When Titanic 2D was released, I was still a kid.
When 3D was released, it was already in 2012, 15 years later.
I booked the tickets online at that time, but due to some delays in the process, it was already half a month before I went to the cinema. I originally thought that when it was close to the offline time, it was another working day, and the audience's enthusiasm should have basically calmed down.
But when I arrived at the theater more than an hour earlier that day, I was told that only the last two tickets were left for the show I wanted to watch.
A girl, unable to bear the complicated etiquette and hypocritical entertainment of the upper class, wanted to sit on the beach with a poor painter, painting dockers, fishing, and spitting. Think about it if in the current Chinese social context, such a girl will most likely be given the image of an idealistic goddess of love, or a solid image of a lack of heart and eyes?
I was still in school before, and once used the automatic washing machine downstairs, I needed to throw 3 steel pewter. That day, the machine had a convulsion, and I swallowed 6 of them and didn't wash it for me. After seeing this, the cleaning aunt told me that I could give her the change, and she helped me wash it. So, from then on, my clothes were handed over to my aunt. Later, I didn't even need to say the number of floors, as long as I put the clothes at her door. Sometimes, when the aunt is not there, it is her first-year daughter who opens the door. Later, the "daughter" always calls me "Uncle Dirty Clothes" when she sees me.
The family rented in the basement of an apartment, in a narrow space of less than 10 square meters. The kitchen was placed outside the bicycle garage, separated from the car by barbed wire. I often see my mother picking her daughter back from school, and my father cooking, the smell makes people unable to help but stop. I have also seen them entertain guests and friends, and people at two banquet tables sit in the aisle in the basement, chatting and laughing happily.
A little off topic, roar. What I want to say is that the values conveyed in movies are so fascinating, often because they are so scarce in reality. Falling in love is too simple, you love me, I love you, together; you love me, I do not love you, refuse; you do not love me, I love you, pursue or give up. But once the thing of love involves parents, status, money, house... it seems to start to struggle. There are too many people in this world, living in the eyes and saliva of others, choosing the tasteless and pitiful "chicken rib" love, and they cannot meet the person who is indispensable to him like Jack and Rose. Is this allowed? Like in "I May Not Love You", Li Daren's sister said: When two people are in love, they must have love. You can't just be with him if you think he is good. If one day a man stays with me just because I think I'm pretty good, I will beat him up.
The movies have the purity we want, even if they are remote and short-lived.
Titanic is the love number, and there is always an iceberg of reality looming in front of everyone.
In fact, the protagonist or heroine abandons wealthy daughters or sons and chooses a grassroots life, which is a cliché plot in idol dramas. Titanic is not only love, but also humanity. For example, the concert group dedicated to the arts, for example, the godfather prayed to eliminate the fear of everyone. Perhaps death is not terrible. Love, art, and religion all play a role of salvation more or less. What people need is faith to achieve inner refuge.
Fifteen years is too long. 15 years ago, those who were by your side were still there?
You may have hated Cal, thinking that he played the role of a witch between the prince and the princess. 15 years later, do you think he is actually a prince who is not very popular with the public? After all, he cared about Rose from the beginning to the end, even at the moment before he escaped, he was trying to save Rose, even if he knew that the hope of survival was slim after the escape, he did not give up looking for it. Even when he saw the portrait of Rose locked in the safe and the joking blank, even though he was embarrassed and embarrassed, he still kept that portrait intact. No one’s love is superior to others. Even if people are more likely to identify with Jack as a result of the substitution of identity, we cannot underestimate Cal’s sincere disappointment and anger when he sees his lover getting away—they are also precious.
What's more, Rose's mother described the family situation when she warned Rose to overstep the rules. I think as a shrewd businessman, Cal cannot be ignorant.
So, can it be said that he is also carefully investing in another thing called "true love" that he is not good at and whose return is slim?
You may have hated Rose's mother, but 15 years of experience have made you gradually understand the power of the environment. Before getting on the lifeboat, Rose's mother yelled for the rank on the boat. And when she saw the scene of people falling on Titanic, didn't she also tear up her eyes? At the last moment, death still obliterated the contempt and indifference that the social hierarchy had imprinted on her soul.
In real life, perhaps Rose's mother is the overwhelming majority, but people who give up their families to chase love are classified as "alien."
You may have hated the builders and captains of Titanic-the direct creators of these shipwrecks. You believe that if even one link is not so accidental, maybe the ultimate tragedy will not happen. However, who has not had such a self-confidence that is unbelievable?
In 15 years, we have become less clear about love and hatred. We have a stronger logical system to analyze the goodwill and suffering of others. I don't know whether this hesitation or prudence is a kind of luck or misfortune. In short, we grew up without hesitation. Fifteen years ago, many people did not understand love, but in fact they may not understand it now; 15 years ago, many people had illusions about love, but 15 years later, they may no longer believe it; 15 years ago, some people took the hand of another person , 15 years later, some of the clenched hands were loosened.
At the end of the show, I saw a theater audience silent thoughtfully. This is probably the best comment on Titanic. The vast majority of people choose to re-enter the theater, not because of the plot or special effects, but more because of collective nostalgia that can be traced back to a movie.
I think the biggest improvement of 3D over the original version is to make the audience cry without being noticed.
I heard the man on the left say to the woman beside me: I hope that in the next fifteen years, if there is still a screening, I will come to watch it with you. Before that, I caught a glimpse of them kissing when Jack was sinking into the sea, so natural and strong. This should be the extra perk of sitting in the last row, overlooking the whole hall, inside and outside the scene.
What can be more reassuring than having a loved one around and knowing that he will not leave?
Rose finally threw the heart of the ocean into the sea. The deep sea is Jack's home and Rose's deepest memory. Ocean Star has been with Jack for the whole 84 years after he left. In these 84 years, she has shouldered the agreement between the two alone to live a good life, get married and have children, and put Jack in Ruhai's heart.
84 years later, when time stood still at the moment of the sinking, Rose embraced Jack with Titanic in his dream.
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