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Movie Trivia

#Titanic trivia and added details
 
movietrivia for titanic
there are currently 165 trivia for the film 'titanic'
  • #001
    The studios wanted Matthew McConaughey, but James Cameron insisted on Leonardo DiCaprio.
  • #002
    Fay Wray was originally offered the role of the older Rose but turned it down, saying, "I think to have done 'Titanic' would have been a tortuous experience altogether". Hollywood legend 'Ann Rutherford' also turned it down.
  • #003
    Before announcing development of this film, director James Cameron shot footage of icebergs off Nova Scotia under the pretence of making a film called "Planet Ice."
  • #004
    When James Cameron decided to include real footage of the Titanic's remains on the seabed, he did not want to simply shoot from inside a submersible as had been done for the IMAX documentary Titanica (1995). To allow filming from outside the sub, Cameron's brother Mike Cameron and Panavision developed a deep-sea camera system capable of withstanding the 400 atmospheres of pressure at that depth.
  • #005
    The deep-sea camera held only 12 minutes' worth of film, but each dive took many hours. To make the best use of his resources, James Cameron had a 1/33 scale model of the wreck constructed and used it to rehearse each dive. The Russian sub operators would walk around the model ship holding model subs in their hands as Cameron explained the shots he wanted.
  • #006
    12 dives were necessary. On the last two dives, shots were taken by sending a remotely operated vehicle into the wreck; James Cameron had intended using this device only as a prop.
  • #007
    For some wreck interior shots, a set was constructed and submerged.
  • #008
    James Cameron went on the dives to the real Titanic himself, and found it an overwhelming emotional experience to actually see it. He ended up spending more time with the ship than its living passengers did.
  • #009
    Most of the decor on the ship - from the carpet to the chandeliers - was reconstructed by, or under the supervision of, the original companies which furnished the Titanic.
  • #010
    When Jack (Leonardo DiCaprio) is preparing to draw Rose (Kate Winslet), he tells her to "Lie on that bed, uh I mean couch." The line was scripted "Lie on that couch", but DiCaprio made an honest mistake and James Cameron liked it so much he kept it in.
  • #011
    In 2007, the American Film Institute ranked this as the #83 Greatest Movie of All Time. This was one of the newest entries on the list (from films which were released between 1997 and 2005).
  • #012
    [June 2008] Ranked #6 on the American Film Institute's list of the 10 greatest films in the genre "Epic".
  • #013
    The movie's line "I'm the king of the world!" was voted as the #4 of "The 100 Greatest Movie Lines" by Premiere in 2007.
  • #014
    Jack Davenport was considered for the role of Caledon 'Cal' Hockley but was deemed too young.
  • #015
    The movie's line "I'm the king of the world" was voted as the #100 movie quote by the American Film Institute (out of 100).
  • #016
    The scenes during which Thomas Andrews chastises Second Office Charles Lightoller for sending the boats away without filling them to capacity is the only scene in the entire film in which the actors' breath was not digitally added in later.
  • #017
    Was the highest grossing film in Japan until Hayao Miyazaki's Spirted Away (2001) opened
  • #018
    First movie to have a budget of $200,000,000.
  • #019
    The engine room scenes were partially filmed aboard the WWII ship SS Jeremiah O'Brien. Smaller railings and catwalks were installed to make the engines appear bigger.
  • #020
    In real life there was concern that the davits might not be strong enough to lower the boats fully loaded, although they had in fact been tested under such a weight. The davits in the film, which can be seen flexing under the weight, were made by the same company as the real-life ones.
  • #021
    Production of the film began in 1995 when Cameron shot footage of the real wreck of the Titanic. He was able to persuade 20th Century Fox to invest in the film by convincing them that the publicity surrounding a real-life dive to the wreck would be really beneficial to the production.
  • #022
    The staircase is not actually technically accurate being slightly larger in the film than it was in real life. This is because people these days are actually a bit taller than they were in 1912 so they would have looked out of place on a staircase that fit the correct dimensions.
  • #023
    The scene in which Rose meets Jack to thank him for saving her life was improvised by the two actors at James Cameron's request, and the spitting scene was almost all ad-lib. Cameron also credits Kate Winslet with writing the heart-wrenching "This is where we first met" line during the final sinking, as well as suggesting Rose spit in Cal's face rather than (as scripted) jab him with a hairpin.
  • #024
    At the departure scene the extras were filmed on a green screen in a parking lot.
  • #025
    A model was used for the ship in the background during the poker scene so the onlookers are missing
  • #026
    Most of the ocean which extras were jumping into was 3 feet deep.
  • #027
    When the scene where a wall of water bursts through a doorway was first shot, James Cameron said that the 40,000 gallons of water dumped into the corridor set were not enough, and asked for triple that amount. The set had to be rebuilt to stand up under the additional weight of water.
  • #028
    James Cameron was adamant about not including any song in the movie, even over the closing credits. Composer James Horner secretly arranged with lyricist Will Jennings and singer C?line Dion to write "My Heart Will Go On" and record a demo tape, which he then presented to Cameron. The song won an Oscar.
  • #029
    After a sizable publicity campaign was prepared, release was delayed from summer to Christmas 1997 while postproduction (especially special effects) took longer than anticipated.
  • #030
    Production began on September 1st, 1995.
  • #031
    As a result of the additional financing, this became the second co-production between Paramount Pictures and 20th Century Fox to win the Best Picture Oscar, after Braveheart (1995).
  • #032
    The "full-size" ship exterior set was constructed in a tank on a beach south of Rosarito, Baja California, Mexico. Construction started on the 85th anniversary of the real Titanic's launch - May 31, 1996 (see also A Night to Remember (1958)). To reduce costs, the number of instances of some repeated components (such as windows) was reduced, and other parts (such as the funnels and lifeboats) were built at 90% scale to produce the correct visual appearance. The set was oriented to face into the prevailing wind so that the smoke from the funnels would blow the right way.
  • #033
    20th Century Fox acquired 40 acres of waterfront south of Playas de Rosarito in Mexico and started building a brand new studio in May 31 1996. A 17 million gallon tank was built for the exterior of the reconstructed ship, providing 270 degrees of ocean view. The ship was built to full scale but production design removed redundant sections on the superstructure and the forward well deck so that it would fit the tank. The remaining sections were filled in digitally. The lifeboats and funnels were shrunk by 10%. While the boat deck and the A-deck were full working sets, the rest of the ship was steel plating. Contained within that was a 50 foot lifting platform for the ship to tilt during the sinking sequences, whilst towering above that was a 162 feet tall tower crane on 600 feet of railtrack. This was used as a construction, lighting and camera platform.
  • #034
    All the scenes where there is an exterior sunset shot were filmed at the set in the Baja California, Mexico set.
  • #035
    In the scene where the water comes crashing into the Grand Staircase room, the film makers only had one shot at it because the entire set and furnishings were going to be destroyed in the shot.
  • #036
    In the scene in the beginning where the captain orders full-speed ahead and the shot moves down into the boiler room, the set was really just about three boilers but the film makers had huge mirrors installed to visualize a great big long room. (In this scene you can see workers shoving in coal, and about 20 feet down the room you can see the mirror image of the workers).
  • #037
    The only real decks were the boat deck and A deck, with a facade of plating and lighted portholes completed only on the starboard side. So many lights were required that cinematographer 'Russell Carpenter' commented: "And you walk inside, and 70 miles of one kind of cable and 70 miles of another kind all add up to this Terry Gilliam vision of the telephone company of the 1950s."
  • #038
    Only the starboard side of the exterior set was completed. In the scenes portraying the ship at the Southampton dock, all shots were reversed to give the appearance of the port side of the ship, as it was actually docked in 1912. This required the painstaking construction of reversed costumes and signage to complete the illusion, which was achieved by reversing the image in post-production. One cast member joked, "I wasn't dyslexic before starting this show. I am now."
  • #039
    The entire set was mounted on hydraulic jacks and could be tilted up to 6? intact within the depth of the tank.
  • #040
    To achieve tilt angles beyond 6?, the "underwater" parts of the facade were simply detached from the set and the support structure adjusted accordingly.
  • #041
    After the ship breaks in half, the bow section sinks rapidly. To film this, the full-size set was in fact divided into sections. But the bow section would not sink fast enough, due to its own buoyancy and the narrow clearance between it and the tank. James Cameron observed that once "God's 10,000,000 kW light" had risen they would have to wait until the next night, and suggested sinking the set, letting the air space between the two decks fill with water, then raising the set again and quickly sinking it before the water ran out. This worked.
  • #042
    The detached stern section of the full-size set was moved onto a separate tilting platform which would allow it to be rapidly turned vertical for the final phase of sinking. There were 10 takes, each requiring 100 stunt players to fall from or along the set while 1,000 extras were attached to the railings by safety harnesses.
  • #043
    In some shots the apparent tilt angle was steepened using various tricks such as tilting the camera and horizon.
  • #044
    Interior shots also involved hydraulically tilted sets in tanks (in various studio soundstages).
  • #045
    A 1/8 scale model of the ship's stern was also used.
  • #046
    Gloria Stuart, being only 86, was aged by makeup to play Rose at age 101. She did not find this a pleasant experience.
  • #047
    In preference to hiring new extras all the time and repeatedly having to fit them for clothes and coach them in proper 1912 mannerisms, a group of 150 "core extras" was hired who would stay with the picture through the entire production. They and other performers learned proper 1912 behavior in a 3-hour course from Lynne Hockney, who was also the film's choreographer. Hockney also produced a video "Titanic Etiquette: A Time Traveler's Guide", which was then left playing continuously in the wardrobe department.
  • #048
    On the final night of shooting in Nova Scotia, one or more pranksters mixed PCP (angel dust) into the clam chowder served to the cast and crew. 80 people were taken ill, many hospitalized with hallucinations. Bill Paxton felt listless for two weeks after the incident.
  • #049
    The last lines spoken by Old Rose, "He exists now only in my memory," are also the last lines in the film Mad Max 2 (1981).
  • #050
    The name of the character Caledon Hockley derives from two small towns (Caledon and Hockley) near Orangeville, Ontario, Canada, where James Cameron's aunt and uncle live.
  • #051
    In the scene where Jack and Rose are walking the deck and talking, Rose calls herself a "poor little rich girl". Gloria Stuart, who plays old Rose, was actually IN the film Poor Little Rich Girl (1936).
  • #052
    Kate Winslet tells Billy Zane, "I'd rather be his whore than your wife." This line was delivered earlier by Peggy Lipton to Chris Mulkey in the second season of "Twin Peaks" (1990), in which Zane and David Warner both co-starred.
  • #053
    The bedtime story the Irish mother tells her children is the story of "The Children of Lir," an old Irish folktale about children turned into swans. That is, unless it's actually the story of "Tir na nOg, Land of eternal youth and beauty", an Irish folktale where no one ages.
  • #054
    At $200 million, the movie cost more than the Titanic itself. The cost to construct the ship in 1910-1912 was ?1.5 million, equivalent to $7.5 million at the time and about $120 to $150 million in 1997 dollars.
  • #055
    After filming, the remains of the full-size set were sold as scrap metal.
  • #056
    After sampling the caviar provided for the first-class dinner scene, Jonathan Hyde said he "made an acting decision on the spot that Ismay was a big eater".
  • #057
    That's real Beluga caviar in the first class dining room sequence.
  • #058
    The first class lounge was deemed to be too expensive a set to be built. As a miniature of it was required for the flooding scenes, one was built to quarter of the real size. This was then greenscreened as background for the scenes where the actors were seen sitting in the lounge.
  • #059
    'Chapman, Mark Lindsay' was fired and rehired twice, and survived an accident where he was struck by a boat and had to be pulled from the water.
  • #060
    On the set of Titanic, Leonardo DiCaprio's pet lizard was run over by a truck, but with some TLC, Leo nursed him to health.
  • #061
    The most expensive first-class suite on the Titanic cost $4,350, the equivalent of about $75,000 today.
  • #062
    James Cameron forfeited his $8 million director's salary and his percentage of the gross when the studio became concerned at how much over budget the movie was running.
  • #063
    When Rose is afloat on the wood looking up at the stars, there is a vague image of the necklace. It is outlined by brighter stars shaping the heart loosely, and a few bright stars shaping the chain.
  • #064
    When James Cameron was writing the movie, he intended for the main characters Rose DeWitt Bukater and Jack Dawson to be entirely fictitious. It was only after the script was finished that he discovered that there had been a real "J. Dawson" who died aboard the Titanic. This "J. Dawson" was trimmer Joseph Dawson, who had been born September 1888 in Dublin, Ireland. His body was salvaged and buried at Fairview Lawn cemetery in Nova Scotia with many other Titanic victims. Today, his grave stone (#227) is the most widely visited in the cemetery.
  • #065
    As is the case with many 20th Century Fox films, the film cans for the advance screening prints and show prints had a code name. Titanic was "Baby's Day Out 2."
  • #066
    When Jack is telling Rose about the lady he drew that sat at the bar wearing every piece of jewelry she owned, Jack said that they nicknamed her Madame Bijoux. Bijoux is French for jewels.
  • #067
    In 1998 it became the first film since 1966 to win the Oscar for Best Picture but not be nominated for its screenplay (the previous film to hold this "honor" was The Sound of Music (1965).
  • #068
    Most Oscar-nominated film (14) not to win in any acting categories
  • #069
    Gloria Stuart was the only person on the set of this biopic who was living at the time of the actual disaster
  • #070
    This was the first movie to best the Oscar and MTV Movie Award for best picture.
  • #071
    Came eighth in the UK's Ultimate Film, in which films were placed in order of how many seats they sold at cinemas
  • #072
    Early in production, this film's brief "decoy" working title was "Planet Ice".
  • #073
    One of three films to win a total of 11 Academy Awards, the others being Ben-Hur (1959) and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003).
  • #074
    Kate Winslet developed pneumonia while filming the water scenes.
  • #075
    A number of scenes are arranged and in some cases scripted almost identically to similar sequences in A Night to Remember (1958). This is particularly true of these scenes: - Thomas Andrews telling Capt. Smith the sinking is "a mathematical certainty"; - The Titanic's band preparing to depart at the end, only to turn around and regroup as Hartley begins playing "Nearer My God to Thee" by himself (though a different version of the song is used in the 1958 film). - A shot of Ismay in a lifeboat as the Titanic sinks behind him. - Thomas Andrews looking at a painting as Titanic prepares to sink - Andrews encountering a man by the Grand Staircase and telling him the ship is doomed (in this film, he tells Rose).
  • #076
    The highest-grossing film ($600,788,188) in North American box office history.
  • #077
    Is the highest grossing film in box office history with a worldwide gross of $1.2 billion.
  • #078
    The drawing Jack made entitled "Lady Bijou" wasn't really just any picture. They got the idea from an old 1933 photograph taken by Brassai called "Bijou".
  • #079
    When the hull breaks in half and the stern falls level, look carefully at the close-up of Jack and Rose when the stern starts to raise again - Jack hits Rose in the face.
  • #080
    The film was initially budgeted at $135,000,000, but going two months over schedule required asking Paramount Pictures to contribute an additional $65,000,000 in exchange for U.S. distribution rights.
  • #081
    Shay Duffin, who played the pubkeeper in England, is related to one of the original Irish workers who built the Titanic.
  • #082
    The original release date was 25 July 1997. When Harrison Ford, whose upcoming film, Air Force One (1997), was scheduled to be released the same day, found out, he demanded that Paramount push the release date to a different time. Paramount, who had distributed many successful films of Ford's agreed, being worried that Ford would never do another film for them again.
  • #083
    After completing Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), James Cameron got the idea to do the film after watching A Night to Remember (1958). He spent five years doing research on the Titanic and its fate.
  • #084
    British newspapers alleged that Michael Caine refused a role.
  • #085
    Macaulay Culkin was considered for the role of Jack Dawson.
  • #086
    Reba McEntire was offered and had accepted the role of the unsinkable Molly Brown, but due to later schedule conflicts had to turn it down.
  • #087
    Ranks first in the Academy Award Most Nominated Films List with 14 nominations, tying with the No.1 All About Eve (1950).
  • #088
    Rose only says "I love you" to Jack once while they are both shivering in the water. Jack never says it, although he mentions what he loves about her (see quotes)
  • #089
    Kate Winslet was one of the few actors who didn't want to wear a wetsuit during the water scenes.
  • #090
    Rose laughs during the flying scene when Jack sings "Come Josephine in My Flying Machine" because in a deleted scene they were singing it as they come out of the 3rd class dance.
  • #091
    The "Sinking" coat was a size 8 while the rest of the gowns were a size 4. It was so large to make Rose seem more vulnerable in the sinking scenes.
  • #092
    At the party in steerage, a foreign-speaking man is speaking with Rose and she says "I'm sorry, I can't understand you." The man is Swedish, probably a friend of Sven's, and he's saying to her "Talar fr? svenska?" In English that translates to "Does the miss/lady speak Swedish?" which she obviously doesn't.
  • #093
    When the stern of the ship is vertical, Chief Baker Joughin (Liam Tuohy, in white) is drinking from a flask. Joughin was one of few to survive the freezing water, allegedly due to the alcohol (but this is disputed as unlikely since alcohol is known to accelerate hypothermia, not to help resist cold). The scene was added after Liam showed the flask to James Cameron explaining that it was a family heirloom as old as the Titanic itself.
  • #094
    The Swedish phrases that Sven and his buddy exchange during the card game translate into the following: "I can't believe you bet our tickets!". "Shut up!". When grabbing Jack by the throat: "You damn weasel!". And after punching his buddy in the face: "You damn idiot! What the hell are we gonna do? I'm gonna kill you!".
  • #095
    One of the Swedes in the beginning of the film is originally Norwegian, and currently works as a doorman at a nightclub in Stavanger, Norway. The other is an actor from Finland.
  • #096
    Was #1 at the U.S. box office for a record fifteen consecutive weeks, from 19 December 1997 to 2 April 1998.
  • #097
    Dolores O'Riordan was asked to both act in and compose music for the movie, but refused both offers due to the birth of her son.
  • #098
    Director Trademark: [James Cameron] [feet] The shoe at the beginning, Rose's feet while climbing the rail, Jack's feet when taking off his shoes, Rose's and Jack's feet while dancing.
  • #099
    Director Trademark: [James Cameron] [perfect cut] Several dissolves between the Titanic on the seabed to the Titanic of the past, and the dissolve from the young to the old Rose.
  • #100
    Director Cameo: [James Cameron] Just below Lovejoy during the below decks party, with a gray beard.
  • #101
    Director Cameo: [James Cameron] Standing behind Fabrizio on the deck waiting for a lifeboat when Murdoch starts shooting.
  • #102
    The hands seen sketching Rose are not Leonardo DiCaprio's, but director James Cameron's. In post-production, Cameron, who is left-handed, mirror-imaged the sketching shots so the artist would be appear to be right-handed, like Leonardo DiCaprio.
  • #103
    Was the first film to be filmed at Fox Studios Baja.
  • #104
    The car in which Jack and Rose make love, was a Renault owned by the Carter family.
  • #105
    The first line spoken in Swedish, the card player saying, "I can't believe you bet our tickets," is spoken with a heavy Finnish accent. So heavy in fact that on the Swedish DVD this line is subtitled along with all the English lines.
  • #106
    The character of Rose is partially based on California artist Beatrice Wood, who died in 1998 at the age of 105.
  • #107
    In the scene where an elderly couple are hugging on the bed while water rushes underneath depicts the founding owners of Macy's department store in New York; Ida and Isidor Strauss. They actually died on the Titanic in real life. Ida was offered a seat on a lifeboat but refused so that she could stay with her husband saying, "As we have lived together, so we shall die together." There was a scene that depicted this moment, it was cut but it can be see on the Special Collecters DVD
  • #108
    In the movie, Jack is a 3rd class passenger on the Titanic who sneaks his way up to first class with the hopes of never getting caught. In the real disaster in 1912, Third Class Passenger Hilda Maria Hellstr?really did sneak up to first class out of curiosity and never got caught, however she was in her 3rd class cabin when the Titanic hit an iceberg and ended up surviving the sinking by boarding one of the last lifeboats to leave, Collapsible C.
  • #109
    The "ale" in the below decks party was actually root beer.
  • #110
    Danny Nucci stated that there were several different versions of his death that were scripted. One of them would have involved him swimming up to Cal's swamped lifeboat and begging to be let aboard, saying it was his destiny to go to America. At that point Cal was supposed to have knocked him unconscious with his oar and tell him "IT'S THAT WAY!"
  • #111
    Both Leonardo DiCaprio and Jason Barry both injured themselves while filming the scene in which their characters pull up a bench in third class and use it to smash a gate open. Leo threw out a shoulder, and Jason caught himself in the chin with the bench.
  • #112
    As originally scripted, Cal was intended to actually find Rose aboard the Carpathia after the sinking. Rose was to tell him to let her mother know that she died on the Titanic, and that he would leave her alone for the rest of her life.
  • #113
    Jack has a line during the first class dinner scene in which he asks Molly Brown which utensils to use for what. Because of the enormous amount of time spent shooting the scene, having to provide different angles and coverage for all the cast members at the table, Leonardo DiCaprio was so worn out towards the end that he picked up a fork and asked Kathy Bates "Which one of these do I use to lobotomize myself?"
  • #114
    During World War II, former Second Officer Lightoller was one of the many private citizens who helped in the Allied evacuation of British forces from Dunkirk, France.
  • #115
    The most expensive movie to be filmed in the 20th century.
  • #116
    Cal's snide comments notwithstanding, Rose intuitively has quite an eye for art. She bought herself a canvas considered one of the most influential paintings of the 20th century: Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (The Ladies of Avignon). During the sinking, it is shown floating in Rose's cabin -but actually it has been on exhibit safe and dry for decades at the Met in New York City (see Goofs).
  • #117
    Approximately 120 tons of water (triple what had been initially planned) were released for Eric Braeden's final scene. Braeden said that he has never been more terrified in his life than when he was preparing for it, as there was obviously no possible physical rehearsal.
  • #118
    Many of the "core extras" used for the movie took on characteristics of actual survivors. One scene where two little girls are loaded onto a lifeboat and the man says, "It's only for a little while" is based on testimony from one of the girls who survived.
  • #119
    When Jack sneaks onto the first-class deck in search of Rose, we see a young boy playing with a top as his father looks on. This is based on a famous photograph taken aboard Titanic soon after her launch (the photographer left the ship when it docked briefly in Ireland). The boy and his father survived the sinking, but the boy died some years later in an auto accident. The father is played by Titanic historian and author Don Lynch, of the Titanic Historical Society, who served as a consultant on the film.
  • #120
    The biggest box-office draw in film history (to date), grossing more than $1 billion worldwide.
  • #121
    The engine master says, "All ahead full," and we hear someone yell, "All ahead full!" in the background. That is actually director James Cameron's voice.
  • #122
    David Warner, who plays Spicer Lovejoy, starred as one of the leading roles, Laurence Beasley, in the TV-movie S.O.S. Titanic (1979) (TV), which also depicts the sinking of the "un-sinkable" ship.
  • #123
    Rose says "Jack" 80 times, not counting when she calls him "Mr. Dawson", but counting both Kate Winslet and Gloria Stuart. Jack says "Rose" 50 times.
  • #124
    James Cameron drew all the pictures in Jack's sketchbook. In fact, the hands seen sketching Rose wearing the necklace are not Jack's but Cameron's. Since he is left-handed and Jack right-handed, the shots were mirror-imaged in post-production (see also the goofs entry).
  • #125
    James Cameron originally wanted Enya to compose the score for the film and even went so far as to assemble a rough edit using her music. When Enya declined, Cameron hired James Horner (who had composed the music for Cameron's previous film Aliens (1986)) to write the score. Horner stated that the tensions with Cameron were so high during post-production of "Aliens" that he assumed he and Cameron would never work together again. However, Cameron was so impressed with Horner's score from Braveheart (1995) that he was willing to forget the past experience. According to some accounts, Horner independently decided the film's score should be done in Enya's style. As a result, several pieces of the score sound very similar to some well-known Enya songs, in particular her theme song for Far and Away (1992) (Book of Days).
  • #126
    In the scene of Rose looking through the corridors for Jack, the water used was actually from the Pacific Ocean at the Baja California, Mexico set. The water was so cold that when Rose gasps when she first dives into the water, it was actually Kate Winslet's genuine reaction to the frigid ocean.
  • #127
    A 162-foot crane originally intended for construction and lighting was mounted on railway tracks and used for most high-level exterior shots, rather than expensive helicopters. The camera platform was big enough for a gyro-stabilized Wescam, a Steadicam and a hand-held camera. James Cameron directed atop it to be able to see the entire set.
  • #128
    Long shots showing the whole ship's exterior were produced by Digital Domain. A 1/20 scale model was filmed and computer-generated images of people, ocean and smoke were added. For one scene, James Cameron instructed them to "imagine we're making a commercial for White Star Lines and we need beautiful shots sweeping around the ship from a helicopter."
  • #129
    The rooms that Caledon Hockley, Rose DeWitt Bukater and Ruth DeWitt Bukater occupied (B52, B54 and B56) were actual rooms on the real Titanic. They were originally booked by J.P. Morgan, but he canceled before the ship sailed. Morgan had a controlling interest in International Mercantile Marine, a conglomerate that owned the White Star Line. Bruce Ismay booked the rooms following Morgan's cancellation. (See Goofs.)
  • #130
    Rose, in her old age, owns a Pomeranian. A Pomeranian was one of only three dogs known to have survived the disaster. As the real ship sank, a passenger freed dogs from their kennels and a survivor later recalled a French bulldog swimming in the ocean. James Cameron filmed scenes portraying the doomed animals but cut them.
  • #131
    The completed film ignores the freighter Californian, which had stopped for the night due to the ice hazard and was within sight of the Titanic throughout the sinking (the Californian's warning had been received and sent to the bridge but was not placed in the chartroom). An early version of the script included a scene on the Californian, but James Cameron cut out the subplot after filming it to shorten running time. The two actors in the scene on the Californian were Adam Barker as radio operator Cyril Evans and Peter John White as Third Officer Groves.
  • #132
    This was the first time the Best Song Oscar (for "My Heart Will Go On") was won by a non-musical Best Picture winner. Best Song Oscar had been won by Best Picture winner only twice before (Going My Way (1944) and Gigi (1958), both musicals).
  • #133
    James Cameron regular Michael Biehn was nearly cast as Cal Hockley and attended numerous meetings with Cameron to discuss the role, though ultimately the part went to Billy Zane.
  • #134
    'Rob Lowe (I)' was considered for the role of Cal Hockley.
  • #135
    After finding out that she had to be naked in front of Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet decided to break the ice, and when they first met, she flashed him.
  • #136
    Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet committed to the film even before the script was written, on the basis only of a 165-page outline James Cameron had written.
  • #137
    Christian Bale auditioned for the role of Jack Dawson, but was turned down because James Cameron didn't want two British actors playing the lead roles of two Americans.
  • #138
    Anthony Higgins turned down a role in this movie to do a play.
  • #139
    With her nomination for Best Supporting Actress at age 87, Gloria Stuart became the oldest person to ever be nominated for an Oscar.
  • #140
    Gwyneth Paltrow was also up for the role of Rose Dewitt Bukater but lost to Kate Winslet.
  • #141
    In the movie the original script included scenes of newlywed couple Daniel and Mary Marvin, Daniel being a cameraman and son of Henry Marvin, co-founder of the movie production company American Mutoscope & Biograph. Daniel Marvin died aboard the Titanic, but not without photographing some of the only existing film of the liner.
  • #142
    Even though the actors wore waterproof makeup for the scenes shot in the aftermath of the sinking, they constantly required touch-ups, as chemicals in the pool they shot in would wash the makeup off.
  • #143
    Considerable controversy arose when James Cameron depicted the suicide of First Officer Murdoch. While Cameron did apologize to Murdoch's family members for the upset the scene caused them, he still kept the shot in the film, stating simply that while no one could prove that it did happen, neither could anyone prove that it didn't. Murdoch's body was never recovered, but it is generally agreed that he either froze to death in the water or went down with the ship.
  • #144
    As a joke in the edit suite, James Cameron had a razor blade with a label that said "Use only if movie doesn't work".
  • #145
    The first film to be released on video (DVD/VHS) while it was still being shown in theaters.
  • #146
    Bernard Fox appeared as Lookout Frederick Fleet in A Night to Remember (1958) (uncredited) and as Col. Archibald Gracie in ?Titanic?.
  • #147
    Jack and Rose ranked #9 on Moviefone's 'The Top 25 Sexiest Movie Couples'. [May 2008]
  • #148
    Harland and Wolff, the Belfast shipyard who built the Titanic in 1900, opened up their private archives to the production, sharing blueprints that were long thought lost.
  • #149
    All the artefacts were created from scratch by Peter Lamont and his production design team to recreate the newness of everything on the ship.
  • #150
    For the safety of the stuntmen, most of the props were made of foam rubber.
  • #151
    The schedule was originally meant to last 138 days but grew to 160 - 20 days short of 6 months.
  • #152
    To sink the Grand Staircase into the purpose-built 5 million gallon tank, 90,000 gallons of water were dumped through it as it was lowered into the tank. Such was the volume that the staircase was ripped from its steel-reinforced foundations.
  • #153
    The post-sinking scenes were shot in a 350,000 gallon tank where the frozen corpses were created by applying a powder on the actors that then crystallized when exposed to water. Wax was applied to hair and clothes to create a wet look.
  • #154
    The original carpet manufacturers were persuaded to make an 18,000 square foot reproduction of the original weave that was on the ship.
  • #155
    The film contains over 100 speaking parts and over 1000 extras, all of whom needed to be dressed in lavish period costume.
  • #156
    Paramount had to send out replacement reels to theaters who had literally worn out their copies.
  • #157
    Of the special effects houses involved, VIFX were responsible for the icy, visible breath of the passengers floating in the water after the ship sank. They also worked on the engine room sequence and a lot of the workers seen therein. POP Film handled digital face replacements and matte paintings, Banned from the Ranch took care of some underwater shots, CIS Hollywood were responsible for sky replacements and bluescreen composites, whilst Digital Domain - Cameron's own company - dealt with the bulk of the big showcase special effects.
  • #158
    Both Winslet and DiCaprio learned how to dance the polka for the scenes set at the party in the third class compartments.
  • #159
    Kate Winslet had to learn how to scuba dive in preparation for her scenes in the water.
  • #160
    The deck of the Carpathia was the same deck of the Titanic set, dressed slightly differently.
  • #161
    Billy Zane was cast after James Cameron saw him in the film The Phantom (1996).
  • #162
    Egg white was used for the initial spitting sequence, but petroleum jelly was used in the sequence where Rose spits on Cal.
  • #163
    Rose's chiffon dress which she wears for the latter part of the film was designed to look just as good wet as dry. Costume designer Deborah Lynn Scott had about 24 of them made.
  • #164
    A number of scenes are arranged and in some cases scripted almost identically to similar sequences in A Night to Remember (1958). This is particularly true of these scenes: - Thomas Andrews telling Capt. Smith the sinking is "a mathematical certainty"; - The Titanic's band preparing to depart at the end, only to turn around and regroup as Hartley begins playing "Nearer My God to Thee" by himself (though a different version of the song is used in the 1958 film). - A shot of Ismay in a lifeboat as the Titanic sinks behind him. - Thomas Andrews looking at a painting as Titanic prepares to sink - Andrews encountering a man by the Grand Staircase and telling him the ship is doomed (in this film, he tells Rose).
  • #165
    Fay Wray was originally offered the role of the older Rose but turned it down, saying, "I think to have done 'Titanic' would have been a tortuous experience altogether". Hollywood legend 'Ann Rutherford' also turned it down.