James Cameron's Titanic currently holds a number of cinematic distinctions.
It is the all-time moneymaker among films, which is fortunate since Titanic
is also the most expensive movie ever made, and its 11 Oscar wins tied it with William
Wyler's 1959 epic Ben-Hur as the Academy's most honored film. As with all
of Cameron's efforts, the money invested in Titanic is on the screen; visually
and aurally, the film is spectacular. Cameron's insistence on re-creating the physical
details of the doomed ship, as well as other aspects of the period, are indeed impressive.
Unfortunately, his ability as a screenwriter falls well short of his directorial
talents (it is no accident that the film failed to earn an Oscar nod for best screenplay).
The story of Jack and Rose is hackneyed and predictable, but in spite of that has
clearly touched a nerve with the viewing public. An earlier Cameron film, The
Abyss, is a more mature and believable study of the transcendent quality of human
love, but it failed to connect with either critics or audiences.
The laserdisc of Titanic is something of a curiosity. The picture on both
discs is crisp and preserves the film's impressive visual detail far better than
the VHS version, and the digital audio (when experienced in home theatre format)
is superb. But the laserdisc has no special features: no trailer, no additional audio
tracks, and no "making of" featurette. It is the laser equivalent of a
sell-through video. This brings up some interesting questions. Will there be a deluxe
laserdisc boxed set at some point in the future? Given the format's diminished shelf
space, that seems an unlikely possibility. Curiously, Paramount (one of the last
studios to embrace the DVD format) has yet to announce a release date for Titanic
on DVD. The entire film could be presented on one side of a dual-layered DVD, so
the medium would seem to be an ideal choice for a definitive version of Titanic.
Still, if Paramount misses the Christmas buying season, the studio might stand to
lose a bundle of potential profits. Unquestionably, Paramount will do everything
it can to squeeze the maximum out of this particular cash cow. Whatever else happens,
history dictates that there won't be a Titanic II, and for the foreseeable
future the laserdisc version of Titanic is a videophile's best option.
--Bud Simons
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