s on the line. Cameron’s attention to detail, paired with strong performances and excellent storytelling, makes this one of the most impactful films ever made. Overrated? Maybe. But it’s a benchmark in filmmaking for a reason.

Read Full Review (The thoughts and opinions expressed here are solely those of the reviewer.)
A Review by John Chard

Beautiful Romance - Tragedy Unbound. It has kind of become the popular thing to kick Titanic, the film and its achievements. It's like the love it garnered on release and the colossal waves it made in the history of cinema, never happene...

reviewer avatar

A Review by John Chard 9

Written by John Chard on 2014-09-25

Beautiful Romance - Tragedy Unbound. It has kind of become the popular thing to kick Titanic, the film and its achievements. It's like the love it garnered on release and the colossal waves it made...

read more
reviewer avatar

A Review by Geronimo1967 7

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-08

Set around the ill-fated maiden voyage of the RMS "Titanic", this is essentially a film in two parts. The first, weaker, element features a young "Dawson" (Leonardo DiCaprio) who wins a third class ti...

read more
reviewer avatar

A Review by Antoine53

Written by Antoine53 on 2023-01-17

Awesome...

read more
reviewer avatar

A Review by TitanGusang 10

Written by TitanGusang on 2023-02-17

Titanic is simply a masterpiece. This movie has it all. A tremendous score, deep emotion emphasized by fantastic performances, and incredibly gripping and high-stakes action. There is really something...

read more
reviewer avatar

A Review by Prodank 7

Written by Prodank on 2023-09-17

Titanic was enjoyable initially, but the constant TV reruns got old fast. I don't even own a TV anymore, and I'm in no hurry to watch it again. Still, it's a good movie, deserving of a 7/10 rating....

read more
reviewer avatar

A Review by RalphRahal 9

Written by RalphRahal on 2024-12-19

Titanic (1997), directed by James Cameron, is one of those films that never loses its impact, no matter how many times you watch it. Some might call it overrated, but it’s hard to deny the emotional w...

read more