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Titanic (1953 film)

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Director
  
Music director
  
Language
  
English

7.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama, History, Romance

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

Titanic (1953 film) movie poster

Release date
  
April 16, 1953 (1953-04-16)

Screenplay
  
Charles Brackett, Richard L. Breen, Walter Reisch

Cast
  
(Richard Ward Sturges), (Julia Sturges), (Gifford "Giff" Rogers), (Annette Sturges), (Maude Young), (Capt. Edward John Smith)

Similar movies
  
Titanic
,
Titanic
,
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End
,
Jaws
,
Ice Age: The Meltdown
,
A Night to Remember

Tagline
  
TITANIC in Emotion...in Spectacle...in Climax...in Cast!

Titanic is a 1953 American drama film directed by Jean Negulesco. Its plot centers on an estranged couple sailing on the ill-fated maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic, which took place in April 1912.

Contents

Titanic (1953 film) movie scenes

Plot

Titanic (1953 film) movie scenes

At the last minute, a wealthy American expatriate in Europe, Richard Sturges (Clifton Webb), buys a steerage-class ticket for the maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic from a Basque immigrant. Once aboard he seeks out his runaway wife, Julia (Barbara Stanwyck). He discovers she is trying to take their two unsuspecting children, 18-year-old Annette (Audrey Dalton) and ten-year-old Norman (Harper Carter), to her hometown of Mackinac, Michigan, to raise as down-to-earth Americans rather than rootless elitists like Richard himself.

Titanic (1953 film) movie scenes

As the ship prepares for departure, her captain, E. J. Smith (Brian Aherne), receives a hint from the shipping company representative that a record-setting speedy passage would be welcomed.

Titanic (1953 film) movie scenes

Other passengers include a wealthy woman of a working-class origin (based on a real-life Titanic survivor Molly Brown), Maude Young (Thelma Ritter); social-climbing Earl Meeker (Allyn Joslyn); a 20-year-old Purdue University tennis player, Gifford "Giff" Rogers (Robert Wagner); and George S. Healey (Richard Basehart), a Catholic priest who has been defrocked for alcoholism.

Titanic (1953 film) movie scenes

When Annette learns her mother's intentions, she insists on returning to Europe with her father on the next ship as soon as they reach America. Julia concedes that her daughter is old enough to make her own decisions, but she insists on keeping custody of Norman. This angers Richard, forcing Julia to reveal that Norman is not his child, but rather the result of a one-night stand after one of their many bitter arguments. Upon hearing that, he agrees to give up all claim to Norman. Richard joins Maude, Earl, and George Widener in the lounge to play contract bridge with them. The next morning, when Norman reminds Richard about a shuffleboard game they had scheduled, Richard coldly brushes him off.

Titanic (1953 film) movie scenes

Meanwhile, Giff falls for Annette at first glance. At first she repulses his brash attempts to become better acquainted, but eventually she warms to him. That night, Giff, Annette and a group of young people sing and play the piano in the dining room, while Captain Smith watches from a corner table.

Second Officer Lightoller (Edmund Purdom) expresses his concern to Captain Smith about the ship's speed when they receive two messages from other ships warning of iceberg sightings near their route. Smith, however, assures him that there is no danger.

That night, however, a lookout spots an iceberg dead ahead. Although the crew tries to steer clear of danger, the ship is gashed below the waterline and begins taking on water. When Richard finds the captain, he insists on being told the truth: the ship is doomed. He tells his family to dress warmly but properly; then they head outside. Richard and Julia have a tearful reconciliation on the boat deck, as he places Julia and the children into a lifeboat. Unnoticed by Julia, Norman gives up his seat to an older woman and goes looking for his nominal father. When one of the lines becomes tangled, preventing the lifeboat from being lowered, Giff climbs down and fixes the problem, only to lose his grip and fall into the water. His unconscious body is dragged into the boat.

Meeker disguises himself as a woman to get aboard a lifeboat but Maude Young notices his shoes and unmasks him in front of the others in the lifeboat. At the other end of the spectrum of courage and unselfishness, George Healey heads down into one of the boiler rooms to comfort trapped crewmen.

As the Titanic is in her final moments, Norman and Richard find each other. Richard tells a passing steward that Norman is his "son" and then tells the boy that he has been proud of him every day of his life. Then they join the rest of the doomed passengers and the crew in singing the hymn "Nearer, My God, to Thee". As the last boiler explodes, the Titanic's bow plunges, pivoting her stern high into the air while the ship rapidly slides into the icy water. The remaining survivors are last seen waiting in the lifeboats for help to come as dawn approaches.

Cast

  • Clifton Webb as Richard Ward Sturges
  • Barbara Stanwyck as Julia Sturges
  • Robert Wagner as Gifford "Giff" Rogers
  • Audrey Dalton as Annette Sturges
  • Thelma Ritter as Maude Young
  • Brian Aherne as Capt. Edward J. Smith
  • Richard Basehart as George S. Healey
  • Allyn Joslyn as Earl Meeker
  • James Todd as Sandy Comstock
  • Frances Bergen as Madeleine Astor
  • William Johnstone as John Jacob Astor IV
  • Harper Carter as Norman Sturges
  • Mae Marsh as Woman to whom Norman gives his seat
  • Edmund Purdom as Second Officer Charles Lightoller
  • Christopher Severn as flag messenger
  • Production

    Walter Reisch says Daryl Zanuck called in him and Charles Brackett and said "I have Clifton Webb under contract, and we have CinemaScope, and I now want to do something big... Don't make Clifton a clown. I want him to start a new career as a character actor. Use all the young people we have on the lot, like Audrey Dalton and Robert Wagner . . ."

    Reisch says he came up with the Titanic idea and pitched Clifton Webb as one of the 25 multimillionaires who died on the Titanic. He said the film would be"60 percent truth, completely documentary" drawing on real life accounts. A part was written for Thelma Ritter. Reisch says it was Richard Breen's idea to have an alcoholic priest.

    Charles Brackett, who co-wrote and produced the film, told the press that some of the stories had to be discarded, "because they are too fantastic for movie audiences to believe. In a September 1952 news article, it was reported that Terry Moore was set to play the role of Annette Sturges, on condition that she would finish production of Man on a Tightrope on time.

    Reception

    According to the film aggregator website, Rotten Tomatoes, Titanic holds an 88% "Fresh" rating, based on 8 reviews.

    Variety reviewed the film positively stating, "but by the time the initial 45 or 50 minutes are out of the way, the impending disaster begins to take a firm grip on the imagination and builds a compelling expectancy."

    Pauline Kael was not impressed with the picture's special effects. She wrote: "the actual sinking looks like a nautical tragedy on the pond in Central Park."

    Awards and nominations

    Titanic won the Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Art Direction. The film was also nominated for the Directors Guild of America Award.

    References

    Titanic (1953 film) Wikipedia
    Titanic (1953 film) IMDb Titanic (1953 film) themoviedb.org