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Titanic 3D Blu-ray Review
Titanic 100 Years In 3D Blu-ray (2012) 2D+3D MultiSubs/Titanic 100 Years In 3D Blu-ray (2012).iso 16 GB Torrent Downloaded From BTScene.eu.txt - Torrent Downloaded From ExtraTorrent.com.txt 300 B. And she explains the whole story from departure until the death of Titanic on its first and last voyage April 15th, 1912 at 2:20 in the morning. Your IP Address is Location is - Your ISP and Government can track your torrent activity! Torrent download. A seventeen-year-old aristocrat falls in love with a kind but poor artist aboard the luxurious, ill-fated R.M.S. Director: James.
A classic film earns a stunning 3D conversion.
Reviewed by Martin Liebman, September 4, 2012
Titanic (1997) 1080p BluRay x264 Dual Audio [English + Hindi] html bbcode To share this torrent use the code below and insert it into comments, status messages, forum posts or your signature. Marking 101 years ago today that the RMS Titanic was launched into the Belfast Lough, film fans worldwide can now pre-order the epic love story on Blu-ray 2D or Blu-ray 3D with participating. On the 100th anniversary of the original voyage, a modern luxury liner christened 'Titanic 2,' follows the path of its namesake. But when a tsunami hurls an ice.
I'm the king of the world!
Take a moment and reflect on James Cameron's directorial career. It's startling that, amongst his 'major' blockbuster motion picture releases, the fantastic True Lies and the breathtaking The Abyss are probably his least well-known movies. Wow. The director of The Terminator, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, and Aliens has certainly found that sweet spot that walks the fine line between 'blockbuster' and 'great movie.' While the two are not necessarily mutually exclusive, the two together are a bit harder to come by than one might imagine and usually only attached to the names of the upper-echelon directors, like Steven Spielberg. And that's only half the story. Cameron's also written each and every one of those blockbusters, accomplishing with every major motion picture on which he's worked what George Lucas did with four of the six Star Wars films (and most fans would agree that many, if not all, of Cameron's films top the 'prequel' trilogy). But the best was yet to come. In 1997, Cameron released the massive, sweeping, true-to-every-sense-of-the-term 'epic' Titanic, a dazzling three-plus-hour masterpiece that encompasses nearly every major movie element -- romance, drama, action -- and blends them in uncannily perfect harmony, the end result an eleven-time Oscar winner and, until recently, the highest-grossing film of all time. Oh, and credit Cameron for that 'until recently,' too. What a career, and what a movie Titanic was and continues to be, now with a Blu-ray release sure to dazzle longtime fans of the film, casual viewers, and newcomers alike.
God Himself could not sink this ship.
A group of treasure hunters has descended to the watery grave of the RMS Titanic, the 'unsinkable' cruise liner that sunk on its maiden voyage from Southampton to New York City on April 15, 1912, killing 1,502 persons. The wreckage is home to a rich history simply waiting to be unburied from nearly one hundred years at the bottom of the Atlantic. But expedition leader Brock Lovett (Bill Paxton, Apollo 13) isn't interested in historical records or trinkets or more fully completing the puzzle that is the sinking of the Titanic. He's instead after the fabled 'Heart of the Ocean' necklace, a priceless piece of history said to once be the property French King Louis XVI. Legend has it that the heart-shaped diamond went down with the ship, that it was purchased by the son of a Pittsburgh steel tycoon and meant as a luxurious gift for his bride-to-be. Lovett's expedition is headline news around the world. Titanic frenzy is all the rage, and Lovett appears on talk television to discuss his latest find, the safe believed to once house the necklace and inside of which the crew discovered not their prize but rather a clue: a drawing of a beautiful young woman, posing naked save for the 'Heart of the Ocean' dangling from her neck. The story piques the interest of an aged Rose Dawson Calvert (Gloria Stuart) who contacts Lovett and claims to be the woman in the drawing. She's flown to the expedition site and recounts her tale of romance, self-discovery, and survival aboard the ill-fated luxury liner.
From this minute, no matter what we do, Titanic will founder.
In April of 1912, a beautiful young woman named Rose (Kate Winslet, Revolutionary Road) boards the RMS Titanic with her fiancé Cal Hockley (Billy Zane, Orlando), son of a Pittsburgh steel tycoon and heir to a vast fortune. They are returning to America where the couple is to be married, much to the approval of Rose's traditional mother Ruth (Frances Fisher, Unforgiven). Despite Cal's vast fortune, the promise of great wealth, an easy life for her and her mother, and the gift of a marvelous gem known as the 'Heart of the Ocean,' Rose is displeased with her life and the prospect of a long, tedious, and controlled marriage to a man she does not -- and cannot -- truly love. When she chooses to end it all by flinging herself from the rear of the ship and into the freezing Atlantic Ocean, she's talked down by a handsome and kindly young man from steerage named Jack Dawson (Leonardo DiCaprio, Shutter Island), an artistically inclined nomad who won his tickets in a game of poker minutes prior to the Titanic's departure. The two form an instant bond and recognize a spark between themselves, an unmistakable chemistry and an unbreakable connection that knows not wealth, privilege, background, or future prospects. Jack is 'rewarded' for saving Rose's life with an invitation to a first-class dinner with, amongst others, Rose, Ruth, Cal, his entourage, and the Titanic's kindly designer, Thomas Andrews (Victor Garber, The Entitled). Rose grows to admire Jack's sense of freedom, his charisma, charm, carefree attitude, and self-worth despite meager origins and a largely aimless life. Cal despises him for his background, poor upbringing, and financial instability. Slowly but surely, Rose and Jack's bodies and souls draw closer together, igniting a whirlwind love affair born of the heart yet also born on the eve of one of the great disasters in human history.
Outwardly, I was everything a well-brought-up girl should be. Inside, I was screaming.
At its most basic, Titanic seems like a film shaped by contrasts, of wealth and poverty and upper decks and lower decks and the bridge and the boiler room and steel and ice and sinkable ships and notions of unsinkable ships. But it's also a tale of man's ability -- should he so choose -- to overlook differences and find something deeper inside, to ignore convention and follow the heart rather than the pocketbook or the book of life that demands one thing when the heart requires another. For Rose, it matters not the clothes on the back, the name on the checkbook, the sum in the bank account, the title on the document, or the accommodations on the ship. For Jack, the contrasts are merely obstacles to overcome in his pursuit of Rose, and truly, contrast is only the clothes on the back and the cut of the hair; Cal fails to recognize Jack in tuxedo, seeing only the suit rather than the man inside of it, reflecting his concern for and preoccupation with the superficial and the artificial rather than that which truly makes a man a man. On the other side, Rose discovers the man behind the lesser clothes and 'substandard' accommodations, discovering a genuine heart, a real talent, and an honest love where high society tells her such things cannot exist. Jack sees in Rose a human being yearning to stretch her limits and live the life she wants, while Cal sees only a possession, a living and breathing jewel meant to be a decoration on his arm rather than a loving, soul-matched companion in his heart. All of the contrasts -- structural, dramatic, thematic, personal -- in the movie could not be more obvious. The end message seems to be that, no matter where life leads, the ups and downs and good times and disasters together cannot break apart true love, that sincere renouncement of society's manufactured contrasts and taboo borders, that relishing of the moment and the memories and experiences of all of life's joys even built from a fleeting moment before the world literally crumbles and floods and freezes all around.
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Titanic was called the ship of dreams. And it was. It really was.The Jack and Rose romance highlights the movie even beyond the technical achievements and the film's uncanny ability to totally absorb the audience into both the modern story and detailed history of Titanic; more on those in a moment. The romance develops beautifully and steadily, with a sense of authenticity even through those contrasts which superficially shape the film but are tossed aside to give it its purpose and particularly its heart, both in a literal and a figurative sense. DiCaprio and Winslet share a remarkable chemistry that's a product of more than words on a page but a true, honest sense of togetherness even from the first glance and dialogue exchange, felt immediately through the social boundaries and despite the forbidden contact of merely occupying the same space, let alone a stare or a touch or whatever may come as the relationship blossoms. The characters cannot ignore society's boundaries -- Rose in particular -- yet neither can deny the sense of fate and the immediate connection shared between them as they seem to instantly envision a destiny, as they see beyond the past and the troubles of the present and into a future made of togetherness and true love molded into their own hearts and not into society's prefabricated one-size-does-not-fit-all box. The relationship is as agreeable as it believable; audiences want to see them together, not only briefly on the ship but for their love to grow so strongly that it can defeat the vessel's obstacles so the two may live happily ever after. But so strong is the connection that 'happily ever after' isn't about old age and sheer time together but the experience of an unbreakable, everlasting love that can withstand ice, chilled water, broken ships, even death itself, a love that quickly reaches the cosmic zenith of the emotion yet finds its demise in the physical realm with an equally quick drop. It's the truest love in one of the most heartfelt yet heartbreaking romances ever displayed on the cinema screen, and no matter its meteoric ascent and rapid decent, hearts this close, this true, this meant for one another will always go on, as the song suggests.
You could almost pass for a gentleman!
Titanic's performances are nearly as flawless as the romance. Leonardo DiCaprio's Jack can be a touch stiff in places, with a few scenes coming across so clumsily that it feels like one of those old rock-and-hard-place problems where he's trying so hard not to act that he can't shake the feel that he is acting. Fortunately, such occurrences are only outliers to a fairly solid, often seamless performance that hints at his more grounded, deeper performances to come. Leo works very well with his eyes, conveying a genuine sense of spirit and love -- not lust -- towards Rose, most evident as he draws her wearing nothing but the necklace. Kate Winslet's effort is on par with DiCaprio's, though there's more of an inner struggle and complexity at work as she sorts through not whether she wants to be with Jack -- there's no question about that -- but whether she can be with Jack. The character arc is not defined by situations but rather a strong, honest sense of self-discovery that's unearthed both by the influences of Cal's overbearing ways and Jack's carefree charisma. Winslet enriches Rose with genuine emotions that extend beyond love and into something far beyond the common definition of the word, and it's that soulful, genuine bond she develops that carries the movie on through to conclusion and extends to the elder Rose at the end of the film and for Titanic's most story- and character-defining scene. The film is dotted with excellent work from Kathy Bates (Misery) as the famed 'unsinkable' Molly Brown, Frances Fisher as Rose's hardheaded mother, and Victor Garber as the affable and humble ship designer, yet it's Billy Zane in the 'villain' role who shines brightest. Zane's so immersed in character, so tied to the clothes and the riches and the empty-eyed stare into the gold-plated chasm that is his life that he becomes one of the finest villains in recent memory and one of the easiest characters to root against. His charisma becomes jealousy and the jealousy becomes a greater need for overwhelming control which finally yields an uncontrollable rage as the character is brought to full fruition with as seamless a cadence as that of the budding romance between Jack and Rose. His descent into madness but also his steadfastness in his nearly unbreakable sense of self-worth and stubborn insistence on winning -- or spinning a win -- at any costs shapes the film's best character and its finest performance.
It has been a privilege playing with you tonight.
Not overshadowing but certainly hanging over the romance is the pending tragedy that will sink the ship and stress the newly formed relationship and recently broken engagement both to their limits. The plot turning point that is the sinking is no mystery yet it comes tragically and slowly and, as the movie's been so absorbing, still almost unexpectedly in the greater context of the plot and the film's dramatic rhythm shaped by interpersonal relationships. Perhaps Titanic's greatest marvel is its ability to make a moment everyone in the audience knows is coming so psychologically intense, emotionally painful, and dramatically involved. The lead-up to the crash and the events immediately following the ship's collision with the iceberg are crafted with a simple intensity, underscored by a steady, even, and reserved musical rhythm that jolts the audience into a sense of dread, not yet despair or hopelessness, but a constant, underlying fear of what's to come. The crew's quiet anxiousness is countered by some of the passengers' nonchalant reaction to the collision as they use chunks of ice as soccer balls and hang over the side rails to marvel at the woulds suffered by the mighty vessel, caused by nothing other than the surface on which it rides only reformed and hardened and fatefully floating in its path. What follows is an eerie foreknowledge of doom and a sense of hopelessness that yields unimaginable choices, and, in the end, panic that Director James Cameron seems to extend into the theater, pulling the audience onto the ship and, in its final moments, having them dangle from its end, gripping tightly and fearful of falling and being pulled into and under the frigid waters that will be a liquid tomb for far too many souls. Watching the film from theater's safety, knowing what is to come, and understanding that it's fact reshaped as fiction cannot desensitize the audience to the tragedy or break their connection to the romance that's transformed in an instant from a playful interlude of match-made souls to a struggle for survival against man, fallible manmade objects, and nature herself. The tragedy extends to the characters, to the realization of what's happening and what's to come, to the somber undercurrent of the ship's band's upbeat notes and the sense of loss of love in life but the hope that it will live forever in the hearts and souls of the characters who found one another and, thereby, found themselves in the shadow of tragic destiny. From afar, it's a surreal experience to watch it all unfold. From within, let nobody else ever know.
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She's the largest moving object ever made by the hand of man in all history.Cameron's Titanic is a mesmerizing masterpiece of historical recreation, of the ship on a bustling dock preparing to sail, of its majesty cruising the Atlantic waters, of the slow demise of the unsinkable ship, of the rise of the waters and the sinking of the iron and steel. From the film's opening shots to the culmination of Jack and Rose's passion is one of cinema's finest love stories, and from the moment of the collision to the ship's last taste of air is perhaps cinema's most frenzied, intense, prolonged, and beautifully crafted string of events. Titanic is truly a marvel of modern filmmaking, a grand, spellbinding, and nearly seamless recreation not of an object but of a history. It's derived from painstaking research, perfected cinema technique, digital excellence, and picture-perfect model work. The movie mesmerizes from the very beginning as Lovett's vessel approaches the wreckage and he offers his corny but accurate monologue about the scope and importance of the mission as well as the historical significance of the
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