Last Mysteries of the Titanic (TV Movie 2005) Poster

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10/10
lasting mysteries
trevixarama29 December 2006
I couldn't wait until i received this DVD after ordering it from amazon. Well, in the first two days i watched it twice and what can i say except that this is the best documentary if the TITANIC wreck available. I've been a TITANIC enthusiast for a long time and love anything to do with the subject and this movie drew me even closer to the allure of the ship. The documentary goes where no one has been before and the quality is superb making you feel like you are part of the exhibition. They enter the Turkish bath room which is overwhelming also james cameron takes us to the straus's room and seeing the clock still in its place is breathless. The equipment they use is state of the art which gives you the feel of being there with the crew... If you love the TITANIC, you'll love this documentary
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3/10
Amazingly dull commentary on murky video footage of the wreck
dimplet19 April 2012
What ever happened to truth and accuracy in documentaries? This Discovery Channel program contains these gems: "Titanic was racing through the night, full speed ahead," the narrator says, adding she was going nearly 25 mph. "Her owner, White Star Line, was trying to make headlines with an exceptionally fast crossing." This is the same yellow journalism garbage spread by the Hearst papers at the order of William Randolph Hearst, as a vendetta against the White Star Line.

Anyone who knows anything about the Titanic knows that she was not built for speed, and could not attempt to compete with the Cunard ships.

So what does that make the producers of this documentary? When a film leads off with such inaccurate, sensational balderdash, all that follows is suspect.

What follows is footage of a couple of snafus, including a dive aborted when the fiber optic cable fouls the submersible's prop. Submersible props that can't snag have been available since the 1990s, invented at HBOI; why didn't they use them? Then we see a "live" video feed of the ship with remarks by James Cameron that border on the inane. This is beginning to look like a snoozeville home movie.

It begins to get interesting with the mystery of the missing staircase. Cameron says he thinks it floated away with the sinking, and that's what began to happen on the movie set when it was flooded.

Next, Cameron talks about seeing the deck where the musicians played as the ship sank. Cue footage from his movie of ensemble playing. Did they actually continue playing to the end? "True or not," the narrator says, they were heroes. Are we trying to generate a fake controversy here? We then get a look at a lone piece of equipment on the bridge, Cameron's comments on the decision to turn the ship to port to try to avoid the iceberg, and more Titanic film footage of an actor turning the wheel.

Cameron is using some very small microsubmersibles he calls bots to enter the ship tethered by fiber optic lines. Finally we see some action with images of the radio room, interspersed with re-creations.

Next, the fanciest suite on the ship, which was now just lumps of mud, until Cameron finds the a clock on a mantle of the fireplace. This time we can really recognize features, and there is some color. This room was re-created in the movie, featured in the scene with Jack and Rose. We see a black and white picture of the actual cabin as reference. Mildly exciting.

Then the narrator returns to spouting nonsense, saying the Bruce Ismay "had personally requested" the captain to "push Titanic to her limit, in the hope of arriving early and making a huge media splash." The documentary then accuses Ismay of receiving a wireless warning personally of the iceberg danger, "which he put in his pocket and forgot" to show the captain.

Where did they get the "facts" for this documentary? The film, Titanic, of course! Cameron makes up a bogus account of the Titanic tragedy, puts it into a major film, the film then becomes the new reality, and it is used as the historical basis for Cameron's documentary. We then hear Cameron commenting on Ismay as a greedy businessman, echoing the theme of his pushing the speed of the ship. Yup, looks like Cameron actually believes his own fictional storyline, and is recycling it in the documentary.

Sorry, folks, but historians don't support any of this. That iceberg warning was shown to Ismay by the captain, who later retrieved it. And there is no evidence of any attempt to push the speed of the Titanic. Capt. Smith had changed to a much more southerly route, which he thought would avoid the icebergs, which is why he didn't slow the ship to a crawl.

They also make a big deal about lifeboat No. 1, which only had 12 occupants. "I've always puzzled over that," Cameron says. Well, Lawrence Beesley, a survivor, explains that in his book, "The Loss of the S.S. Titanic." Passengers, especially women, didn't want to get on the first lifeboats because they weren't convinced the ship would sink, and it was cold out there. Beesley said there was NO panic among passengers, even near the end. Unlike the movie. Mustn't let facts get in the way of a good story, right, Cameron?

Cameron brought several experts on the expedition, but most of what we hear in the first half is Cameron talking over his video feeds by recalling scenes from the movie (the new reality), plus the narrator. We hear more explanatory comments from the experts later on, but it is not terribly insightful. The highlight is the Turkish baths room, which is largely intact.

The title, Last Mysteries of the Titanic," seems a total disconnect with the documentary. What "last mysteries"? There are NO mysteries revealed here. But there are still plenty of mysteries buried with the ship. This seems more like Cameron's home movie of his trip to the Titanic, paid for with a tax credit by producing a quickie documentary.
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Amazing Footage
Michael_Elliott11 April 2012
Last Mysteries of the Titanic (2005)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

John Burke hosts this rather amazing documentary that features James Cameron at the bottom of the ocean taking live shots of the Titanic ship. Since there have been countless pictures of the ship released after this film as well as other movies about the subject (including one from 2012 with Cameron), you'd think that this here would be out-dated or a little less impressive but that's not the case at all because this thing contains some extremely strong stuff. Cameron, using robots, goes through various parts of the sunken ship and we really get some breathtaking moments along the way. Of course, seeing the outside of the ship is always very haunting and the technology from this time allows for some of the clearest views that you're going to get. Cameron shows us around various parts of the ship and also shows a few places where damage has happened since the last documentary that he shot there in 2001. The real magic of this documentary happens as they enter the ship and locate the Straus Room and notice that now legendary clock still on the fireplace. From here we get to see the Turkish bath house and the amazing footage is without question some of the greatest you're going to see. The details remaining in the tile is just amazing to see and I can't see how anyone wouldn't have their jaws on the floor. At under an hour one wishes that you could have spent more time on the ship but there's no question that's what here is something truly incredible to see.
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