1:23 -Get in to the boat! -No! We've been together for 40 years and where you go I GO! Man this deleted scene alone was so much better love story than 5 movies of Twilight.
That Was My Favorite Part Of The Movie. What A Lovely Lady. I Felt That So Much From Her. Modern Times People Can't Do 4 Years Together Talking About 40.
I'm thinking this scene would have ended up making Rose look worse..Face it the woman was the ride of die chick, who would have made men and fathers proud knowing that in the end this woman was gonna die with her man or not at all. Meanwhile Rose not offering the extra space on the floating door would have left a bitter taste in peoples mouths..
That man is based on a true person in the titanic. He was a baker and when the boat was sinking he was throwing chairs and stuff that people can hold onto in the water. He was also drinking the whole time it happened but I think he survived
Brian The Bold No,she reunited in "Titanic Heaven" with Jack .As well as Helga and Fabrizzio. Old Rose didn't show any sign of breathing when she was in her bed...and Jack did say that Rose has to promise him to die an old lady warm in her bed. And everybody who died was in "Titanic Heaven"
likenikey justdoit febreze blonde Norwegian girlfriend. She was holding on to the rails with her dad when rose and jack were laying on the back of the ship when it was vertical to the water. They both slipped and fell to their deaths
I don't feel much empathy for her - she was a grown ass woman and could have made a decision for herself to run away with the Italian guy and not listen to her father. She sealed her faith.
Arsaja that would be such a hard decision though choosing between your family you've known your whole life and a man you love but just met. She probably Would have died either way
5:13 There he is! Ladies and gentleman, i proudly present to you. The man that literally went down with the ship and stepped into the water without getting his hair wet. The man who helped load lifeboats, and at times was seeing forcing women into the lifeboats. The man who gave up his position in a lifeboat to go back to his cabin for more booze. The man who threw half the deck overboard for people in the water to float on. The man that swam around in freezing water only to be saved 2 hours later. The man who was the last person on the Titanic before it went under. And quite possibly the drunkest guy on the ship that night. Chief Baker- Mr Charles Joughin!!!
He was able to survive because he drank a lot of alchohol that night, which made his blood flow a lot to his skin making his body really warm and toasty, so he was able to swim through all that freezing water without a problem. I also do see him as a real hero though, he put others safety first before his own! Respect
+Eunice Kim i also dont know his name..but he is the officer who coming back with the boat to safe the people that still alive when the titanic fully sink
They basically deleted all Elga’s scenes, that’s the reason why Rose look at her eyes when she is about to fell from the ship, they already knew each other, but we couldn’t know that since most of the scenes were cut off.
@Exploration Gmer13 i watched the re-release yesterday and was wondering the same thing. weird how they kept the shots where they just stare at eachother after ditching all the rest.
Older Rose lived in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, so I believe she really did personally deliver that letter to his wife, fell in love with the state and decided to live there.
+MadZy omg I never noticed!! I watched it again the other day and I noticed in one scene where they show a brown-haired girl fall & slide down the boat from one end to the other that it was Rose's maid Trudy!
Fundip32010 tinaluna Actually saved him. The real guy drank and the alcohol allowed his body to stay warm in the water for two hours until the lifeboats arrived to get him.
His name was Charles Joughin, and although he was literally drunk the whole time, he still had more sense than half the people on board. While he was getting completely wrecked he started ushering/pushing people into lifeboats, throwing anything that wasn't bolted down into the ocean for flotation devices, and was the last man on the Titanic.
That last scene was so powerful... That man has already accepted that he's going to die there so the only thing he wants to do is make sure his wife will have a last message So sad
@@Minime163 not really…james cameron was very demanding and he made people work overtime. the jobs were physically and emotionally draining, so no, it really wouldn’t have been worth it. imagine working so hard for days to get your lines and acting right just for him to throw your scene away.
@@dollpickle yes, it would have been worth it. LOTS of actors and actresses from “old Hollywood” had their scenes cut before the film was released, Or are barely visible in a crowd scene, Or can be seen but are uncredited for whatever reason. It’s how you get experience.
@@dollpickle Exactly 🤦🏾♂️ Fuck whoever “James Cameroon” is I don’t even care this movie is good but it pisses me off wit all the fairytale teen love bullshit. It’s not even real so why tf did they get so much screen time? They need a new movie with only TRUE events 👌🏾
He kept jacking the hooch. So his blood never actually thickened (from freezing) due to alcohol content. Allowed him to survive long enough to be rescued.
how it was even possible that he survived? people are always warned not to stay in the freeze after drinking alcohol because they don't feel they're actually freezing to death.
+luiza177music No but what happens immediately afterwards was, that scene was right before it so it is part of the deleted scene clip so people who watched the movie (and if you didn't watch the movie why the heck would you be watching the deleted scenes?) would know right where they are in the movie. Otherwise those scenes could be occurring anywhere in their relevant part of the movie.
The chef was so smart, he got drunk so when he was in the water so he wouldn’t of noticed he was freezing, and also left deck chairs for people in the ocean to hang on to, he saved a Chinese man because there is a scene of him on the deck chairs being rescued ❤️
That wasn't being smart. His accounts state that he was sure he wasn't going to make it, so he decided to just "hang around" and get comfortable. That includes getting wasted. Turns out it saved his life but like I said he just gave up and decided to go out having as much fun as he could given the situation.
@@cassidywest5539 actually the alcahol didn't contribute to him living. That would more likely cause death in the water. The likelihood was that many of the passengers had alcohol in them before the iceberg hit and some intoxicated but it still didn't save them. The man just got lucky.
@@cassidywest5539exactly. I doubt it was premeditated because his drunken state could have easily resulted in him losing his balance and drowning. I’ll say he got lucky!
Bruce Ismay are shipowner, managing director for White Star Line, but in case, he must follow the master instruction to carry out women and children first
+Alex Patt Exactly right! Isidor Strauss was the founder of the Macy's Department Store & his wife Ida Strauss refused to leave his side and get in a lifeboat during Titanic's sinking. Very sad story among the many that occurred.
I love this movie for including so many different stories in it. Helga was such a special character. We didn't know much about her and her family but in a few scenes we got to feel her, and empathize with her and her parents. She had a tragic death, like a lot of people that night. Many people might have met on that ship and get along well, before being pulled apart or united forever by death. Just some faces, voices, but infinite memories and lives.
@@vanille6607 No worries. I liked Olga too though. And I like your insight into Helga's character. She was a bright, pretty face with a huge heart. Just like Rose. It definitely made Titanic more as a whole. E.g. to have an Italian (Fabrizio) mingle with a Norwegian etc. Exactly, as immigrants to America in the 19th and early 20th century did.
People always seem to forget when it comes to the door scene. Rose was young and naive. She believed Jack could survive anything and would always be with her because he continuously told her that. After all they went through to get out of the ship and survive, she probably never imagined he would be able to die. Even when she saw the boat coming back for them, she still thought Jack was alive and tried to wake him. And I am so tired of hearing they could both fit on that damn door. Of course they could both have fit. But it wouldn't have HELD them both. Could they take turns? Yeah probably but it's easier to say than to do. You can die in minutes from hypothermia. How much energy do you think they would have had to keep taking turns? Jack loved her and wanted her to live. Simple as that
Finally someone said it! What annoys me more is how if rose stayed on the lifeboat he might have survived. (I understand the whole you jump I jump and that they couldn't leave each other)
+Lourenço Nogueira That really happened during the sinking. A steward got mad a the passengers trying to break a door (or something like that) to escape. He was only doing his job.
+Lau B No, his job during the sinking was to lead the passengers to safety and not worry about a door. In other circumstances i would agree with you but not during a sinking ship
My grandfather already knew that the Titanic would end up sinking. He tried to warn people, but they ignored him, and they looked at him like crazy. But he continued with his warnings, screaming more and more. In the end they had to throw him out of the cinema.
This was the captains last voyage before he retired..Sadly he dies while helping everyone he could..ONE CHEF drank so much alcohol that his body didnt freeze in the 1 degrees almost freezing cold water..the liquor saved him...IN real life..wow
Also, he didn’t panic, like the others. Panic accelerates you’re adrenaline, you can die quicker if you’re adrenaline is up. I’m not saying that the 7 - 9 cups of alcohol and whiskey (I supposed, from the 1958 movie) didn’t help; It did. No Panic + Alcohol = Less & Less chance of dying
True fact: alcohol opens up your capillaries (smallest blood vessels), causing the blood and thus the body to cool quicker. The same happens with caffeine and tobacco. That being said, I'd still drink like a sponge, knowing my chances of survival were next to nil
As others have pointed out, alcohol doesn't actually warm you up. However, it's suspected that Charles Joughon (the baker) was not so drunk that he bled body heat like flour through a sieve, but was just drunk *enough* that he didn't thrash around in a panic like everyone else, thus conserving his energy. Being the literal last man on the ship, and stepping off rather than jump and get his head (the largest zone of heat loss on the human body) wet, helped too.
@@K9TheFirst1 Yep. A drunk person is more likely to freeze to death than a sober person due to vasodilation. A drunk person is more susceptible to hypothermia because all the blood drains from vital organs to the surface of the skin. However, in Joughin's case, the water in the North Atlantic Sea was around -2°C that night, which was cold enough to constrict his blood vessels and, as a result, balance the alcohol in his system.
You have to watch the Titanic movie closely because although Rose and Jack are fictional many people in the background were supposed to be real passengers. The family in the back ground is either the Anderson family or Goodwin family.
I don't think they were the Goodwins or the Andersons, because that family later appear saved on Collapsible C (you can see them in the backround when Ismay climbing in), but maybe they were inspired from Goodwins and Andersons
1:40 That scene between Ida and Isidor is so sad, but so heatwarming. Because it's true. When the ship was sinking, Ida refused to leave her husband, and Isidor was offered a seat in a lifeboat, but he refused, as there were still woman and children on board. Ida gave her seat to her maid Ellen, and gave Ellen her fur coat. The two were last seen on the deck, arm in arm.
The worst part about all that? They weren't even supposed to be on that ship. They had planned to go to New York on a different liner, but there was a coal miners' strike in England at the time, and the coal from the other ship was diverted to the Titanic.
@@broonie32 they are seen in the movie, spooning on a bed, with water rushing beneath them. For as much as James Cameron tried to be as historically accurate as possible, seeing them portrayed in bed was a disappointment.
+John Phillips LOL well, at the time they didn't realize the ship was actually sinking until much later. With the band playing in the background they were all told it was no big deal and would be back in their beds in a couple of hours. For the first hour there was no sense of urgency and people were actually annoyed that they were roused from bed to freeze outside for nonsense. Same thing happened with the Costa Concordia few years back. Staff told them it was an electrical problem and to go back to their rooms, no big deal, so people didn't take it seriously until the ship started to tilt.
I liked that part because it is what happened. the rich were told to go to the boats to get on first but a lot of them refused and went back inside. they would not even put on life vests. to me that is why they locked the lower levels for so long because the super rich were such a pain in the ass to get on the boats
i see the japanese passenger when jack and fabrizio go to their bunk after boarding, then during the evacuation and in the deleted scene I think he's the one who is rescued by the returning life boat, but he must have lost his glasses
The guy who threw the chairs down was a real person. Chief Baker of Titanic Charles Joughin. He threw in the chairs and started drinking heavily and jumped off and assembled a raft with the furniture before the ship sank and paddles away. So no one would sink him. The alcohol gave him enough liquid courage to do so and he was back at work within days.
@@2degucitas oh really? So the countless men that sacrificed their lives arent your heros?? You people make me sick...a man's life means nothing in this world
@@yungsammysosa6201 honorless swine , the Moment a lady , child elderly is in distress a man is supposed to help them in any way possible ! Want to know why woman and children first became a golden rule ? *Because woman and children are liklyer to die in a catrastrophy than man who are naturaly build stronger!* shame in you as a fellow "man" !
@Spectre N7 I guess the team is trying to make it as historically accurate as possible. I honestly don't mind waiting a year or 2 more for the full released version as opposed to a beta kinda thing. Patience good sir. I will be more than worth it. Honestly if the full release is like $100. I may or may not consider paying that amount for it. I just adore Titanic, maybe a little too much. :P
I don't think they should have deleted the captain calling for the boat to come back. That's a pretty good example of the reality that happened that night.
Oh, my. One of the most important deleted scenes is the one where Captain Smith calls for the return of the boat, and he is ignored. That few seconds means there is no hope, and that the captain is beginning to realize that he is of no import, no value. It adds huge meaning when the immigrant woman runs to him and asks what she should do. Captain Smith has nothing left for her. He turns and flees into obscuraty--in real life, no one knows how he met his end. But, in the movie, we would have known exactly when his real life was over.
Jim Porter especially because that’s what happened in real life. Almost all of the early boats were lowered with less people in them not out of selfishness or self-preservation, it was assumed that it would be safer to lower the boats to the water and then have them come around to the gangway doors so people could be loaded on lower down the ship, but sadly they underestimated just how quickly the ship was sinking and human nature when things become apparent that you might die
The scenes based off an actual event that happened. I read it somewhere, everyone argued to go back except the lifeboat captain who stuck too. To be honest i can see both sides points.
Some witness accounts claim that he and Mr.Andrews ferried some babies to lifeboats close to the ship before finally succumbing. How true they are I don't know, but I would like to think that's how they went out, scrambling to save lives to the last.
The guy throwing the deck chairs over was the head Baker. He survived. They credit it to all the alcohol that he drank. He had several bottles. He was in the water for two hours before he was picked up. Some think the alcohol in his blood lowered it's freezing temperature.
Yeah they were the Straus's her husband Isidor was the co-owner of Macy's department store. I also just realized that they are the old couple you see lying on the bed as the cabin fills with water during the scene where the band plays Nearer My God To Thee :(
In the last scene, the guy asks Rose to take a note to his wife in Des Moines, Iowa. Old Rose lives in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. I choose to believe that that means that she did deliver the note, fell in love with the state while she was there, and convinced Mr. Calvert to move there after they got married.
@@p33nywhoa14 no, it was the Fox executives who thought that an almost 5 hour movie would bore audiences (i dont blame them. Who wouldve thought a romantic, period-piece movie would be the most successfull movie ever). 5 hours is too long to be premiered, so they decided to cut some scenes to make it shorter, but still, longer (3 hours)
I know this comment has nothing to do with the movie but I saw the logo next to your name....its about time the cubs finally got the big win....been a die hard fan all my life...go cubs go
That old couple at the beginning really hits different it makes me feel sad that all these victims had to suffer in such a horrific way god bless them 🕊
1:20 they should add this scene there is a couple like that the wife doesnt leave because her husband couldnt come 5:20 they should add this scene there is a survivor chef in titanic who drunk to much brandy and survived because of that
Jaihr Reidel Nah too un realistic. Both from different cultures, cannot understand eachothers language, cannot speak English one of them i.e. Helga, Fabrizio only a small amount, different in looks, most blonde girls end up with blonde guys naturally, trust me, and no chemistry, this is why it was deleted, according to production staff and Cameron.
Rose didn’t go on the boat. If she did, jack could go on that "door". He would survive, and rose would also survive, so maybe they could meet on carpathia. I know. It’s a movie, but this is how both could survive
Those people that gave Rose a blanket/coat and the drink make me feel so much more comfortable, even though the ship is sinking. Those two can also be seen during the leaving port scene beside Jack.
aw that's so sad, was that woman her mother? because i remember her from the nearer my god to thee scene where she was telling a bedtime story to her 2 kids.
1:37 Those are the owners of Macy's. Isidor Straus and his wife, Rosalie Blun returned to their cabin where they died. They're the old couple on the bed you see in the movie when the ship sinks. 5:18 That's the Chief Baker, Charles Joughin. He threw over 50 chairs in the water as flotation devices for the people in the water after helping passengers board the lifeboats. In the end, he was on the end of the ship as it went down vertically. In the video you can see him drinking alcohol; he drank a lot so he didn't feel any cold when the ship went under (don't drink alcohol in cold water. It raises the risk for hypothermia). He survived.
Fabrizio has always been my favourite! I love that scene with Helga, wish they'd kept it in the film. But then, it would have made his death even sadder.
Wow.....I remember the day this movie came out...in April of '97, year these scenes are brand new, and it's almost like watching anew. Thank you... Who couldn't have tears in their eyes from this flick~
MaximaManXx5 i wish i could have seen it. i heard everyone was crying in the theatres, is it true ? what was everyone doing after they walked out of the theatre ?
+Gencturk92 I cried at the theater all 3 times I saw it there! And I cried for a couple weeks after, every time "My Heart Will Go On" came on the radio, with sound lips from the movie.
That mean officer was right though, if they went back to the sinking ship anyone would try to get in, swarming it, this devastates the situation and negates the entire purpose of serving as a lifeboat, it's supposed to SAVE lives not make people FIGHT each other, more deaths in the freezing water..
4:05 This scene is the most crucial and important part in the movie. Why did they cut it out? Actually, I've been wondering if they actually call back the lifeboats that were already rowed away from the ship. The lifeboats could save about 1300 +- people instead of 700 +-. That being said, your captain words are not really important anymore when a disaster like this happens. The crewman think that would be unnecessary to follow the captain's command in this tight situation. I just feel terribly sorry for the captain.
I have to admit that Kathy Bates was always one of my favourite actresses. Kate Winslet has always (since before Titanic) been my favourite, but Kathy was great as Molly Brown.
Somehow after watching these deleted scenes, puzzle seems to get solved. The song that Rose sings in the end, the couple on the bed.. all makes sense now.
at 5:27 You might not know this, but this is a sneak at a man named Charles Joughin He survived the ice cold water by being shitface drunk, he was the head baker, Joughin spent nearly two hours floating in darkness. Then, he used the first rays of dawn to spot an overturned lifeboat set adrift in the Titanic's chaotic final minutes. He paddled over, pulled himself out of the water and was eventually hauled to safety by a passing lifeboat.
Wow he was really getting on my nerves... like the passengers didn't know what they were supposed to do, there was no need to repeatedly give the same command over and over
This is magnificent! Every scene should have been left in the movie. I always hope that, one day, they will release the film in its original six hour version. That would be difficult in a theater, but on home DVD or Blu-Ray, it would be fine. So many great scenes were cut from the final version of the film.
I've been to the Titanic museum on the docks where the Titanic was built (Belfast), and let me tell you, the entire section dedicated to the final communications between Titanic and the RMS Carpathia is absolutely haunting.
The amazing thing about almost all of the scenes is they actually happened and were historically accurate, the captain did ask the boats to return so the empty seats could be filled at the gangway doors, ismay was essentially told to piss off by that officer and the strouses did refuse to get on any of the boats because they thought it would be dishonourable and would rather die together because they had lead good lives so they just sat on the deck in each other’s arms for 2 1/2 hours
the way they potrayed ismay in this was completely wrong. Ismay was not told to piss off by the officer, he in fact helped with the loading of the lifeboats all while being barefoot in his sleeping attire and then was TOLD by the officer to get onto the lifeboat as there was no more women and children in the area to board the boat. there was testimonies during the senate inquiry in the states that spoke to ismays character during the sinking.
@@joshcluck8482 Several elements of of the film are either inaccurate, disputed or completely fabricated. Ismay telling Captain Smith to speed the boat up for headlines is largely disputed by historians as the evidence of this is very flimsy and based on 1 'witness'. The third class passengers were never locked in their area after the boat hit the iceberg and the officer who shot himself in the film never did this either. No passenger got shot by any officer. This was complete fabrication.
Fifth Officer Lowe's line to Bruce Ismay: "You're a passenger, and I'm a ship's bloody officer!" serves as a call-back to an earlier point in the film where Bruce Ismay says to Captain Smith: "Of course I'm just a passenger, I leave it to your good officers to decide what's best."
+sf443 I don't think that's going to be necessary since we don't are in war right now. And Germany would never want to carry the swatiska again after the Second World War..
I love how Officer Lowe told off Ismay when he was panicking. Absolutely right in what he said and so good seeing him being treated like an ordinary human being
LOL Harold Lowe just ripped Ismay a new one. I love 5th officer Lowe he took charge of the lifeboats after the ship sank to go back and save people if they could. They got 5 i know thats not many but it would have been 5 more people dead if he had not taken control
Whether it would add a couple of more hours into the movie or not, the entire movie "Titanic" WITH deleted scenes should be added for the 20th anniversary of this classics release, this movie would have been so much more with these scenes and the others added in.
They should have kept the scene with Isidor & Ida Strauss. Most of the deleted scenes seem to involve real people. I think those scenes should have stayed & cut some of the Jack & Rose scenes.
I love this movie! Made me begin my fascination with the actual Titanic tragedy, and when I say fascination, I don’t mean that in a positive way. There’s just something about it. This movie came out when I was 12 and even then, I was more interested in the real story and sinking than I was in the romance or “Jack”. He’s adorable but I never had a huge crush on him then or ever lol