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Titanic

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2012
  • TV-PG
  • 48m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
3.7K
YOUR RATING
David Calder, Toby Jones, Maria Doyle Kennedy, Linus Roache, Perdita Weeks, and Jenna Coleman in Titanic (2012)
Trailer for Titanic
Play trailer2:10
4 Videos
51 Photos
DramaHistory

The world's largest ship, the R.M.S. Titanic, meets with disaster when she strikes an iceberg on her maiden voyage.The world's largest ship, the R.M.S. Titanic, meets with disaster when she strikes an iceberg on her maiden voyage.The world's largest ship, the R.M.S. Titanic, meets with disaster when she strikes an iceberg on her maiden voyage.

  • Stars
    • Peter McDonald
    • Steven Waddington
    • Glen Blackhall
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    3.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Peter McDonald
      • Steven Waddington
      • Glen Blackhall
    • 48User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 10 nominations total

    Episodes4

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2012

    Videos4

    Titanic: The Complete Series
    Trailer 2:10
    Titanic: The Complete Series
    Titanic
    Trailer 2:10
    Titanic
    Titanic
    Trailer 2:10
    Titanic
    Titanic
    Trailer 0:16
    Titanic
    Titanic: The Complete Series
    Promo 0:16
    Titanic: The Complete Series

    Photos51

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    Top cast85

    Edit
    Peter McDonald
    Peter McDonald
    • Jim Maloney
    • 2012
    Steven Waddington
    Steven Waddington
    • Second Officer Lightoller
    • 2012
    Glen Blackhall
    • Paolo Sandrini
    • 2012
    Ruth Bradley
    Ruth Bradley
    • Mary Maloney
    • 2012
    Georgia McCutcheon
    Georgia McCutcheon
    • Theresa Maloney
    • 2012
    Antonio Magro
    Antonio Magro
    • Mario Sandrini
    • 2012
    Perdita Weeks
    Perdita Weeks
    • Lady Georgiana Grex
    • 2012
    Stephen Campbell Moore
    Stephen Campbell Moore
    • Thomas Andrews
    • 2012
    Jenna Coleman
    Jenna Coleman
    • Annie Desmond
    • 2012
    Linus Roache
    Linus Roache
    • Hugh, Earl of Manton
    • 2012
    Geraldine Somerville
    Geraldine Somerville
    • Louisa, Countess of Manton
    • 2012
    Miles Richardson
    Miles Richardson
    • John Jacob Astor
    • 2012
    Noah Reid
    Noah Reid
    • Harry Widener
    • 2012
    Diana Kent
    Diana Kent
    • Eleanor Widener
    • 2012
    Angéla Eke
    • Madeleine Astor
    • 2012
    Péter Kõszegi
    • George Widener
    • 2012
    Toby Jones
    Toby Jones
    • John Batley
    • 2012
    Maria Doyle Kennedy
    Maria Doyle Kennedy
    • Muriel Batley
    • 2012
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews48

    6.03.7K
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    Featured reviews

    4gradyharp

    Julian Fellowes Lost At Sea

    The DVD hasn't been released here yet but the 'mini-series' is now over. It is difficult to call this amalgamation of snippets about an historic tragedy a miniseries because it was spread out so unevenly (3 hours on first night, one hour on second night) and we are now informed that the film is a total of 184 minutes which means that the fourth hour was completely filled with the most distracting and disrupting of commercials. Why this new version of TITANIC wasn't place on cable television where it could have been enjoyed on one uninterrupted three hour showing is beyond understanding. Perhaps when the DVD is released and there are no loud and ugly commercials every 5 minutes the story will hold together.

    Julian Fellowes, so respected for his writing of such series as Downton Abbey, etc. seems to have the urge to tell the story of the event through quick snippets of personal stories among the passengers - a commendable idea, but when the tiny tales are buried in the almost immediate collision with the iceberg and the attempt to flesh out the story by making it about how tragedy affects people's relationships come as little disconnected pop-ups, it is difficult to care about anybody, much less get to know them well enough to remember them at picture's end. Granted there are some moments before the ship is finished that emphasize the fact that the unsinkable Titanic was rushed to completion before it was safely ready, and those flashbacks to offer some interesting moments.

    But basically the story is the same as all the other TITANIC movies - a study about class distinction not only among the peerage of Brits but also the differentiation among first, second and third (steerage) classes - with a hefty dollop of snubbing the crass American passengers. Jon Jones directs this amalgamation of ideas. There are some brief but tasty moments for actors such as Glen Blackhall (a memorable Paolo) and Antonio Magro (Paolo's brother Mario), Peter McDonald, Steven Waddington, Ruth Bradley Linus Roache and Geraldine Somerville as the Mantons, Toby Jones and Maria Doyle Kennedy, Celia Emrie, James Wilby and Dragos Bucur (the stowaway Russian). The rest of the cast is so little used that they all but disappear.

    The film was apparently shot on digital video. Some of the effects are fine, but the whole film lacks cohesion - at least on the American release on commercial television!
    sara-buller-599-666198

    this Titanic left me lukewarm, should have been much colder

    I've read several reviews of Julian Fellowes' Titanic, and I agree with comments about the choppy, confusing editing (I'm sure there was a point to it, but I kept thinking I had started with the wrong episode, or in the middel of one...) I also agree with those that found the cast to be lacking in chemistry or real emotion. But what bothered me most about this version was that there was absolutely no sense of the arctic, icy cold. Nobody breathed vapor. Nobody froze to death -- EVRYBODY that went into the water drowned? Really? That sounds like (yet another) glaring historical inaccuracy. There was no mention of the cold throughout the "sinking scenes" except for one character mentioned she'd rather freeze than deal with "those people." There was no ice anywhere except the CGI iceberg. This version could have been set in a lukewarm summer lake, for all the impression of cold it produced. (And okay, maybe James Cameron put a little TOO much emphasis on clouds of vapor and frozen hair, but at least you FELT how cold it was!) If the point of this version was to make us feel the total experience of this tragedy, it missed by an artic ocean. Pun intended.
    drednm

    Better Than I Expected

    Tale of the Titanic disaster in four parts. The first three tell the same basic story but through the eyes of passengers in 1st, 2nd, and 3rd class (steerage). The story lines overlap and all meet in the same disastrous finale: the sinking of the ship.

    Although there are no big names in the cast, several are familiar faces (Maria Doyle Kennedy, Linus Roache, Toby Jones, Steven Waddington, Stephen Campbell Moore, Celia Imrie, James Wilby, Linda Kash).

    To my knowledge this is the only "Titanic" story that has included the real-life Dorothy Gibson (played by Sophie Winkleman), an American movie actress, who survived the disaster. Back in the US, she was rushed into "Saved from the Titanic" within a month of the sinking. She played herself, recounting the disaster, but was so overcome by grief, she suffered a nervous breakdown during the filming and retired from acting. The 1912 film was an absolute sensation, one of the biggest hits of the time. The film was tragically lost in a 1914 studio fire.
    6paul_m_haakonsen

    Actually quite nice...

    If you compare this four hour TV mini-series to the twelve hour "Titanic: Blood and Steel" series, which also came out in 2012, then this shorter series is more enjoyable. And even with a much smaller budget, they accomplished a much more captivating and entertaining series. And one that is not actually a drag to sit through.

    The 2012 "Titanic" series focus on the ship and the stories of the passengers, which is what the audience wants to see. Unlike the twelve hours series of political drama and shipyard problems.

    The acting in this series was good and they had some good talents on the cast list.

    I will say that the practical effects and special effects team managed to pull off the effects quite amazingly. And the visuals do play a big part in a drama about the Titanic.

    The costume and props department also did their job quite well, fleshing out the atmosphere nicely.

    If you have an interest in the Titanic then you should take the time to sit down and watch this 2012 TV mini-series, because it is actually quite entertaining and good.
    4TheLittleSongbird

    Sadly never seems to leave the deck

    I wanted to like this mini-series, really I did. I love Downton Abbey and Gosford Park is great fun, so it isn't as if I am not a fan of Julian Fellowes. And this had a great cast on paper. Unfortunately, apart from some beautiful photography, gorgeous costumes and a wonderfully-rendered ship as well as some decent turns from Glen Blackhall and Geraldine Somerville, this soggy ITV drama sadly never seems to leave the deck. A main problem of mine was the pace. Most of the drama had a very rushed feel to it, consequently characters came and went, story lines(and rather derivative ones at that) were introduced but never satisfactorily elaborated upon or resolved(especially Mary Maloney's) and the main characters lack depth or even any sort of genuine personality and it doesn't help that here they are all underdeveloped stereotypes.

    Some scenes particularly at the start take a while to get going, maybe in an attempt to give the characters depth but seeing as they failed with that aspect the first episode was dull, and the sinking scenes which had potential to be riveting lacked any true tension. The dialogue lacks the control and wit also of Downton Abbey and Gosford Park, it is all very stilted and soap-opera-ish with some parts like with the younger actors cringe-worthy and there are a couple of heavy accents too making some of the dialogue muddled. The rest of the acting considering the cast pedigree was disappointing, and the fact that a lot don't have much to do has a lot to do with it.

    Toby Jones for example is a good actor, but is one of these, and for me he also had a character that was all too derivative of some of his other roles(such as a less-evil version of Quilp from The Old Curiosity Shop). The rest of the cast that aren't the main focus of the drama are so little used and so scatter-shot in their appearances that their acting is downright forgettable. All in all, a big soggy and largely unmoving disappointment, better than the animated versions, which are the "what-the-devil-did-I-just-watch?" sort of quality, but for a better version try the sumptuous James Cameron version which had an absolutely riveting last hour and especially the brilliant A Night to Remember. 4/10 Bethany Cox

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Liam Neeson in Schindler's List (1993)
    History

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This is the first Titanic film to show the Titanic splitting in half at a shallow angle. New research has indicated that the Titanic split in half at a lower angle than once thought and not at the high angle depicted in James Cameron's 1997 film.
    • Goofs
      The passengers and crew are seen attempting to launch the overturned Collapsible lifeboat B on the starboard side as the ship sinks. That particular lifeboat was actually on the port side.
    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits of each of the four episodes look like they're submerged in water.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Wright Stuff: Episode #17.55 (2012)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 14, 2012 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Canada
      • Hungary
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Титаник
    • Filming locations
      • Stern Film Studio, Pomáz, Hungary
    • Production companies
      • Deep Indigo Productions
      • Sienna Films
      • Mid Atlantic Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 48m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16:9 HD

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