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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/titanic_1953.jpg]]
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3''Titanic'' is a 1953 drama film based on the UsefulNotes/RMSTitanic disaster of April 1912, directed by Jean Negulesco and starring Creator/CliftonWebb, Creator/BarbaraStanwyck, Creator/RobertWagner, Audrey Dalton, and Creator/ThelmaRitter.
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5[[LostInImitation Like most films on the topic]], this version features some characters based on actual ''Titanic'' victims and survivors; however, most of the lead characters and subplots are fictitious. The core plot revolves around the Sturges family.
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7Richard Sturges (Webb), a wealthy American expatriate living in Paris, buys a last-minute ticket for ''Titanic''[=’s=] maiden voyage in order to find his wife Julia (Stanwyck) and his two children, 18-year old Annette (Dalton) and 10-year old Norman (Harper Carter). Julia is displeased with her life in Europe and wants her kids to be raised down-to-earth Americans, rather than IdleRich elite Europeans. Previously having been in the dark on the issue, Annette insists that she go back to Paris with her father. After a particularly ugly argument, Julia [[TheReveal reveals]] a long-kept secret that she's been hiding for years. This leads Richard to abandon his wife [[DisappearedDad and son]]. Around this same time, an attractive college tennis player named Gifford "Giff" Rogers (Wagner) notices Annette and falls for her. After initially brushing him off, Annette eventually starts to warm up to Giff. Unfortunately, not too soon afterwards the ship’s lookouts notice [[ForegoneConclusion an incoming iceberg]]...
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9''Titanic'' is a well-received, if historically inaccurate, dramatization of the disaster. It won the UsefulNotes/{{Academy Award}} for Writing Original Screenplay and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Art Direction. The film also was nominated for the Directors Guild of America Award.
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11Despite sharing the same title and basic premise (a fictional soap opera using the sinking of the ''Titanic'' as a backdrop) as well as being produced by the same studio, [[Film/Titanic1997 the James Cameron film]] is not a remake of this one.
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13!!''Titanic (1953)'' contains examples of:
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15* AdaptedOut: The ship's designer Thomas Andrews and J. Bruce Ismay, the chairman of the White Star Line, are both absent in this version.
16* AgeLift:
17** Captain Smith looks at least 20 years younger than his actual age.
18** Madeleine Astor looks a good 10 to 15 years older than she would've been at the time of the sinking.
19* AnachronismStew:
20** Some of the actors' costumes and hairstyles reflect the [[TheFifties early 1950s]] [[HollywoodCostuming fashion]], and not TheEdwardianEra, when the story is set.
21** UsefulNotes/WorldWarII era inflatable rafts can be seen lowered during the evacuation sequence.
22** The type of siren heard during the sinking didn't exist until decades after the ''Titanic'' disaster.
23* ArtisticLicenseHistory: Where to begin...
24** ''Titanic'''s maiden voyage was not sold out, more than half of First-Class cabins were unoccupied, so Richard wouldn't have had to haggle for a steerage ticket.
25** Tickets were non-transferable; Richard would not have been able to board the ship after purchasing someone else's ticket.
26** The Astors occupied a parlor suite on C-deck, but the film portrays them in an A-deck cabin, which in reality were some of the cheapest and most uncomfortable First-Class cabins on the ship.
27** Only the promenade deck remotely resembles any actual location aboard the ''Titanic''.
28** As with most films based on the sinking, this version erroneously portrays First Class passengers dancing during dinner. There was no designated space for dancing in any of the public rooms aboard ''Titanic'' and dancing itself wasn't embraced as an acceptable public pastime by the upper classes until after World War I.
29** ''Titanic'''s orchestra is shown consisting of horn instruments and percussion, while in reality all of the musicians played string instruments only.
30** There was no emergency alarm system on the ''Titanic''.
31* ArtisticLicenseShips: The ship's model used in the film is actually quite well done, but it seems to have been based more on ''Titanic'''s sister-ship ''Olympic'' and has "Southampton" written on the stern as the ship's registered port. In reality, while ''Titanic'' did sail out of Southampton, its actual port of registry was ''Liverpool'', which is what was written on the stern.[[note]]White Star Line had its main offices in Liverpool, as did Cunard. However, they began sailing their ships out of Southampton as it had a closer proximity to London and could easily make a port of call in France to pick up passengers from the continent.[[/note]]
32** The interiors and general layout of the ship in the film bear only a passing resemblance at best to the actual ''Titanic''.
33* BeachKiss: [[spoiler: Julia cheated on Richard with a stranger she met while strolling on the beach late one night.]]
34* ContrivedCoincidence: [[spoiler: The ropes of two lifeboats get tangled, and Giff is the one that climbs out on the davits to free them. After he does, he falls, and gets pulled into one of the lifeboats, which ends up allowing him to survive rather than likely go down with the ship. Possibly justified as Julia losing both Richard and Norman, ''and'' Annette losing Giff would likely have been too much for the audience to bear.]]
35* DatedHistory: ''Titanic'' is shown going down in one piece.
36* DeathOfAChild: [[spoiler:Norman]] commits a HeroicSacrifice and gives up being saved in order to let someone else have his seat in the lifeboat. Also a sad case of TruthInTelevision.
37* DefrostingIceQueen: Annette starts out very frigid and antagonistic towards Giff, but eventually his wooing works and she falls in love with him.
38* DirtyCoward: Harold Meeker dresses as a woman in order to sneak onto a lifeboat.
39* DisguisedInDrag: See above.
40* TheEdwardianEra: With a healthy dose of the TheFifties [[AnachronismStew thrown in]] for good measure.
41* FaceDeathWithDignity: The remaining passengers and crew left behind on the ship gather together and sing ''Nearer My God To Thee'' (even the Jewish ones), as the ship gradually sinks beneath the waves.
42* ForegoneConclusion: The ship hits an iceberg and sinks.
43* FreudianExcuse: Julia's [[spoiler:infidelity]] is HandWaved as a result of her self-consciousness around Richard's sophisticated wealthy friends.
44* HamToHamCombat: Clifton Webb and Barbara Stanwyck tearing into each other in every scene they have together.
45* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: Surprisingly averted. The film puts all blame for the sinking on Captain Smith's shoulders, where it probably belongs.
46* HollywoodCostuming: Most of the costumes and hairstyles in the film are an eclectic mix of Edwardian and Fifties style fashion trends.
47* HollywoodHistory: Probably the quintessential example amongst ''Titanic'' films.
48* {{Hypocrite}}: For someone who so openly disdains living the privileged life of the upper class, Julia has no qualms booking First Class tickets on the most luxurious ship ever built for her family’s passage back to America.
49* IdleRich: Invoked by Julia when she's criticizing Richard's shallow lifestyle.
50* {{Jerkass}}: After learning the truth about Julia's affair, Richard lashes out at the innocent ten year old Norman.
51* LighterAndSofter: The film portrays the evacuation of the ship as much more calm and organized than it actually was. The steerage passengers are shown to have easy access to the lifeboats and the people left behind are shown stoically singing ''Nearer My God to Thee'' instead of desperately fighting for their lives as the ship begins its final plunge.
52* LoveAtFirstSight: Giff fell for Annette immediately. For her it took a while.
53* MadeOfExplodium: Titanic's boilers apparently had a lining of sodium given how they explode on contact with water during the final plunge.
54* MeaningfulName: Pathetic Harold ''Meeker'' raids the wardrobe closet in some woman’s cabin in order to escape the sinking ship.
55* NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed: Maude Young is a thinly veiled representation of the famous ''Titanic'' survivor Molly Brown.
56* NotActuallyHisChild: Julia reveals to Richard that [[spoiler:his beloved son Norman is actually a product of a one night stand she had eleven years earlier]], leaving Richard heartbroken.
57* OneNightStandPregnancy: [[spoiler:Norman is the result of his mother’s one-night stand with a stranger on the beach.]]
58* OutlivingOnesOffspring: [[spoiler:The film concludes with a devastated Julia watching ''Titanic'' sink into the ocean with her son still onboard.]]
59* ParentalTitleCharacterization: DaddysGirl Annette calls her father "Daddy". Norman has a more stilted relationship with their father, and he wants to seem more grown-up, so he instead uses "Father". He also calls him "sir" a lot.
60* RagsToRiches: It's implied that prior to marrying Richard that Julia was middle class at best.
61* RaceLift: The Jewish Mr. and Mrs. Straus are shown singing the classic methodist hymn "Near My God, To Thee" at the end of the film.
62* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Just about everything Julia tells Richard before the ship hits the iceberg is this.
63* RedemptionEqualsDeath:
64** Reverend Healy, who was defrocked by the Catholic Church due to his alcoholism, goes down into the boiler room to give comfort and absolution to the stokers and engineers before the ship sinks.
65** Richard Sturges drops his upper class pretense when the ship begins sinking and makes no attempt to save himself. He then proceeds to help evacuate the women and children, even making sure that the Basque family he used to board the ship is put safely into a lifeboat.
66* RichBitch: Averted. Unlike most of the other films based on the ''Titanic'' disaster, none of the women in First Class are portrayed as snobby or cruel.
67** While Annette could arguable be seen as one, she is more of an [[TheEdwardianEra Edwardian]] LovableAlphaBitch.
68* RichBoredom: Julia would rather have her children be raised as middle-class than as rich.
69* RichesToRags: These are Julia's plans for her family when she goes back to her hometown in Michigan.
70* SayMyName: "NORMAN...''NORMAN!!!!!!''"
71* TheScream: Julia lets out an agonizing wail when she realizes her son is still aboard the sinking ship. It's a very jarring moment because Barbara Stanwyck's raw emotion is uncharacteristically modern and realistic for a glossy Hollywood melodrama filmed in 1953.
72* ShownTheirWork: Even though the film is rife with cliches and historical inaccuracies, it is the only dramatization of the disaster to correctly show ''Titanic'' listing to port (left) side during the sinking.
73* SoProudOfYou: [[spoiler: Despite not being his biological son, Richard is nevertheless proud of Norman's selflessness for giving up his seat to save someone.]]
74* TogetherInDeath: A famous [[TruthInTelevision real life example]]; Ida Straus refuses to leave her husband Isidor.
75** [[spoiler:In a non-romantic example, Norman and Richard die together on the ship, reunited as father and son]].
76* TheUnfairSex: Richard's lifestyle may be seen as shallow, but he is still portrayed as a courteous man who genuinely loves his family, while Julia does nothing but whine about their privileged life together and constantly shames and belittles her husband's upper class upbringing; she even attempts to take her children back to Michigan under false pretenses in order to keep Richard away from them. Yet, ''she'' is the one who the film treats as sympathetic and in the right; and even uses her RichBoredom as an excuse to justify her infidelity, which is a bit shocking considering this film was made at the height of MediaNotes/TheHaysCode.
77* VehicleTitle: [[Film/{{Film/Titanic1943}} Second film]] about the disaster using the title ''Titanic'', this would later [[FollowTheLeader become a trend]] with film/tv dramatizations of the sinking.

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