Titanic

4.15
    Titanic
    1997

    Synopsis

    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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    Cast

    • Leonardo DiCaprioJack Dawson
    • Kate WinsletRose DeWitt Bukater
    • Billy ZaneCal Hockley
    • Kathy BatesMolly Brown
    • Frances FisherRuth DeWitt Bukater
    • Gloria StuartOld Rose
    • Victor GarberThomas Andrews
    • Bill PaxtonBrock Lovett
    • Bernard HillEdward Smith
    • David WarnerSpicer Lovejoy

    Recommendations

    • 100

      ReelViews

      You don't just watch Titanic, you experience it.
    • 100

      The New Republic

      With the ship, with its totality of people, Cameron is wizardly, creating an entire society threading through the various strata of a world that has been set afloat from the rest of the world. [Jan. 5, 1998]
    • 100

      TNT RoughCut

      A heart-tugging potboiler that is at once poetic, tragic and cold as steel.
    • 100

      New York Daily News

      It leaves the port of enterprise and arrives on the far shore of art.
    • 80

      Dallas Observer

      It's a powerfully ersatz experience, but at least it's powerful. There's a lot to like here: At three hours and 14 minutes, the film takes longer to watch than the Titanic took to sink.
    • 75

      Christian Science Monitor

      The first half drags a bit, but the adventure scenes are exciting and the visual effects are as dazzling as Hollywood's most advanced technology can make them. Focusing as much on time and memory as on danger and disaster, it's an epic with a heart.
    • 70

      Film.com

      Technically, Titanic is a marvel.
    • 60

      Washington Post

      This movie should have blown us out of the water. Instead we catch ourselves occasionally thinking the unpardonable thought: "OK, sink already."

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