Titanic
(1997)
Rated PG13
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet,
and Gloria Stuart
Rating:

out
of

|
James Cameron must feel quite vindicated by the current success of his
$200 million epic, Titanic. Over the past year, the movie was deemed a
failure waiting to happen as story after story of the studio's concern
about the movie's budget leaked out. But, after just over three weeks
in release and over $150 million in box-office revenue later, it's been
predicted that Titanic will make at least the $425 million that it needs
to become profitable. (And that's not including the exorbatant sum that
NBC just paid to air the film on TV.) After viewing the film, it's not hard to see where the $200 million went.
It's all over the screen in set design, special effects, and costumes.
Cameron even sent an expedition to the actual wreck of the Titanic in
the North Atlantic to film footage that's never been seen anywhere else.
He clearly wanted Titanic to be an event. He succeeded.
The plot, of course, centers
around the ill-fated maiden voyage of the Titanic, the "largest movable man-made object in the world".
Even with all the flash and glitz, the movie would be as doomed to sink
as Titanic itself if it didn't have a good story. Cameron delivers the
goods in the form of a love story between Jack Dawson (Leonardo DiCaprio)
and Rose DeWitt (Kate Winslet). Although there's clearly a formula at
work (Jack's poor and happy; Rose is rich and unhappy), the execution
itself is brilliant.
The movie is told in flashbacks by a 101-year-old Rose, who has been
airlifted back to the sight of Titanic's wreckage by Brock Lovett (Bill
Paxton). He's looking for a diamond thought to buried there. Rose tells
Lovett and his crew her story. It seems that Rose was travelling to America
on Titanic with her fiance, Cal (Billy Zane), who was a less-than-perfect
choice for a mate. Rose was pressured by her mother and friends to remain
with him because of his wealth and ability to provide for her like few
men could. Feeling she can't escape the trappings of a life where success
is measured by who you're married to, Rose attempts to jump off Titanic,
but is rescued by Jack, a third-class ticket holder. Clearly, he's not
in her league. Of course, in movie terms, this means they're meant for
each other.
As predictable as the love affair is, it's handled deftly. Cameron, working
from his script, wrings out great performances from both actors. In fact,
the sinking of Titanic provides a backdrop to their story rather than
overshadowing it -- as I think it would have in the hands of a less capable
director.
That's not to say, however, that the eventual sinking of Titanic doesn't
have any power in the film. Quite the contrary. In fact, the 45 minutes
or so that the Titanic takes to sink are probably the most intense 45
minutes of film I've ever seen. Cameron shows, with unblinking clarity,
what it would it would be like to be trapped on Titanic and not have a
way off. In what could have been an over-the-top, pure special effects
fan's delight, Cameron keeps it all focused on the humanity involved in
the disaster. The effects simply enable the film to show what happened
when the sheer stubbornness of mankind collides with the brute force of
nature. The results are emotion-wrenching and eye-popping at the same
time. Some of the images can only be described as horribly beautiful.
Yes, James Cameron can breathe easier now. Everything -- and I mean everything
-- in this movie clicks: the music, the acting, the effects and, thankfully,
the story. Titanic, the ship may have been doomed, but it looks like the
movie is going to reach its destination: success. And it deserves to. Trivia: Jenette
Goldstein, who played Vasquez, the hardcore female marine in James
Cameron's Aliens, has a small role in Titanic as the Irish mother
of two small children. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |