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desertcart.com: Titanic 4K Ultra HD [Blu-ray] [Region Free] : Movies & TV Review: Everything a good movie should be - It has it all. Engineering, action, personal development, romance, fear, triumph, challenges, and resolution. This movie never gets old. Review: 25th Anniversary Titanic 4K - A beautiful set with lots of extras and awesome content like the musical score of My Heart Will Go On, the ships blueprint with the key scenes located, the note Rose left behind for Cal, the tickets won in a poker game. Also, it looks remarkably fantastic on 4K UHD. Definitely worth it to have in your collection and if you’re a fan of this great film by one of the greatest directors out there, James Cameron!
| ASIN | B0CMY128M9 |
| Aspect Ratio | Unknown |
| Best Sellers Rank | #21,786 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #10,020 in Blu-ray |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (15,887) |
| Dubbed: | German, Italian, Spanish |
| Item model number | ZMH-au-kn18 |
| Language | English (DTS 5.1), German (Dolby Digital 5.1), Italian (Dolby Digital 5.1) |
| Product Dimensions | 6.69 x 5.31 x 0.47 inches; 4.59 ounces |
| Subtitles: | English, German, Italian |
A**A
Everything a good movie should be
It has it all. Engineering, action, personal development, romance, fear, triumph, challenges, and resolution. This movie never gets old.
M**E
25th Anniversary Titanic 4K
A beautiful set with lots of extras and awesome content like the musical score of My Heart Will Go On, the ships blueprint with the key scenes located, the note Rose left behind for Cal, the tickets won in a poker game. Also, it looks remarkably fantastic on 4K UHD. Definitely worth it to have in your collection and if you’re a fan of this great film by one of the greatest directors out there, James Cameron!
J**R
Titanic the best movie ever
Love this set It's loaded with extras and you'll spend several hours enjoying it.
K**M
Darned Good Movie
For the product itself, that is, the DVD, it was perfect, BOTH of them! I ordered a used one, and it took too long so I ordered a new one. They both came, and so far I've played only the used one! That a DVD is good is not much of an issue. The bigger issue is the movie, that is, the story. I got interested in the movie because of some YouTube videos of James Cameron going to the wreck of the Titanic and elsewhere to the bottom of the ocean, especially the Challenger Deep, about 7 miles down, the deepest part of the ocean. Then I decided to watch his movie 'Titanic' again! Well, the movie had enough in it on the actual ship, the weaknesses in its design, and the mistakes in its operation. Okay, got that, but it took only maybe 10% of the time of the movie. Next the movie was a story about the strong class differences between first and third class. Okay, the first class eats rare lamb with mint sauce for lunch and caviar with champagne for dinner! Next, get to see something of the style and mannerisms of rich/royal people then. The few times I've been in a yacht club dinning room, the style and mannerisms are still in force. Next the movie is a love story between a surprisingly bright third class boy, Jack, and a gorgeous but scared, confused, and frustrated first class girl, Rose, already engaged to a son, Cal, of the wealthy owner of a Pittsburgh steel company. The first class sex role differences are really strong: The men are concerned with business and politics as it affects business, and the women are wildly over dressed, cared for, and limited to narrow, empty versions of social small talk and gossip. Rose is afraid, terrified, of the "inertia" of her life that is pushing her beyond her control into the emptiness of the first class female roles. In particular she is terrified of the power of her future husband Cal. He's actually a pretty nice guy, adores Rose, but has zero insight into her fears and other emotions. If she would just go along with the established wife's role, then he wouldn't need insight. She didn't have to be afraid: She COULD have played the empty role some times and done interesting things other times. And the story had a woman who punctured the role, Molly Brown, a new-rich woman from the US West, Rose could have used as an example and/or tutor. So, in a peak moment of fear and frustration, Rose decides to jump off the back of the ship. As she is outside the railing ready to jump, Jack sees her and talks her back. They have a friendship. He has some, not a lot, of good insight into Rose's problems, and that comforts her. They have a fast love affair. She decides that when the ship reaches NY, she will exit the ship with Jack. The ship sinks, and Jack dies of the cold water. Rose lives from being on top of some floating wood and being picked up by the rescue efforts pulled in by wireless SOS calls a little before the ship sank. Cal also lives, on the rescue ship looks for Rose. She sees him, ignores him, and he doesn't see her. She was REALLY afraid of the rich life style! Cal was really slow on the uptake! With her love affair with the boy, she was REALLY eager to give up financial security and jump into poverty. The love affair was a bit of a strain to believe, but I've seen some women that were that mixed up! But the costumes, sets, music, acting, directing, computer animation are all so good it is very good story telling!
W**S
Price good
Love this movie .I watch it often.
R**N
The DVD set that goes on and on
If you are a Titanic fan, you must have this DVD set. Order it, and then clear your schedule for a weekend because you won't be leaving the house for a while. Here are some of the highlights: The cast and crew commentary is certainly varied, with producers Jon Landau and Rae Sanchini commenting throughout and then Kate Winslet, Gloria Stuart, various supporting characters and even extras and stunt people chiming in with behind the scenes stories. Interesting to find out about the scene where Jack and Rose are taking their first daylight walk on the deck and Jack confronts Rose by asking her if she loves Cal. That wasn't in the original script and was only added at the insistence of Kate and Leo that there be something more than hearts and flowers in the Jack - Rose relationship. The historical commentary with Don Lynch & Ken Marschall was fun. Cal and Rose may be arguing on screen - but Don and Ken are talking about the historically accurate White Start Line ashtrays on the dresser. Of course, sometimes we are back on a set they've already dissected, so they are reduced to watching the movie and saying things like "I love that line!", just like any fan. Motor-mouth James Cameron gets his own directors track where he tries to give background on every shot: "This is on the set, and then now we cut to models with CGI water; now this is back on the set with green screen and now we're in the tank with models and the boats in the background are CGI, and now we're..." It may be more than most can take for the length of this movie. Still, Jim actually gives more historical background that Don and Ken - he obviously knows his stuff and is very passionate. Breaking New Ground - The Making Of Titanic Tv Special is a good behind the scenes feature, particularly for people who want some of the backstage story but won't be taking the time to get into the commentaries and "pods" where much of this is explored in even more detail. Titanic Crew Video is a hoot - one of the AD's took home video footage of the shoot and then edited it together with some of the movie scenes (along with a few shots from Poseidon Adventure and other old films) for comic effect. Low brow - but funny. (I particularly liked the shot of Titanic pulling out of the harbor with a big "Sink Me" Post-It digitally slapped on to the stern.) Then, of course, there's always The Movie: I realize that there are a lot of people who disagree about this - but I think Titanic is an incredible screenplay. Yes, some of the dialog is inane, and yes, Cal does everything but twirl his moustache (if he had one). But screenplays are not built on dialog. (Case in point - Star Wars. Some of the worst dialog ever written - but still a compelling and entertaining movie.) Screenplays are about structure and visual storytelling. And it's here that Titanic excels. The first problem in writing a screenplay of the Titanic story is this: how do you get beyond the tragic numbers (1500 people dead) make people care about these long forgotten people? Enter Rose, Cal, and Jack - a cross-class love triangle. Their story will show the audience the ship as well as the social structure of the day. (And you can't understand Titanic without grasping the social underpinnings.) The second issue the screenwriter has to overcome is the Apollo 13 problem: everyone already knows how the tale ends. Enter Brock and his modern-day crew. What I love about the opening of Titanic is that you are expecting to see this 1912 story with Kate and Leo, but for the first 20 minutes you are firmly in the present. This tells the audience that, like Brock the treasure hunter, they don't know this story the way they think they do. They need Rose to take them back to Titanic and paint the triumph and tragedy of the great ship. The film is visually audacious - the angles are dramatic and unimaginable. Where previous Titanic movies have shot scenes tightly to disguise the fact that the real ship isn't there - Cameron boldly goes for big helicopter views. Even the close shots have deep detailed backgrounds. Finally, the themes of the film acted out by the characters, are the drawn from the lessons of Titanic as well. Rose begins the story corseted into a beautiful, but narrow existence with limited possibilities. She leaves all that behind in the North Atlantic, and embarks on a life with no security - but unlimited possibilities. On a larger scale, Titanic was that beautiful but strictly controlled society. But, passengers and crew found out that you can't control everything, and the grand world broke apart and sank into chaos. Two years after these events, The Great War would scuttle most of the upper classes of Europe and kill or wound 30 million more. At the same time the rights of workers, women, and minorities were ascendant, so that today it is hard to imagine living under the Edwardian social conventions. Titanic foreshadowed the violent demise of the old order. We can roll our eyes at their arrogance, but we also can't help but be a little nostalgic for the lovely world they created. This exquisite DVD set will be treasured by anyone who wants to immerse themselves in the craft of the actors and technicians, or in the great ship itself.
F**R
Recebi um produto diferente do anunciado, porém fui bem atendido, devolvi o produto e eles me enviaram o produto correto. O produto em si chegou sem alterações, de excelente qualidade e conforme anúncio.
A**C
** How good is this Blu-ray technically? The image on my modest 32-inch widescreen is clear but not huge. However, the quality of the rendering in this blockbuster is so good that it is due to the rendering possessing a much wider palette of colours, brightness, and contrast levels, and topped off with great sound mixes. In fact, I thought, at the time, there was a fault with the Blu-Ray device, as it was like comparing chalk and cheese in quality terms when comparing this Blu-ray to the DVD and DVD player I previously used. This film was my first encounter with the Blu-ray format on a second-hand Sony player. This idea that the DVD quality was the reference continued until I realised how superior and different this Blu-ray copy is by possessing these attributes, and how really good it looks even on my standard quality, wide-screen, typical telly. The quality of the Blu-ray is held back a bit by my ordinary telly. I have seen my sister's TV, and it is of much better quality, and these disks would be much improved with a better set. ** Errors in story settings I have met casual viewers of this movie who say that its recreation of the event is full of inaccuracies. And that 'A Night to Remember' is more accurate. They are, i.m.h.o. both mostly accurate up to each other and to several points. At the time I saw it first, I bought seven books from Amazon about the Titanic and read each at least twice. Overall, its retelling is accurate. The major possible big error is that the ship would not have been beyond 23 degrees from the horizontal, as its keel would break. This was tested and proved by a TV station that paid the $4k to have the shipyard designers accurately create the Titanic parameters in CAD and test its performance on a computer. The only other error is when Jack wins the card game, he boards the R.M.S. Titanic at noon. The last time a person could, in reality, board the ship was actually 11:15. Another small part, some people suggest, is another error, about the film's depiction of the film is when the sailor is instructed to turn the ship. He's instructed to turn the ship to the starboard (right), but turns the wheel to the port (left). All ships before 1928 had this somewhat counterintuitive way of steering. Another error is when Officer Will Murdock shoots two people and himself. This wasn't true, although it was due to its sources being bogus. Being based on the then anti-English propaganda from the then Irish in Eire. Another fact that is accurately shot, but others say is not true, is that the sinking in the ocean around the ship has no waves. Amazingly, the earlier part of the sinking was so gradual that it allowed plates to float off tables. The lack of waves was unique in the calm of the ocean. The crew even said they had '...never seen such a flat calm. Like a mill pond.' Jack says he was ice-fishing close to Chippewa Falls, (Wisconsin). This was only built in 1917. The Titanic sank in 1912 The flares of ships were not standardised. The colours meant different things, depending on the line of the ship it belonged to. ** Brief background facts not mentioned in the film, but have a bearing on the sinking of R.M.S.Titanic The ships in the White Star line had names ending in 'ic'. Such as Britannic, Olympic, and of course, the Titanic. The R.M.S. is 'Royal Mail Ship', as it involved taking post both to and from the U.S.A. for $50k a year. Titanic's home port was Liverpool, UK and not London, as seen on some items on sale. It was also granted a tax break by the U.K. government, which stipulated that, in the event of a war or conflict, it would be commandeered by the armed forces and used as a troop ship. There was a coal strike, and the Titanic needed to buy coal from several ships around it. This ship was the last major ship to use coal. All later ships following this used crude oil. The radio wouldn't work. So it was stripped down and rebuilt in 24 hours. The radio was tested and was powerful enough to both reach and receive to and from Cairo, Egypt. If it had not been fixed, then the wreck would have been a total loss of crew and passengers, with no records of what went on. The reason why the radio was promoted so heavily as a security measure by White Star is that, before this incident and a few years prior, the ship S.S. Miami was crossing the Atlantic when it struck an iceberg. This time was head-on. Crunching the bow by 17 feet. But their radio called other ships. This saved all the crew and passengers, and no fatalities. This was a reason why the 'unsinkable' ship myth was strengthened. R.M.S. Titanic no longer required more lifeboats. The Titanic was the last ship to use manually powered methods to lower lifeboats. All major ships after this used electric motors to lower lifeboats into the ocean. However, the remaining main catalyst, not mentioned in the film, of the sinking is that a coal bunker was spontaneously burning and superheating the side of the ship. This extreme heat and very cold ocean water really stressed the ship hull, made with Siemens-Martin formula steel. The stokers let others know of this. But this was common, as coal can spontaneously start burning. Photographs taken of the exterior of the ship while in Northern Ireland show this in the discolouration of the hull on the outside of the related coal hopper. This, retrospectively, is the major reason for the weakened hull to fail in the collision with this ship and the iceberg. Under examination by the ship investigators of the Titanic hull, the actual summation area of the damaged plates spread along the side of the hull, which allowed the ocean water inside the ship to be a total area of only 12 square feet. It's stripped rivets and buckled plates, spread over 300 feet of the ship's skin and not a big gaping hole as previously thought. When the R.M.S. Titanic's engines started at exactly noon, off in Southampton Harbour, they had so much force that it almost caused the S.S. New York to hit the Titanic. There was a comment that the third-class passengers were locked below by White Star, stopping their progression to the lifeboats. These were actually policies instigated by Ellis Island immigration in New York for the control of the spread of any contagion. And not an inhumanity crime carried out by White Star workers. The film, overall, was the best they could do at its time of creation. The sailor in the crow's nest of the Titanic, Fredrick Fleet, was the first to see the iceberg and said exactly as seen on the screen, "Iceberg right ahead." He survived. And helped with the inquiry into the disaster.. Then had a long career in shipping. He became suicidal in 1961 as he blamed himself for not seeing the iceberge obstacle sooner. This is the so-called curse of the Titanic. The Board of Trade investigated the sinking of R.M.S. Titanic. It investigated the Board of Trade itself. Not surprisingly, it found itself not responsible. And largely blamed the ship S.S. Californian's captain, Lord, largely responsible. With the sleeping radio operator not responding to distress messages. ** There are features on the other disk in this set. The two big ones feature a diagnosis of what happened to the ship and how it sank. These were very interesting to view on their own. ** Seeing the movie in the theatre I saw this movie in the cinema at its original showing three or four times. The audience was upset at the scenes, and I heard people, both men and women, around me crying. The people who see it now will not admit to this ever taking place! And its effect doesn't make me cry now. I am less moved by this movie now, too. On the hundredth anniversary of the sinking in 2012, I saw the 3D version of Titanic on the big screen. I was the only attendee! The 3D version is good stuff. It's used heavily up to the middle of the film, and less towards the latter parts. I would have thought and expected the sinking in 3D would be spectacular. But it was not applied at this point in the movie. ** Is it worth seeing the recovered artefacts from the wreck of the Titanic? If you like or love this movie, and if you ever have the time to view the artefacts retrieved from the wreck of the R.M.S. Titanic, I recommend you go. My brother wasn't going to see it, but his friends said it's once in a lifetime. So he drove both of us, and I paid for myself and my brother at £17.50 each. To see the retrieved ruins is a privilege and an honour. As it turned out, my brother, who's not keen on the film, touched the 'Big Piece', a 15-ton piece of the hull, for over a minute and was still as if spellbound.
E**S
Hallo liebe Titanic Fans.... zu allererst.... ich hab ein Video gemacht von der limeted Box, wo ihr sehen könnt, was in der limeted Edition drin ist. Zu finden unten im Kommentare link. Link kopieren und im Browser einfügen. Tschuldigung für die Ruckler, aber auspacken und gleichzeitig filmen ist nicht so einfach ;) Zu dem Film äußer ich mich jetzt nicht, den kennt jeder, ich möchte hier gerne zu der 3 D Version meine Rezi schreiben: Also, ich war ja etwas skeptisch am Anfang, weil der Film ja bekanntlich nach bearbeitet wurde. Und als der Film anfangs lief, war ich noch nicht so überzeugt, aber dann..... woooow... das haben se wirklich super gut hinbekommen, wenn man bedenkt, wie alt der Film doch schon ist. Mit aktuellen 3 D Filmen kann Titanic 3 D locker mithalten, da haben se wirklich alles rausgeholt, was man rausholen konnte. Die müssen den komplett überarbeitet haben und da steckt bestimmt jede Menge arbeit hinter. Man kann sehr schön die vorderen Personen herrausstechen sehen und wie sich der Hintergund abhebt...ganz ganz toll..... Bild wurde wohl auch überarbeitet, satte Farben, klar und scharf. Toll Und der Sound.... super, ich hab Titanic über eine Dolby Anlage gehört und muß sagen, auch kristal klar und viel Wums drin, meiner Meinung nach sogar zuviel, stellenweise mußte ich den Ton etwas niedriger drehen, sonst wären mir die Boxen um die Ohren geflogen. Aber genauso stell ich mir den Sound eines Kinofilms vor. Die 3 D Version kommt in 2 blurays daher....Teil eins und zwei...anfangs , geb ich gerne zu, war mir die Vorstellung zuwieder einen Film gestückelt vorzufinden, aber nun gut, ich denke mal, das war technisch wohl nicht anders möglich. ABER.... haben se wirklich gut gelöst. An einer sehr gut platzierten Stelle endet dann Teil eins, so das man damit gut leben kann, und man kann dann sogar zwischen durch bei dieser "Zwangspause" kurz zur Toilette, oder Knabberzeug nach holen ;) Also, ich hatte es mir wirklich schlimmer vorgestellt, das tolle 3 D Bild reißt das wieder raus. Die 3. Bluray enthält Titanic in 2 D ( also die normale Version) die hab ich aber nicht getestet, weil ich scharf auf 3 D war, das war auch für mich der ausschlaggebende Grund, diese Box überhaupt zu kaufen. Desweiteren ist auf bluray 4 die Sonderausstattung mit dem ganzen Bonusmaterial, was man hier der Beschreibung oder anderen Rezis entnehmen kann. Die werde ich mir aber auch jetzt noch reinziehen. Sollte mir dabei etwas nennenwertes noch auffallen, das es Wert wäre, zu rezensieren, werde ich das etwas später in dieser Rezi nachreichen. Zu den FSK Logos bin ich in meinen Video eingegangen, und zu dem Extra Bonusmaterial wie der Bildband und die Passagierpapiere auch. Alles in allem muß ich sagen: Woooow.... beim 3 D gucken des Films hatte ich das Gefühl, ich seh den Film wieder das allererste mal, man ist sofort wieder in seinem Bann gezogen, die Magie des Films wirkt immer noch.... Ich war fasziniert, beeindruckt, gebannt, gefesselt, ich hab mitgelitten und bin total begeistert. Für diesen Preis, und das was man dafür bekommt, sollte man sich dieses Filmereigniss in der limt. Edition wirklich zulegen. Das ganze macht allerdings nur Sinn, wenn man 3 D fähig zuhause ausgestattet ist, um in diesem Genuss zu kommen, aber.... ich bin der Meinung, das auch die normale Version auf bluray sein Geld wert ist. Da der Film ja komplett überarbeitet wurde.... Wie heißt es noch so schön? DVD war gestern....und für Titanic Liebhaber kann ich diese Edition nur empfehlen, ich bereue es auf keinen Fall. Viel Spaß mit dieser Sonderedition , ich hoffe, ich konnte mit Filmchen und Rezension die Kaufentscheidung etwas erleichtern.
J**A
Transcrissão para o 4K muito boa, pena não ter legendas em português.
S**N
Un chef d'oeuvre et une leçon d'histoire!
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