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1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Production  





4 Historical Inaccuracies  





5 Reception  





6 Home video  





7 See also  





8 References  





9 External links  














A Night to Remember (1958 film): Difference between revisions






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The ''Carpathia'' is four hours away and is racing to the site, in hope of saving more lives. The ship sinks amid much chaos on the deck, with third class passengers allowed up from below after all the boats have gone.

The ''Carpathia'' is four hours away and is racing to the site, in hope of saving more lives. The ship sinks amid much chaos on the deck, with third class passengers allowed up from below after all the boats have gone.



Captain Smith is last seen walking onto the bridge, Thomas Andrews is last seen in the smoking room. Lightoller and many others swim off the ship. It sinks deeper into the water; suddenly a funnel breaks loose and crashes onto the surface and the ship goes down. One of the overturned collapsible boats is floating, so Lightoller and a few more men balance on it and wait. Chief Baker [[Charles Joughin]] is found in the water, not minding the cold because he's been drinking, and pulled up onto the boat. Lightoller spots another one and the men are saved. The Carpathia comes and rescues the survivors.

Captain Smith is last seen walking onto the bridge, Thomas Andrews is last seen in the smoking room. Lightoller and many others swim off the ship. It sinks deeper into the water; suddenly a funnel breaks loose and crashes onto the surface and the ship goes down. One of the overturned collapsible boats is floating, so Lightoller and a few more men balance on it and wait. Chief Baker [[Charles Joughin]] is found in the water, not minding the cold because he's been drinking, and pulled up onto the boat. Lightoller spots another one and the men are saved. The ''Carpathia'' comes and rescues the survivors.



Lightoller, the senior surviving officer, reflects that they were all so sure about the safety of the ship, and that he will "never be sure again, about anything."

Lightoller, the senior surviving officer, reflects that they were all so sure about the safety of the ship, and that he will "never be sure again, about anything."


Revision as of 14:02, 10 March 2015

A Night to Remember
original poster
Directed byRoy Ward Baker
Screenplay byEric Ambler
Story byWalter Lord
Produced byWilliam MacQuitty
StarringKenneth More
Ronald Allen
Robert Ayres
Honor Blackman
Michael Goodliffe
Laurence Naismith
CinematographyGeoffrey Unsworth
Music byWilliam Alwyn
Distributed byThe Rank Organisation [1]
Carlton International Media (UK)
CBS (TV)
Criterion (USA DVD)

Release date

  • 3 July 1958 (1958-07-03)

Running time

123 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguagesEnglish
Russian
German
Italian
Polish
Budget$1,680,000 (est.)

A Night to Remember is a 1958 British drama film adaptation of Walter Lord's book A Night to Remember (1955), recounting the final night of the RMS Titanic. It was adapted by Eric Ambler, directed by Roy Ward Baker, and filmed in the United Kingdom. The production team, supervised by producer William MacQuitty, used blueprints of the ship to create the sets accurately, while Fourth Officer Joseph Boxhall and ex-Cunard Commodore Harry Grattidge both worked as technical advisors on the film.

The film's World Premiere was on Thursday 3 July 1958 at the Odeon Leicester Square. Titanic survivor Elizabeth Dowdell attended the American premiere in New York on Tuesday 16 December 1958.[1]

Among the many films about the Titanic, it has long been regarded as the high point by Titanic historians and survivors alike for its accuracy,[2] despite its modest production values[3] when compared with the 1997 Oscar-winning film Titanic.[2][4]

Plot

The Titanic was the largest vessel afloat, and was widely believed to be unsinkable. Her passengers included the cream of American and British society. The story of her sinking is told from the point of view of her passengers and crew, principally Second Officer Charles Lightoller (Kenneth More).

Once in the open sea on her maiden voyage, the ship receives a number of ice warnings from a nearby steamer, the SS Californian. Only one of the messages is relayed to Captain Edward J. Smith (Laurence Naismith), who orders a lookout but because of nearly universal faith in the ship's indestructibility does not slow the ship or consider an alternate route.

Late on 14 April 1912, lookout Frederick Fleet (Bernard Fox) spots an iceberg directly in front of the ship. It turns hard to port but collides with the iceberg on its starboard side, opening the first five compartments to the sea, below the waterline. Thomas Andrews (Michael Goodliffe), the ship's builder, inspects the damage and finds that it will soon sink, a bad situation made horrific by the fact that it does not have sufficient lifeboat capacity for everyone on board.

A distress signal is immediately sent out, and efforts begin to signal a ship (the Californian) that is seen on the horizon, a mere 10 miles away. But its radio operator is off duty and does not hear the distress signal. Fortunately, the radio operator on the RMS Carpathia receives the distress call, understands the emergency and immediately alerts Captain Arthur Rostron (Anthony Bushell) who promptly orders the ship to head to the site at maximum speed.

Captain Smith orders Officers Lightoller and William Murdoch to start lowering the lifeboats. Many women and children are reluctant to get in a small, cramped one, and Murdoch and Lightoller must use force to put them in. Many men try to sneak on board, but Lightoller will not allow them. Murdoch, working the other side of the ship, is shown as more accommodating to men. As the stewards struggle to hold back women and children in third-class, most of the ones from first and second class board the lifeboats and launch away from the ship.

The bow of the ship is swiftly taking on water, and there are only two collapsible lifeboats left. Lightoller and other able seamen struggle to untie them and, unable to take the time to put passengers into them, leave them in the hope that they will save more lives.

The Carpathia is four hours away and is racing to the site, in hope of saving more lives. The ship sinks amid much chaos on the deck, with third class passengers allowed up from below after all the boats have gone.

Captain Smith is last seen walking onto the bridge, Thomas Andrews is last seen in the smoking room. Lightoller and many others swim off the ship. It sinks deeper into the water; suddenly a funnel breaks loose and crashes onto the surface and the ship goes down. One of the overturned collapsible boats is floating, so Lightoller and a few more men balance on it and wait. Chief Baker Charles Joughin is found in the water, not minding the cold because he's been drinking, and pulled up onto the boat. Lightoller spots another one and the men are saved. The Carpathia comes and rescues the survivors.

Lightoller, the senior surviving officer, reflects that they were all so sure about the safety of the ship, and that he will "never be sure again, about anything."

An epilogue at the end of the film states that the passengers have not died in vain, as today there are lifeboats for all, unceasing radio vigil, and that the International Ice Patrol guards the sea lanes, making them safe for the people of the world.

Cast

  • Ronald Allen as Mr. Clarke
  • Robert AyersasArthur Godfrey Peuchen
  • Honor Blackman as Mrs. Liz Lucas
  • Anthony Bushell as Captain Arthur Rostron
  • John Cairney as Mr. Murphy
  • Jill Dixon as Mrs. Clarke
  • Jane Downs as Mrs. Sylvia Lightoller
  • James Dyrenforth as Colonel Archibald Gracie IV
  • Michael GoodliffeasThomas Andrews
  • Kenneth Griffith as Wireless Operator Jack Phillips
  • Harriette Johns as (Billed as Lady Richard in credits) Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon
  • Frank LawtonasJ. Bruce Ismay
  • Richard Leech as First Officer William Murdoch
  • David McCallum as Assistant Wireless Operator Harold Sydney Bride
  • Alec McCowen as Wireless Operator Harold Thomas Cottam, Carpathia
  • Geoffrey Bayldon as Wireless Operator Cyril Evans, Californian
  • Tucker McGuire as Mrs. Margaret "Molly" Brown
  • Teresa Thorne as Miss Edith Russell
  • John Merivale as Robbie Lucas
  • Ralph Michael as Jay Yates
  • Laurence Naismith as Captain Edward J. Smith
  • Russell Napier as Captain Stanley Lord
  • Redmond Phillips as Mr. Hoyle
  • George Rose as Chief Baker Charles Joughin
  • Charles Belchier as Bandleader Wallace Hartley
  • Joseph Tomelty as Dr. William O'Loughlin
  • Jack Watling as Fourth Officer Joseph Boxhall
  • Patrick Waddington (Billed as Sir Richard in credits) Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon
  • Howard Pays as Fifth Officer Harold Lowe
  • Michael Bryant as Sixth Officer James Moody
  • Cyril Chamberlain as Quartermaster Rowe
  • Richard Clarke as Martin Gallagher
  • Bee Duffell as Mrs. Farrell
  • Harold GoldblattasBenjamin Guggenheim
  • Gerald Harper as Third Officer (Carpathia)
  • Thomas Heathcote as Steward
  • Andrew Keir as Second Engineer Officer John Henry 'Harry' Hesketh
  • Harold Siddons as Second Officer Herbert Stone (Californian)
  • Howard Lang as Chief Officer Henry Wilde (uncredited)
  • Sean Connery as Steerage Passenger (uncredited)
  • John Moulder Brown as Boy (uncredited)
  • Henry Campbell as William T. Stead (uncredited)
  • Larry Taylor as Bearded Seaman (uncredited)
  • Ray Austin (Stunt Actor) as jumping passenger and Seaman (uncredited)
  • Desmond Llewelyn makes an uncredited appearance as a crew member reassuring the panicking steerage passengers and Peter Burton makes an uncredited appearance as a steward.[5] Bernard Fox, who appears uncredited as Lookout Frederick Fleet who utters the famous words "Iceberg, dead ahead, sir" also appears as Colonel Archibald Gracie IV in the 1997 Titanic film, making him a cast member of two films about the sinking of the Titanic. Norman Rossington plays a steward who loses his temper with non-English speaking passengers just after the collision. Rossington twenty years later played the Sergeant-at-Arms in 1979's SOS Titanic.

    Production

    The film is based on the 1955 book A Night to RememberbyWalter Lord, but in Ray Johnson’s documentary The Making of "A Night to Remember" (1993), Lord says that when he wrote his book, there was no mass interest in the Titanic,[6] and he was the first writer in four decades to attempt a grand-scale history of the disaster, synthesizing written sources and survivors’ firsthand accounts. Lord dated the genesis of his interest in the subject to childhood. So did producer MacQuitty, who, as a boy of six, watched the Titanic set out from Belfast, as well as screenwriter Ambler, who was a lad in London when the ship was launched.

    Producer MacQuitty had originally contracted with Shaw, Savill & Albion Line to use its former flagship QSMV Dominion Monarch to shoot scenes for the film, but the company pulled out of the production at the last minute, citing that they did not want to use one of their liners to recreate the Titanic sinking. However, according to MacQuitty, the Shaw Savill Line at the time was managed by Basil Sanderson, son of Harold Sanderson, the White Star Line's director in the U.S. at the time of the sinking. Harold Sanderson would later succeed J. Bruce Ismay as president of the International Mercantile Marine Company, J.P. Morgan's shipping conglomerate that owned the White Star Line. This connection to White Star, according to MacQuitty, is what actually led the Shaw Savill Line to pull out of the film. MacQuitty eventually got permission from Ship Breaking Industries in Clydebank, Scotland to film scenes aboard RMS Asturias, a liner the company was in the process of scrapping. The liner's port side had been demolished but its starboard was still intact and so MacQuitty got art students to paint the liner the White Star Line colors and used mirrors to recreate scenes that took place on the port side.

    In addition to basing the script — both in action and dialogue — on Lord's book, the filmmakers achieved nuanced performances and authentic atmosphere by consulting several actual Titanic survivors who served as technical advisors. Among them were Fourth Officer Joseph Boxhall and passengers Edith Russell and Lawrence Beesley. Boxhall and Russell were also portrayed in the movie.

    Kenneth More recalled the production of the film in his autobiography, published 20 years later in 1978. There was no tank big enough at Pinewood Studios to film the survivors struggling to climb into lifeboats, so it was done in the open-air swimming bath at Ruislip Lido at 2:00am on an icy November morning. When the extras refused to jump in, More realised he would have to set an example. He called out: "Come on!"

    "I leaped. Never have I experienced such cold in all my life. It was like jumping into a deep freeze. The shock forced the breath out of my body. My heart seemed to stop beating. I felt crushed, unable to think. I had rigor mortis, without the mortis. And then I surfaced, spat out the dirty water and, gasping for breath, found my voice.

    'Stop!' I shouted. "Don't listen to me! It's bloody awful! Stay where you are!

    "But it was too late ...."[7]

    The character of the baker, seen drinking after giving up his seat in a lifeboat to a female passenger, is based on Chief Baker Charles Joughin who, on that night, drank some whisky, threw deck chairs overboard, rode the stern all the way down, swam in the freezing water for hours and was eventually picked up by the overturned collapsible boat B, surviving the disaster.

    During the sinking, a man pauses as he flees through the first-class smoking room to ask ship's designer Thomas Andrews, "Aren't you even going to try for it, Mr Andrews?" This sequence was replicated essentially word-for-word in the 1997 Titanic film, substituting that film's protagonists Jack Dawson and Rose DeWitt Bukater instead of the man. The scene was also repeated in S.O.S. Titanic with a stewardess asking him if he will save himself, pointing out that there would be questions that only he could answer. In reality, the last person to see Andrews alive was a steward who asked him if he was going to save himself.

    Four clips from the 1943 Nazi propaganda film Titanic were used in A Night to Remember; two of the ship sailing in calm waters during the day, and two clips of a flooding walkway in the engine room.[8] As Brian Hawkins writes: the British came closest "to the Titanic truth in 1958 with their black-and-white production of Walter Lord's novel A Night to Remember, seamlessly incorporating sequences from director Herbert Selpin's 1943 (Nazi) Titanic without giving any screen credits for these incredible scenes."[9] Selpin, himself, was executed by Goebbels over the course of production in early August 1942 for offering a negative opinion of the German military while directing this earlier Nazi era film.

    Historical Inaccuracies

    Of note are some historical inaccuracies:

    The first scene of A Night to Remember depicts the christening of the ship at its launch. However, Titanic was never christened, as it was not the practise of the White Star line to stand on this sort of ceremony. This has come down in popular lore as a one of the many contributing factors to the ship's "bad luck."

    The film portrays the ship sinking in one piece.,[10] when in fact, Titanic broke into two pieces which sank at separate times.

    In the film, the hymn "Nearer, My God, to Thee" is sung to the 1861 hymn tune "Horbury" by John Bacchus Dykes, which is more commonly heard in the United Kingdom than in the United States.[11] The crew, including Captain Smith is depicted having a full trust in the Titanic, considering her "unsinkable", an allegation which was never claimed with such a certainty.[12]

    Reception

    Upon its December 1958 U.S. premiere, Bosley Crowther called the film a "tense, exciting and supremely awesome drama...[that] puts the story of the great disaster in simple human terms and yet brings it all into a drama of monumental unity and scope"; according to Crowther:[13]

    "this remarkable picture is a brilliant and moving account of the behavior of the people on the Titanic on that night that should never be forgotten. It is an account of the casualness and flippancy of most of the people right after the great ship has struck (even though an ominous cascade of water is pouring into her bowels); of the slow accumulation of panic that finally mounts to a human holocaust, of shockingly ugly bits of baseness and of wonderfully brave and noble deeds."

    A Night to Remember won the 1959 "Samuel Goldwyn International Award" for the UK at the Golden Globe Awards.[14] The film still receives praise as "the best Titanic film before Titanic (1997)" and "the most accurate of all Titanic films" [15] and "the definitive Titanic tale",[16] especially for its social realism, reflecting, in the words of one critic, "the overwhelming historical evidence that the class rigidity of 1912, for all its defects, produced a genuine sense of behavioural obligation on the Titanic among rich and poor alike; that the greatest number of people aboard faced death or hardship with a stoic and selfless grace that the world has wondered at for most of this century."[17]

    Home video

    A Night to Remember is one of the Criterion Collection's early titles. A high definition upgrade of the DVD and a Blu-ray edition were released on 27 March 2012.

    See also

    References

    1. ^ "Miss Elizabeth Dowdell". encyclopedia titanica. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  • ^ a b Janice Hocker Rushing and Thomas S. Frentz, "Singing over the bones: James Cameron's Titanic", Critical Studies in Media Communication (ICMC), Volume 17, Issue 1 (1 March 2000), pp. 1–27.
  • ^ Celeste Cumming Mt. Lebanon, "Early Titanic Film A Movie to Remember", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (11 September 1998), p. 39.
  • ^ P. Parisi, Titanic and the making of James Cameron (New York: Newmarket Press, 1998), p. 127.
  • ^ http://www.aveleyman.com/FilmCredit.aspx?FilmID=13724
  • ^ Sragow, Michael. "Nearer, My Titanic to Thee". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  • ^ More, Kenneth (1978). More or Less. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-0-340-22603-2."
  • ^ "Matte Shot: a Tribute to Golden Era special fx". Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  • ^ Brian Hawkins, The Titanic's last victim: in 1942, a German film director put a uniquely Nazi take on the great ship's sinking. The reviews were deadly, The National Post, Thursday 12 April 2012, p.A10
  • ^ "Titanic". Variety. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  • ^ The Musical Times, January 1898, p. 22
  • ^ Richard Howells, The Myth of the Titanic, ISBN 0-333-72597-2
  • ^ Crowther, Bosley (17 December 1958). "Screen: Sinking of Titanic; A Night to Remember Opens at Criterion". The New York Times. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  • ^ Night To Remember, a HFPA Retrieved 2010-01-04.
  • ^ Michael Janusonis, "VIDEO – Documentary just the tip of the iceberg for Titanic fans", The Providence Journal (5 September 2003), E-05.
  • ^ Howard Thompson, "Movies This Week", The New York Times (9 August 1998), p. 6, col. 1.
  • ^ Ken Ringle, "Integrity Goes Down With the Ship; Historical Facts, Including True-Life Gallantry, Lost in Titanic", The Washington Post (22 March 1998), p. G08.
  • External links


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