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Book Summary InformationAuthor: Jain Lemos, James Cameron Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 1997-12-10 ISBN: 0006490603 Number of pages: 192 Publisher: Harper Paperbacks
Book Reviews of James Cameron's TitanicBook Review: Qian L. - TITANIC is first and above all a love story...... Summary: 5 Stars
So what if my review is long? You should still READ THIS!!! Anyway, I didn't read this book (yet), but I saw the movie. TITANIC is THE best movie of ALL TIME, and Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio are simply GORGEOUS. I thought the saddest parts were: the old couple and the mother and her two childen awaiting their deaths in their rooms instead of going out on the deck; the captain of the ship standing, the glass breaking, and the water pouring in; the designer of the ship awaiting his death near the clock on the grand staircase; the violin and cello players playing as the TITANIC sinks, when they separate, and one of them still plays and the rest comes back and they all continue playing as they meet their death; and when Jack makes Rose promise to "never let go." TITANIC is about two doomed lovers, Jack and Rose, on the first and last voyage of the supposed "unsinkable" ship, the TITANIC. Jack got his ticket to go on the TITANIC by winning a poker game. He's going as 3rd class. Rose comes from a rich family, and she has a fiance named Cal. Rose and Jack meets when Rose was about to jump off the ship, and Jack sees her and coaxes her to not jump off. She agrees. Later, Rose and Jack becomes friends... and lovers. On the 5th day, the TITANIC crashes into an iceberg. Woman and children first on the lifeboats, the crew members say. So Rose gets on a lifeboat. However, she jumps back into the ship at the last moment because she can't bear to be without Jack. She and Jack gets pursued by a very angry Cal. They almost get shot by Cal. Soon, they run down the ship and loses Cal. In the 3rd class hallways, there's a lot of water. Nevertheless, they find a way and get back to the deck. The deck is almost at the surface of the water, and the lifeboats are all gone, due to the small amount of people in each lifeboat. Jack and Rose decides to jump, and then, they surface again. Rose finds a big piece of wood, and she gets on it, while Jack just uses it to float. Rose tells Jack that she loves him, and Jack says, "Don't you do that, don't you say your good-byes, not yet, do you understand me? You're gonna get out of here, you're gonna go on. Winning that ticket, Rose, was the best thing that ever happened to me. It brought me to you, and I'm thankful for that, Rose. You must promise me that you'll survive, that you won't give up, no matter what happens. Promise me, now, Rose." And Rose replies, "I promise. I'll never let go, Jack, I'll never let go." Rose sleeps, and when she wakes up, she finds that Jack has frozen to death due to the freezing temperature. And then, she hears someone calling out. She looks, and sees that a lifeboat has come back for any survivors in the water. Rose decides to push Jack down the water, and then she swims to another person's piece of wood and blows the person's whistle since she was too weak to shout out. She gets rescued and goes on with her life, although she still remembers and loves Jack. Roses eventually gets married and have children. When Rose was 100 years old, she sees on TV that some people have uncovered the ruins of the TITANIC, and recognizes "The Heart of the Ocean" a valuable neckless with a giant blue stone that Cal gave to her. She also recognizes the painting she posed naked for Jack on the TITANIC. She calls the people who discovered the ruins of the TITANIC, and goes with her granddaughter to the location of where the TITANIC was found. She tells the people there her story by beginning with, "TITANIC was called the ship of dreams, and it was, it really was." That night, she throws "The Heart of the Ocean," which she kept hidden all these years, into the ocean. She dies that night in her sleep. She and Jack gets reunited "on the other side," this time, for eternity. THE END! I have read several books, almost all of which were fiction, concerning the TITANIC. I also LOVE "My Heart Will Go On" by Celine Dion. Whenever I think about TITANIC or anything involved, I feel extremely sad. TITANIC should be a movie, book, and soundtrack to treasure for the rest of your life. I know I will.
Summary of James Cameron's Titanic"James Cameron's Titanic" chronicles the cinematic re-creation of the most legendary ocean disaster of all time as seen through the eyes of a master storyteller. Set against the ship's fateful maiden voyage, Cameron's much-anticipated motion picture epic weaves a rich human tapestry of romance, heroism, tragedy and greed.Within these pages is a detailed look at the monumental effort by thousands of artists and craftsmen to accurately re-create the 'ship of dreams, ' including the full-size exterior replica of the ship and the 17-million-gallon tank facility designed to sink her; a wealth of detailed interior spaces; new discoveries from Cameron's 1995 dives to the wreck, some two-and-a-half miles below the ocean surface; studies of the ornate wardrobe, makeup and hairstyles that defined the look of the 'Gilded Age'; an overview of the film's groundbreaking visual-effects work; and in-depth interviews with cast and crew, all referenced to the historic events of the Titanic's maiden, and final, voyage. James Cameron's Titanic is a book conceived on the epic scale of the movie--not only do the massive page size and sky-high production values of the book do justice to the big ship, they give Kate Winslet's titanic hats an impact comparable to what the big screen gives them. It's also fun to get the effect of exploring a set as vast, complex, and fiscally and physically dangerous as the one Cameron created for Titanic the film. He is Hollywood's answer to Ahab, so he deserves a great big book. Nor will fans be disappointed to hear Winslet break character--she plays an upper-class lass from the stuffiest circles--and explain how she helped her costar prepare for their first scene together, in which she stripped for her dishy portrait. "I was naked in front of Leo on the first day of shooting," says Winslet in the book. "She had no shame with it," says DiCaprio, who apparently despises shame. "She wanted to break the ice a little beforehand, so she flashed me. I wasn't prepared for that, so she had one up on me. I was pretty comfortable after that." While the stars were getting acquainted and the wild-eyed director was figuring out historically unprecedented ways of blending live footage with computer imagery ("Cheat the size of the tugboats 10 percent smaller ... It will make the ship look even more majestic as it leaves Southampton!"), the core cast of 150 extras was taking a crash course in manners. Etiquette coach and choreographer Lynne Hockney even taught the Core (as they were called) that there was a proper way to laugh. "It was the Gilded Age, a time of the grand hostess, lavish parties and tireless pleasure-seeking," Hockney says in the book. "And each social class was scrambling to reach the one above it. This made proper behavior terribly important.... You cannot slouch in a corset, for example. You perch." One wishes there was a frame or two from the Hockney film running on a tape loop in the wardrobe building, Titanic Etiquette: A Time-Traveler's Guide. If it were available for sale, people would be buying it. On the other hand, there's always the movie. Or this book. --Tim Appelo
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