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 A successful attempt at an even-handed portrayal of the White Star 
Line's (later part of Cunard) luxury liner R.M.S. Titanic's sinking from
 the standpoint of 2nd Officer Charles Herbert Lightoller, himself the 
most senior of the ill-fated ship's Deck Officers to survive the 
disaster. (Lightoller later went on to distinguish himself as a line 
British Naval Officer during the First World War and served as a Senior 
Naval Staff Officer (convoys) during WWII. Between wars he owned and 
operated a successful family business producing pleasure craft.) His own
 survival of the sinking, along with several others, is shown atop one 
of the liner's two "collapsible" lifeboats which was capsized in 
floating off the liner as it sank. The picture depicts then known facts 
(c1958) as reported after the sinking; such as the woeful lack of 
adequate lifeboats, the ship's band playing true to the very end, White 
Star's co-owner Bruce Ismay's somewhat less than chivalrous departure 
from the sinking vessel -and- the Titanic's designer (Andrews, on-board)
 revelation that due to the severity of below-the-water-line damage and 
that the vaunted watertight compartments were not designed to nor sealed
 up to the weather deck, would only delay the inevitable as sea water 
spilled over the top of one to the next from the bows to the stern. It 
also addresses the mysterious ship seen from the Titanic's bridge 
stopped some 12-19 miles off and depicts it as being the S.S. 
Californian, whom - if that steamship had responded, the loss of life 
could have been far, far less. The Californian is seen stopped due to 
the ice warnings, the same alerts whose import were undervalued by the 
Titanic's Captain Smith. She herself had shut-down wireless operations, 
nominally at 11:00pm as her sole operator retired for the evening, this 
before the iceberg was struck and the 1st distress calls were made by 
Titanic. It also addresses somewhat the coal fire in one of Titanic's 
bunkers - apparently not uncommon back in those days, before her 
departure into the Atlantic and potential for damage to steel plates 
below the water line. (This picture predates the calling-into-question 
of the quality of rivets (metalurgy) which has since come to the fore.) 
The film also shows the class distinction and its impact as to whom - of
 the "women and children first," got a seat in a boat; the fact that the
 first/earliest lifeboats launched were not at full capacity; and that 
the boats launched from the port and starboard side held to different 
criteria as to loading. The latter allows the viewer an inference as to 
the importance for crew and passenger alike as to lifeboat drills which 
were then (1912) neither required nor ever held aboard Titanic. One of 
several movies on the subject, it stands well the test-of-time for its 
"just the facts" approach in the telling and avoidance of conjecture or 
added melodrama.               - Written by
drew_wallner@verizon.net
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Reasonably accurate account of the sinking on April 14, 1912 of the RMS 
Titanic, the luxury ocean liner that struck an iceberg in the North 
Atlantic on its maiden voyage. The ship was the height of luxury - 
certainly by those traveling in first class - and was widely reputed to 
be unsinkable. The film focuses mostly on the ship itself and the issues
 faced by Captain Smith, his crew and the passengers. The ship carried 
only enough lifeboats for half of the passengers and crew but even at 
that little more than a third of them survived. The film also recounts 
the activity on the Carpathia, which sailed to the survivors' rescue and
 the California which failed to recognize their distress signal.        
       - Written by
garykmcd
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On its maiden voyage across the Atlantic, the British liner Titanic with
 2200 people on board is gashed along 300 feet of its hull by an 
iceberg. As it starts to sink, the new invention of radio is used to try
 and summon help, although this is disastrously ignored by the closest 
vessel. With lifeboat places for only 1200 people, it is not only women 
and children first, but also First Class before Steerage.               - Written by
Jeremy Perkins {J-26}
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Based on the best selling book by Walter Lord, this is the true story of
 the R.M.S. Titanic which struck an iceberg on its maiden voyage from 
Europe to New York in 1912.               - Written by
Jim Sadur <jsadur@intercall.com>
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It is 1912, and the White Star Line's new ship - the 'unsinkable' 
Titanic - is making its maiden voyage across the Atlantic from 
Southhampton to New York City. Unfortunately, the night of April 14-15, 
1912 proves to be a night in which man's arrogant overconfidence in his 
technological creations was shaken to its core, as the legendary ship 
collides with an iceberg in the North Atlantic. The much-touted 
watertight compartment system that supposedly rendered it 'unsinkable' 
was never designed to cope with such extensive damage, and the Titanic 
is doomed. Focusing on the accounts of most of the real people who 
sailed on the ship, it centers largely on the experiences of the ship's 
2nd officer, C.H. Lightholler. With these accounts come frightening 
revelations about the ship - not only are there way too few lifeboats, 
but people are loaded into them according to their class - First before 
Steerage. Based on the late Walter Lord's book of the same title.       
        
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