Upon it's release on December 19, 1997, this truly MAGNIFICENT film achieved worldwide critical and commercial success. Nominated for fourteen Academy Awards, it won eleven, including the awards for Best Picture and Best Director, and the most Oscars ever won by a single film. With an initial worldwide gross of over $1.84 billion, it was the first film to reach the billion-dollar mark.
posted on 8/12/17
And Japan
posted on 8/12/17
I remember watching it around the time it came out.
posted on 8/12/17
Watched that borefest for 4.5 hours and got eventually to the end ....and ....guess what - the boat SANK !!! Never saw that coming.
Seriously tho' the film should have been about 2-2.5 hours. No need for 2 hours of diddly, diddly, diddly below decks at all, they usually leave all the irrelevant stuff on the cutting room floor
posted on 8/12/17
Magnificent film??????
Comedy gold. A film only liked by people who like to sleep with men.
posted on 8/12/17
The boat sinking is the only part worth watching.
posted on 8/12/17
there was room on the door.
posted on 8/12/17
The last hour was pretty impressive, as were Winslet's ti.s. I'm also a Di-Caprio fan, so all good!
posted on 10/12/17
The ending was predictable.
Kate’s fun bags were a nice touch
posted on 10/12/17
I didn't see it coming, was it a dream? or was it Titanic heaven? Everyone on the ship was there again and gave Kate and Leo a round of applause
posted on 10/12/17
One of the worst films that I've ever seen; total crap, the old 1958 film, "A Night to Remember" was actually much better, which isn't saying much to be fair. For me the worst bit of "Titanic" was the depiction of Mr. Andrews, Cheif Engineer of Harland & Wolff, as a Southern Irishman, complete with southern Irish accent. Harland & Wolff was in Belfast, and Andrews, as an Ulsterman would have sounded nothing like that. Mind you, it is an American film, so I gues historical accuracy isn't going figure much.