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5,2/10
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MA NOTE
L'un d'eux a dit que Dieu lui-même ne pouvait pas la couler. Puis ils ont dit qu'aucun homme sur Terre ne pouvait l'atteindre. Mais une agence de recherche sous-marine est chargée de retrouv... Tout lireL'un d'eux a dit que Dieu lui-même ne pouvait pas la couler. Puis ils ont dit qu'aucun homme sur Terre ne pouvait l'atteindre. Mais une agence de recherche sous-marine est chargée de retrouver le navire dans sa tombe de l'Atlantique Nord.L'un d'eux a dit que Dieu lui-même ne pouvait pas la couler. Puis ils ont dit qu'aucun homme sur Terre ne pouvait l'atteindre. Mais une agence de recherche sous-marine est chargée de retrouver le navire dans sa tombe de l'Atlantique Nord.
- Prix
- 3 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe movie was surprisingly accurate on one point, though they didn't know it at the time. Computer displays show the Titanic resting at a depth of 12,347 feet. When the wreck was discovered in 1985, it was resting at a depth of 12,415 feet.
- GaffesThe Titanic is towed up New York City's East River, presumably to the Brooklyn Navy Yard, and passes under the Brooklyn Bridge. The Titanic's masts, which are intact, were about 200 feet high from the waterline. The Brooklyn Bridge has 127 feet of clearance at mean high water. To reach the Navy Yard, the ship would also have to pass under the Manhattan Bridge, which has 135 feet of clearance.
- Autres versionsThe original theatrical version featured a long sequence of the foam being pumped into the hull of the Titanic, which is mentioned in the screenplay earlier. Shortly after the film began to get the horrid reviews and poor box office, there were edits made to the film and new prints sent to theaters, in a failed attempt to tighten the film a bit. These scenes have not been included in any of the VHS or DVD releases.
- ConnexionsEdited into Voyagers!: Voyagers of the Titanic (1983)
Commentaire en vedette
I have never understood the degree of ire, dislike, contempt and scorn heaped upon this movie. A multi million dollar turkey at the box office which virtually sank Lord Lew Grade and one that has provided film critics with cheap laughs ever since. I sit here this morning, having sat through ZOOLANDER last night, watching a complacent, pre-programmed brain-dead audience guffaw itself senseless, contributing another truck load of dollars to Ben Stiller's superannuation fund and you know, I wonder about RAISE THE TITANIC. What has happened to sentiment, simplicity, the ultimately simple values in life?
Sure, RAISE THE TITANIC captures none of the power of Cussler's novel, but I don't really care! Yeah, they got the funnel configuration shot to hell, the underwater model as it surfaces looks much like the little rubber boat I used to play with in the bath as a child, and David Selby has the animal magnetism of Osama bin Laden, but I'd like to tell you something. Perhaps because I maintained a fascination with the TITANIC ever since I was a child and dreamed of just how it must have been that night, when watching that absolutely awesome scene in RAISE THE TITANIC as the great ship broke the surface I have never in my life been so emotionally moved. Tears just ran down my face and I cried like a child. When I got home that night my wife asked me what was wrong. I couldn't talk about it and was never able to explain, and you people reading this want to believe it, I am the absolute last guy you would consider to be a wuss! How anyone could have witnessed that scene in the theater and NOT been moved I could never understand.
So many memorable things in the film. Titanic survivor, Sir Alec Guinness' touching cameo in the pub when he gives Dirk Pitt (the late Richard Jordan) the white star flag that he removed from the stern the night the great ship foundered, and which he wanted replaced if they were ever to raise it from the bottom of the Atlantic. The inarguably realistic scene when Jordan and his crew members finally discover the wreck on the bottom, played out against John Barry's ultimately moving musical score, the best he wrote for ANY film. The external shots of the ship once it has been raised (Way better I thought than Cameron's digitised TITANIC) and the internal shots of the gymnasium still dripping with water. Finally, the wonderful scenes as it is towed into New York harbor to complete its (then) 68-year journey. True, the last twenty minutes or so were all downhill, but nothing can detract from what went before.
Worst thing they ever did was to FIND the wreck! A dream died that day!
Sure, RAISE THE TITANIC captures none of the power of Cussler's novel, but I don't really care! Yeah, they got the funnel configuration shot to hell, the underwater model as it surfaces looks much like the little rubber boat I used to play with in the bath as a child, and David Selby has the animal magnetism of Osama bin Laden, but I'd like to tell you something. Perhaps because I maintained a fascination with the TITANIC ever since I was a child and dreamed of just how it must have been that night, when watching that absolutely awesome scene in RAISE THE TITANIC as the great ship broke the surface I have never in my life been so emotionally moved. Tears just ran down my face and I cried like a child. When I got home that night my wife asked me what was wrong. I couldn't talk about it and was never able to explain, and you people reading this want to believe it, I am the absolute last guy you would consider to be a wuss! How anyone could have witnessed that scene in the theater and NOT been moved I could never understand.
So many memorable things in the film. Titanic survivor, Sir Alec Guinness' touching cameo in the pub when he gives Dirk Pitt (the late Richard Jordan) the white star flag that he removed from the stern the night the great ship foundered, and which he wanted replaced if they were ever to raise it from the bottom of the Atlantic. The inarguably realistic scene when Jordan and his crew members finally discover the wreck on the bottom, played out against John Barry's ultimately moving musical score, the best he wrote for ANY film. The external shots of the ship once it has been raised (Way better I thought than Cameron's digitised TITANIC) and the internal shots of the gymnasium still dripping with water. Finally, the wonderful scenes as it is towed into New York harbor to complete its (then) 68-year journey. True, the last twenty minutes or so were all downhill, but nothing can detract from what went before.
Worst thing they ever did was to FIND the wreck! A dream died that day!
- uds3
- 9 nov. 2001
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- How long is Raise the Titanic?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Raise the Titanic
- Lieux de tournage
- The Sloop Inn, The Wharf, St Ives, Cornwall, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(John Bigalow shows Dirk Pitt his collection of Titanic memorabilia at the Sloop Inn)
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 36 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Durée1 heure 55 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was La guerre des abîmes (1980) officially released in India in English?
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