Film Review
Viewed through the highly distorting prism of Nazi anti-British
propaganda, this account of the sinking of the RMS
Titanic offers little in the way of
historical accuracy but was a major cinematic achievement for its
time. Commissioned by Joseph Goebbels, the German Minister
of Propaganda,
Titanic was
the most expensive German film of its time and, even by today's
standards, its special effects are impressive and authentically convey
the scale and horror of the most famous maritime disaster in
history. This was not the first film account of the sinking
of the
Titanic (there had
been three earlier silent films and a well-known early sound film
entitled
Atlantic, released
in 1929), but it is one of the most spectacular and
realistic. A few shots from it even found their way into
the 1958 British film
A Night to Remember, which is
widely accepted as the most accurate dramatic account of the disaster.
The film
Titanic lived up to
its name, in more ways than one. In spite of its colossal budget,
it was a highly fraught production and failed to recoup more than a fraction
of its cost. The film was directed by Herbert Selpin, a
successful German filmmaker who had made his name by directing popular
comedies and melodramas at UFA in the 1930s.
Titanic was to be his last film,
one of a series of propaganda pieces he was compelled to direct after
the outbreak of WWII. Selpin's personal view of the British was
fiercely at odds with what he was being asked to present in his films
and he was also outspoken in his criticism of the German
military. It was this unapologetic anti-Nazi sentiment which led
him to be arrested by the Gestapo whilst making the film. Within 24 hours of his arrest,
Selpin was found dead in his prison cell, apparently having hanged
himself. The film was completed, at great expense, by Werner
Klingler.
Despite its prestige and overt pro-Nazi agenda,
Titanic enjoyed only a short
release after its 1943 premiere. Goebbels disapproved of the
film, mainly on account of its all-too realistic portrayal of panic and
death, and authorised its ban. A scene in which steerage
passengers are divided up according to age and sex, chillingly
reminiscent of what was later found to have happened in the Nazi
concentration camps, may also have contributed to its
censure. The film resurfaced in the late 1940s but
was banned in most western countries, probably because of its strident
anti-capitalist subtext. It was only in 2005 that the film was
restored and became widely available in its unexpurgated form, a
curiosity piece for film enthusiasts and anyone with a keen interest in
the subject matter.
To give the film added realism, several scenes were filmed on a
functioning passenger liner, the SS
Cap
Arcona, which would later feature in an even greater real-life
human tragedy. In May 1945, just one day before the capitulation
of the German army, the ship was sunk by RAF bombers in the Baltic
Sea. On board were many thousands of passengers, mostly evacuees
from Nazi concentration camps, of whom around 5000 were drowned, more
than three times the death toll of the
Titanic sinking. The pages of
history are scented with the cruellest ironies.
These days, the
Titanic story
is so widely well-known - thanks to James Cameron's hyped 1997
blockbuster film and endless documentaries and dramas on the subject -
that it is too easy to fault this little-known German film on its
historical inaccuracies and obvious national bias. Among the most
egregious lies/errors presented in the film is the assertion that White
Star Line, the company that operated the
Titanic, was listed on the stock
exchange, whereas it was in fact a wholly owned subsidiary of the
International Mercantile Marine conglomerate. The film
over-emphasises the part that White Star chairman J. Bruce Ismay
played in the disaster and insists he was unjustly
exculpated afterwards. It is now accepted that human arrogance
and hubris (coupled with a terrible conspiracy of circumstances), not
capitalist greed, were the primary drivers of the
Titanic tragedy.
Today, the film's anti-British stance is more laughable than offensive,
and its attempts to portray German heroism in the face of disaster are
so skewed and caricatured that they rob the film of genuine
poignancy. Yet, for all its failings,
Titanic is a fascinating piece of
propaganda cinema and, having ranted on and on about the failings of capitalism
for over an hour, it has no difficulty redeeming itself in its final
two reels. Arguably, the film's dramatic ending evokes the scale
and terror of the
Titanic
disaster with a more visceral edge than any other film since,
and it leaves the spectator with a bitter taste of what was experienced by
those poor damned souls in the bleak North Atlantic, in the fateful early
hours of 15th April 1912.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
April, 1912. As the share price of the British shipping company
White Star Line begins to tumble its president, Joseph Bruce Ismay,
conceives a plan that will save both the company and his personal
fortune. He persuades the board of White Star to sell their
stock, depressing the share price even further so that they can buy
back the shares at a lower price. Ismay will then boost the share
price by leaking news that will make maritime history. On the
maiden voyage of the RMS
Titanic,
he will send a telegram declaring the ship to be the fastest passenger
liner in the world and prove it by ensuring it crosses the Atlantic in
record time. Convinced that the
Titanic
is unsinkable, Ismay ignores warnings from its crew when the
ship enters an iceberg field and insists that it maintains its present
course and speed. Ismay will indeed make history, but not
in the way he planned...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.