Year of Release: 1958
Director: Roy Ward Baker
Screenplay: Eric Ambler, based on the book A Night to Remember by Walter Lord
Starring: Kenneth More, Michael Goodliffe, Laurence Naismith, Honor Blackman, Kenneth Griffith, David McCallum, Tucker McGuire, Frank Lawton
Running Time: 123 minutes
Genre: Drama
In 1912 the luxurious passenger liner RMS Titanic, the largest vessel afloat and widely believed to be unsinkable, sets sail on it's maiden voyage from Britain to America. During the voyage, however it strikes an iceberg, in one of the most famous maritime disasters in history.
While this lacks the spectacle and production values of James Cameron's Titanic (1997), this is widely regarded by historians and survivors as the most accurate version of the famous disaster. It's filmed in a documentary style with a large ensemble cast. It moves from the opulent splendour of First Class, to the cramped, crowded Steerage, who are more or less abandoned to their fate. We also see the reactions of the nearby ships, the only ship to render any assistance is too far away to do anything but collect survivors, and one ship that is very near is oblivious to their distress calls. The cast do occasionally come across as comically upper class and the upper lips are as stiff as cardboard, but there are some good performances from a number of notable British actors including Honor Blackman, David McCallum and a very early, uncredited appearance from Sean Connery. The film is most effective in it's quiet moments and cumulation of telling details. While the special effects look crude by modern standards, the sequences of the ship sinking are still effective.
A Night to Remember
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