Movie news
Great sites
Quotes
Rose: Mr. Andrews. I saw the iceberg, and I see it in your eyes. Now tell me the truth.
Mr. Andrews: The ship will sink.
Rose: You're certain?
Mr. Andrews: Yes, in an hour, or so, all of this will be at the bottom of the Atlantic.
Mistakes
The lifejackets in the movie have the wrong number of cork pieces. In real life each side had six pieces but in the movie there are twelve. See more...
Trivia
In 1898 (14 years prior to the Titanic tragedy), Morgan Robertson wrote a novel called "Futility." This fictitious novel was about the largest ship ever built hitting an iceberg in the Atlantic ocean on a cold April night. The fictional ship (named Titan) and the real ship Titanic were similar in design and their circumstances were remarkably alike. Both ships were labeled "unsinkable." This uncanny foresight by Morgan Robertson was mentioned at the beginning of Walter Lord's book "A Night to Remember" on which the 1958 British film was based. The comparisons and similarities are stunning, right down to the findings of an investigation after the sinking which blamed "excessive speed" for the tragedy. See more...
Titanic
Continuity: When Jack and Rose are going down with the ship, there is a man holding onto the flagpole. The man's life jacket disappears and reappears.
|
|
Previous • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 • Next
Read all entries for Titanic
Any blue numbers are pictures visible to everyone, or all free members. The greyed out numbers are pictures that have been online for less than 6 months - those are only accessible to paid members.
You may also like: Twilight | The Wizard of Oz | Friends | Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
To submit a screenshot, just click the edit icon under the relevant entry, then choose 'add screenshot'. Thanks!
All images remain the copyright of their original owners - these low resolution images are simply individual frames used to demonstrate the entry.







