Nick-Davis.com: 100 Favorite Films
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#55: Titanic
(USA, 1997; dir. James Cameron; cin. Russell Carpenter; with Kate Winslet, Leonardo DiCaprio, Billy Zane, Gloria Stuart,
Bill Paxton, Frances Fisher, Kathy Bates, Bernard Hill, Victor Garber, Jonathan Hyde, David Warner, Suzy Amis, Danny Nucci, Jason Barry, Ioan Gruffudd)
IMDb // My Full Review
When I first started teaching film, Titanic was invaluable to me, because every single student in my course had seen
it, often more than once. As a result, for shared, shorthanded examples of camera angles, color filters, process shots, the comparative
scope of a scene vs. a sequence, etc., and just as living proof that movies can unite people and endow us with common language
and experience, Titanic wasin the treasure-hunting lingo of Brock Lovett & Co.a trove,
a jackpot. These days, it's hardly worth the trouble of invoking Titanic, because cracking the thick crust of derision
or, at best, embarrassed affection is too arduous and digressive a task. Talk about hitting an iceberg: I recognize that even
in 1997 and 1998, plenty of people were roundly unseduced by James Cameron's ballad of Jack and Rose. By now, though, Titanic
seems to have sunk from a global preoccupation to an abashed recollection or a blacklisted
memory.
Both the initial embrace of Titanic and its harsh disavowal, at least in the crowds where I hang out, betray a
degree of emotionalism uncommon in the giddy world of moviestestament not only to how the film distinguishes
itself from other epic-scale blockbusters by stoking emotion instead of cultivating detachment (it is, in this regard, the
anti-Matrix) but to how the sinking of the Titanic itself,
with all due respect to the people who died, resonates more in the history of affect than in any real chronicle of worldly
consequence. Of course the event was triggered and conditioned by much vaster and more complicated forcesindustrialism,
social stratification, a booming market in luxuries, a new impetus behind global travelbut it's hard to feel as though
any of these concepts operate in any truly complex way within the story of the Titanic, which unfolds as cleanly and
simply as a parable. The poor paid for the luxuries of the rich, but death leveled them all. Idealism and ambition ran afoul
of a major shoal of hubris. Many, many people died at once, and the foregoing circus of media jubilation around the ship's
maiden voyage (as damp a phrase as anyone ever coined)
made the deaths somehow more awful by making them so publica bleak irony, too, since
part of the horror of this story is the dark, freezing, lonely privacy in which the ship met its fate, so chillingly
captured by that one extreme long shot of the distress flare, a pathetic white comma on the blank black sheet of the oceanic night. Titanic has an ideally sized plot for a movie, and for eliciting mass enthusiasm and identification, because despite
the size of the ship and the scale of its infamy, the story's contours remain so manageable. In absolute contrast to something
like the JFK assassination, the essential gist and ramification of the story can be quickly known, and since popular imagination
has kept it afloat within an envelope of gently precautionary pathos, the tale offers a perfect porthole into broad
fields and brushstrokes of feeling: romance, awe, sublimity, sentimentality, gravity, fear, manmade inequities as well as cosmic ones.
Cameron's script isn't nearly as ambitious as those he wrote for the Terminator films or for the exemplary Aliens.
Nonetheless, his extraordinary visual acumen and his keen regard for the audience's investments even
in kinetic and logistic-heavy scenes prepares him perfectly as the director to animate Jack's doomed resourcefulness,
Rose's coltish but galvanized resolve, the shipbuilder's avuncular regret, and all those "minor" moments of couples laid together in bed to their final rest,
strangers gripping to handrails, waitstaff bolting through the corridors, deckhands crumbling in the face of the panicking
crowd, "survivors" condemned to watch what they have just escaped. And he keeps all this in balance while presiding over a
gargantuan, exacting, and detailed set, a mythic vision to hold alongside Griffith's Babylon.
Shame about the dialogue, and the high school lit-mag deployment of suicide as a plot device. I know, I know: that song. Many of the performances could stand
some tweaking (more than that, in Billy Zane's case), even allowing that they've been evacuated of nuance so as to approximate
the idioms of shipboard fictions, and also to purvey the script's distilled emotional states in as unobtrusive
a way as possible. Too bad that, for all the justified finger-wagging at class oppression onboard, the world below decks is
still something of a fratboy revue of gambols and beer steins, and the story still ends with a crafty and hardworking prole giving
his life so that an aristocrat might live. If Titanic were truly building to an intellectual or editorial point, it
would have a hard time persuading anybody that Jack's death offered the gorgeous, necessary precondition for Rose's rich,
full life of riding ponies and turning pots. But palpably, these aren't the waters in which Titanic means to sail,
at least not essentially. Every shot, every terrifically paced and judged cross-cut and interludeincreasingly so, in
the film's formally heroic second halfsquares the viewer right inside a romantic imagination of beauty and danger that movies
almost never attempt anymore. The range of sentiments and the visual lucidity through which Titanic presents itself
are tangible and recognizable to almost anyone of any age, and maybe that sounds like a backhanded compliment, but I mean it as an endorsement
of the film's refusal to be cynical, or to be simply and flatly procedural like The Poseidon Adventure or Airport,
or to wave the flag of its own virtuosity in as shrill and off-putting a way as James Cameron does in his public appearances.
The movie knows when to stop showing us smashed hutches and looming rudders against the sky and to contract instead around
moments like the one that always, always gets me: Rose, secured on a lowering lifeboat, realizing as Jack recedes in an
extreme low-angle shot that the life she is saving for herself is not one she wants to save, and so she clambers back onto the
dying animal of the Titanic and runs right back toward Jack. The most sophisticated dramaturgy in the world? Nobut
at least for me, it reverberates just as much as watching Dorothy walk outdoors into Technicolor or Luke discover that his
archenemy is his father or a treasured, long-buried childhood toy melt away in a furnace. Call me crazy, but I'll go down with this ship every time.
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