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#3557792 - 04/17/12 11:07 AM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: Donnybrooke]
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Member
Registered: 04/03/12
Posts: 142
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Well,
But accept what you wish. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
semmern: Interesting theory. I'm a little dubious, as the California only ten miles from the Titanic's last position spotted the pack ice and halted in time. It must have been a very "local" phenomena. But, as pointed out in the movie, the Titanic was just entering the Labrador Current and temperatures were falling, so there may be some truth to it. Yea, and I choose to accept the words of those two witnesses and not some journalist trying to sell a book. The woman actually says in that interview that it is an outright lie that the "band played on". The California was 19 miles away according to the documentary I watched.
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#3557796 - 04/17/12 11:13 AM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: NavyNuke99]
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Member
Registered: 04/03/12
Posts: 142
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Also, something else I just found out recently: shipboard wireless operators at that time weren't employed by the respective ship lines, but instead by the Marconi company, which may partially explain why California's operator wasn't at his station that night, especially as the ship had decided to wait in the ice field for the night before braving the ice field in the morning.
But they still should have known a ship was in distress even if they did not get the morse code because they saw signal flares sent up from the Titanic but chose to ignore them for some inexplicable reason. Probably thought it was a fireworks display.
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#3557809 - 04/17/12 11:37 AM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: Donnybrooke]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/01
Posts: 4875
Loc: Derbyshire, England
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I've watched Director Roy Ward Baker's A Night To Remember many times and will do so again.
Wouldn't care to watch Cameron's version again though.
As if there wasn't enough drama on that fateful night without introducing a couple of twittering post-pubics and some bloody maniac running about with a Colt .45 M1911A1. Incidentally, it would have been extremely unlikely that he would have possessed an M1911 at that time and certainly not the improved version he was toting which didn't appear until 1926.
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TWELVE YEARS BEFORE THE HWH MAST.
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#3557824 - 04/17/12 11:53 AM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: Donnybrooke]
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Member
Registered: 04/03/12
Posts: 142
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Cameron's Titanic is worth watching just for the recreation of Titanic and the fake story is entertaining anyway.
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#3557843 - 04/17/12 12:29 PM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: Donnybrooke]
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Member
Registered: 06/28/08
Posts: 1337
Loc: The very north of Germany
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I don`t think Titanic was all that bad (minus the love story and Celine singing).
A few days ago I watched one interesting documentary, "The heroes of the Titanic" dealing with the crew of the engine rooms and the electricians. A very different perspective.
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#3557845 - 04/17/12 12:35 PM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: Old Dux]
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Effervescent Libertarian
King Crimson - SimHQ's Top Poster
Registered: 04/04/01
Posts: 78950
Loc: Miami, FL USA
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some bloody maniac running about with a Colt .45 M1911A1. Incidentally, it would have been extremely unlikely that he would have possessed an M1911 at that time and certainly not the improved version he was toting which didn't appear until 1926. And what percentage of movie audience members do you think actually noticed that inaccuracy? It's not like he was running around with an M-16. Now that would have been ridiculous. 
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#3557973 - 04/17/12 05:06 PM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: kilosierra]
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One Man Wolfpack
Senior Member
Registered: 01/04/09
Posts: 3988
Loc: Raleigh, NC
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I don`t think Titanic was all that bad (minus the love story and Celine singing).
A few days ago I watched one interesting documentary, "The heroes of the Titanic" dealing with the crew of the engine rooms and the electricians. A very different perspective. This is something that I've often thought about myself, and had a few conversations with my old Navy buddies about, since if the unthinkable ever happened to the carrier we would have been called upon to do the same. The electrical generators were all the way aft, which was why the lights were able to stay on for so long, but I can't imagine what it must have been like down there, knowing you were going to die, either from the cold, drowning, or electrocution when the water level finally got to the switchboards and generators. True heroes indeed.
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#3558086 - 04/17/12 09:27 PM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: NavyNuke99]
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Senior Member
Registered: 05/08/02
Posts: 4607
Loc: USA
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I don`t think Titanic was all that bad (minus the love story and Celine singing).
A few days ago I watched one interesting documentary, "The heroes of the Titanic" dealing with the crew of the engine rooms and the electricians. A very different perspective. This is something that I've often thought about myself, and had a few conversations with my old Navy buddies about, since if the unthinkable ever happened to the carrier we would have been called upon to do the same. The electrical generators were all the way aft, which was why the lights were able to stay on for so long, but I can't imagine what it must have been like down there, knowing you were going to die, either from the cold, drowning, or electrocution when the water level finally got to the switchboards and generators. True heroes indeed. This is why "Pearl Harbor" left a lasting impression on me. It showed the experience of the sailors on board those doomed ships in a way I have never seen on film. Movies tend to look away from the fate of men trapped below decks, some of the scenes in "Pearl Harbor" forced the audience to feel for them.
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#3558092 - 04/17/12 09:42 PM
Re: A Night To Remember
[Re: Tarnsman]
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Viceroy of Huntly
Hotshot
Registered: 02/23/06
Posts: 5635
Loc: Virginia, USA
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There's a particularly gripping scene in "Red Tide" as well.
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