eva hart told herself she saw it with other survivors but peoples that are born decades later and wasn't here are explaining us and them that they don't.🤦♂🤷♂
Ohhhkay now that's just fuckin horrifying Imagine being on one of the lifeboats, having poor vision on that moonless night, and just only being able to HEAR it, and the screaming people
Dude, never mind the lifeboats - imagine being in the fucking *water.* Every light on the ship goes out in the same instant, leaving you in the dead of night with your vision absolutely fucked. Your eyes are going to need a few minutes to adjust to the sudden blackness, but you don't have a few minutes. Within SECONDS of the lights going out, over all the panicked screams and surging waves, you suddenly hear what sounds like GUNSHOTS going off. Everyone starts panicking harder while you have no clue where the gunshots are coming from, until maybe - *maybe* - you whip around at the right moment to see some sparks flying out of the ship as it breaks apart. Those tiny sparks are just barely enough to tell you 1 critical but bone-chilling detail: the gunshots aren't coming from someone on the ship or in a lifeboat. They're coming from the *ship itself.* They crack out across the night, frequent yet with no real rhyme or reason. And they're getting *louder.* They're punctuated by the haunting groan of metal twisting and buckling - a sound that you, a 19th century peasant with no Internet and a third grade education at best - have probably never heard before. The screams are getting louder, especially from the direction of the ship - the ship that, up until seconds ago, you were thinking might've been the safest place to be because it had power and a lot of it was still dry and out of the water. Now, you're scared shitless of it. Why is it making those noises? Why is it sparking? Why is everything getting louder? Are those noises the engines? The electrical machinery? Is the ship about to EXPLODE?!? So you turn tail and run - or swim, rather. You paddle into the frothy, freezing darkness that is probably certain death with all your might because your entire world has just been upended and what had been a beautiful, luxurious passenger ship a few hours ago is now sinking AT BEST, and is a 1,000-foot long ticking bomb at worst. Behind you, the screams get louder. The buckling and cracking becomes louder. It's all getting louder. It's all getting *closer.* Debris goes flying into the water all around you. And behind the screams and the explosions and the noises from Hell, you become dimly aware of a new noise, very low at first but very quickly increasing in volume and pitch. It's a persistent, vicious surging noise, like the fin of some fucking titanic sea monster effortlessly CLEAVING through the water behind you. It overtakes everything else as it bears down on you. Towards you. *Towards YOU.* Oh God it's coming for YOU! IT'S RIGHT BEHIND YOU OH GOD OH JESUS HELP ME GOD- Then, for a fraction of a second, you feel something solid and colossal, crashing down on your frail, tiny body like the hand of God Himself. And then, you feel no more.
@@DaRkLoRdZoRc Yeah back then there were no action movies or video games and you probably wouldn't have been anywhere with heavy machinery or demolition work going on so the sound and sight (if you even got to see it break) is completely foreign to you.
There was no moon that night, so near pitch blackness after the lights failed. The terror those people felt hearing noises and not seeing whats happening.
Except for the entire sky full of stars lighting the entire area well enough for survivors with a flank view to accurately describe, in the majority, where the ship broke apart. It wasn't pitch black, it was just dark.
Could you imagine if this was played in theaters, half would be peeved they couldn't see anything, and others would be shocked by the darkness and screaming that was realistic to that night.
I think if it was played accurately with us not being able to see anything it would’ve been more terrifying as what we don’t see scares us more than what we do see
Para la película en el cine le pusieron mucha luz para poder apreciar el naufragio . Pero En ese ambiente de obscuridad era el que realmente se estaba presenciando exactamente aquella fatídica noche de abril de 1912. Las personas no veían nada, estaban completamente confundidas sin saber que estaba pasando, era algo tremendamente horrible para ellos porque los estruendos al partirse, escuchar los gritos de desesperación de los demás y el golpe de la persona cayendo al agua. Por eso en los testimonios posteriores del tribunal concluyó que el barco se hundio completo, porque la gente en los botes salvavidas no lo vieron claramente porque casi no se veía, solo veían la sombria silueta enorme ser tragado por el mar.
According to witnesses the only sight of the Titanic after its lights went out was the black outline against the stars. Which would explain the contradiction between accounts.
The overwhelming majority stated it broke in two. Only a small handful (some 3 people) insisted it sank in one piece. It just so happens one of those three was 2nd Officer Lightoller. Hence, the decision of the American and British Boards of Trade to conclude the ship sank intact. I've been at sea in starlight on new moons and it isn't nearly as dark as people on the internet are making it out to be. It takes 10-30 seconds for the eyes to adjust and it's remarkably clear.
I'm pretty sure it was even darker than that. If what everyone said is true that there was no moon that night, then I'm pretty sure you wouldn't even be able to see the water splash ( 0:48 ) cause where would it even get any bit of light for even a slight visbility?
very nice. only thing which i miss in this video are the stars, because the night was clear an dark.. so you actually could have seen the most beautiful night sky
@@xpotatomilk2944 i couldn't adjust to make it look dark and stars still appear cuz of the editor i use. i wanted to make the stars appear but i couldn't.
My friend told me to watch Titanic, and he gave me a heads-up saying that it's very emotional. I watched it, and I had to use 2 tissue boxes, lol. 1:16 l.