Titanic Oprah TV Special

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Skip to 28:25. You will not be disappointed.

👍︎︎ 7 👤︎︎ u/Caledon_Hockley 📅︎︎ Jul 04 2020 🗫︎ replies

Thank you, just saw the whole episode.

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/skyhawk77 📅︎︎ Jul 05 2020 🗫︎ replies
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you've seen the movie I know now you want to know how did they do today the stars of Titanic tell the sexy secrets of that ship how am I gonna work with this beautiful man from those steamy scenes with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet I had his makeup on me our legs are very kind of tangled up this is my favorite line from that scene put your hands on that's my new line to the villain Billy Zane didn't want to kick him off the boat now movie mastermind James Cameron reveals all the movie magic the Dolphins the Dolphins are real the Dolphins are real thank God the Dolphins away it's so real I was screaming at the screen turned the corner Rose if we saw Titanic you'll want to see this next [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] Hey well now oh you're looking good if you have not seen Titanic yet I don't know where you been James Cameron the mastermind who wrote it produced it and directed it is going to let us in on some of the amazing secrets behind the making of Titanic because when you were watching weren't you like how those people in the water and their cold eye they go freeze in the water do they have enough life jackets or everybody my first guest plays the miserable Beauty rose who boards the Titanic engaged to an over possessive rich guy but before tragedy hits she falls way overboard for that kind of carefree romantic Leonardo DiCaprio just say his name and 50 euro women swoon okay take a look at one of the all-time best screen kisses it's a historical [Music] okay there's already a lot of talk about a Best Actress Oscar nomination Kate Winslet is here [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Applause] thank you so much okay I make when you did we were just looking at that great kissing scene where your unflagging did you when you saw that when you saw that or when you were doing that scene did you think that it was going to become one of the great you know kisses of all times well you don't never really think ahead I mean I try and stay sort of so much you know in the moment and everything I mean certainly on paper and and in the screenplay we knew it was a very you know important and passionate moment so you knew it so we knew it uh-huh but it didn't sort of I mean to be honest with you at the time it was all a bit of a rush and we had to do it in lots of kind of chopped up a little bit how much time did you spend making this movie seven months it was a seven month shoot yes in the end but there was a lot of kind of preparation time for me back home in England before I went to start the shoot and we're sort of getting into the dialect and also understanding what it was like to be an upper-class girl of the aedra at the age of 17 in 1912 in Philadelphia I mean I don't even know what it's like to be an English girl at that time in an upper-class society so that for me was quite a sort of a struggle at first you know what kind of stuff did you do to prepare well I did a lot as I'm thinking it's fun to be upper-class well it is but the thing is I'm sort of not really like that and so for me my favorite scene in the movie and my favorite scene to shoot was the steerage party oh really I grew up with that kind of music I mean my parents are quite sort of oh you're dancing and you go down yeah yeah so they're dead yeah that would that was my sort of highlight moment yeah this is it we'd look we had such a fun time did you shoot that four days Wow I think it was I think it was it was a day or a couple I think it was a day a lot a very long day I'm just doing that see yeah but also all the dancers were professional dancers and I tell you there's nothing more exciting than dancing with a proper professional dancer and so everyone was just really sort of up for it and the music was great and it was really it was really a lot of so that's your favorite see that's my favorite thing okay what about when you all are in the back okay when you are like I'm making out and the steam comes on the window alright okay so know that scene actually I have to say was probably one of the most uncomfortable seams to show because it was a tiny little space yeah and we had all this comment everybody who's ever done it in a back seat knows it's not easy yeah so this was you know this was kind of difficult to him we had lots of them sort of glycerin all over our skin to sort of make us look sweaty and yeah but now fluff sticks to glycerin we were covered in fluff Leo had my makeup on him I had his makeup on me our legs were very kind of tangled up and my arm went dead where's like camera in that shot oh I can't even remember it was sort of wedged into some strange position and it was it was those things do become so no this is my favorite line of medicine I just thought of it we were we were watching it together when you said put your hands on me put your hands on me jack that's my new line [Laughter] [Applause] that's right I went home with seven put your how you go what are you talking about anyway okay so that was that was cumbersome that scene oh it was I mean believe it or not and then one night when I you know finally saw it I said I mean are we not really sort of sweet and lovely and very kind of comfortable and we I mean we really actually not okay but we did have fun I mean that was the great thing Leo and I always had a laugh together we always got on incredibly well and then we would seven months yeah absolutely and you know I was I was like you know probably all the women in this audience are about Leonardo DiCaprio initially I thought oh how am I gonna work with this beautiful man I'm such a brilliant actor and I met him and he's so honestly he's so lovely and down-to-earth and normal and so good at what he does but it was net it was actually never about that it was a real brother-sister thing we were very very very close and really stuck together really and you have to yeah so let's talk about the scene you know where the gate closes you're behind the gate in the waters coming that was pretty frightening was it frightening well it was a little bit just because we were so sort of involved with what was going on and the waters rushing in and there's explosions going off all over the place and water currents underneath okay when you are walking through that water cuz you never know we're gonna find out later with with James what's real so the water really is up to your waist as you're walking through the way yes cuz you know one of these people what people don't want to go to the movies with them going turn the corner Rose I know well that there's that there's a reaction at that is on screen which was a genuine reaction because Jim had always said to me notice the water's going to be pretty cold down there and you could feel it in the air as well it was very damp and and I come to the bottom of the stairs and and the water is and I'm thinking oh you know I just got to get in so I get in and it really was and it was absolutely freezing but to be honest with you I don't think I would have had it any other way and I remember saying to Jim please don't heat the water because it would it would have felt like the water exactly the water is cold and all the shivering it just helped to have it being freezing and and it would have been much colder for them you know really grown in 1912 it is extraordinary we're gonna be talking about James talking to in a few minutes James Cameron who directed it rode it produced the whole thing everything that everything to it yes he did yeah could you believe when it was happening that it was going to be this big well it's I always knew that I was part of something that was very very special and every and everybody there I mean all the extras all the crew members all the Mexicans they were so excited to be there down in Baja Mexico it was yeah and that's why these y'all are going Mexican dynasty yes it was it was shot and it was ha ha Mexico's when they built the whole studio but there were a lot of Mexican crew members and really the the atmosphere was so great because everyone was so excited about it and and and just looking around you all the time and learning so much oh you talk - speaking of upper class girl I mean that outfit did you keep the outfit when you first entered the boat with the big blue hat and that hole no I did is I go that hat this world it was very very hot steaming fantastic it was really really beautiful I'm really fun to wear and also really helped as well because I mean with a course it means and is so uncomfortable but I'm very sort of used to wearing corsets now from other things that I've done but it does help because the posture then was very sort of poised and upright and and it really did make a difference but you know I was ready to burn that coffee at the end of it I really understand as I was okay up next he's the man who did everything he gave up his multi-million dollar salary to keep the Titanic afloat director James Cameron is here to tell us about the making of the most expensive movie of all time be back to talk to him [Applause] [Music] the other half of coy [Music] [Applause] when you are it's spectacular you all didn't see during the commercial break James Cameron walked out in the whole audience stood up it's because we just love this much talent all in one body we can't believe it can we audience [Applause] it's just you know I think what is exciting about and I think you know the audience and James said do you all do that normally now they all stand up for people but I tell you what's exciting about it I know you all are feeling the same thing than I am is that when you see somebody with this much going on when you just dare to follow your dream you just keep at it when everybody says oh it's over budget and it's not going to do this and then you just keep at it we see that part of ourselves the part that would dare to be what you are and that's what makes us want to stand up and share [Applause] she's seen it four times she can do Kate's dialogue now yeah amazing amazing but did you ever think of giving up was there time where you thought every day every day but you know once you're in the situation you just gotta you just got to power through how long about and how big of a dream was this for you James five years five years three years of just continuous work on Titanic you know from writing the script three years ago through now today is my last official day on Titanic really yeah yes I've been doing a lot of press and stuff okay so you so we're going out with a bang did you know it was gonna cost as much because everybody talked about how much it was how you know over budget it went no we didn't know you know I mean the the the budget did go way up beyond you know what we thought it was going to be but we did the the film was greenlit at 125 million dollars so you have to think about that moment in history where a guy at 20th Century Fox said let's make this film you know probably 25 125 million dollars it's three hours long almost everybody dies it's a chick flick that takes place in 1912 it's a movie about feelings uh-huh and they thought that that would be a good movie to make for a hundred twenty-five million dollars so the bravery of that moment yeah I think is astound that's to be applauded also yeah well one of the reasons the film cost so much and took so long was because that ship needed to be so Titanic and that meant as we're saying now building a monstrous set take a look when it's set sail on its maiden voyage April 10th 1912 the Titanic was deemed unsinkable but this Titanic was specifically built to go down and a ship that big needed a big slip welcome to the home of the Titanic it's a custom-made studio along the Baja coast in Mexico the largest set in film history it took thousands of craftsmen and technicians for months to recreate the enormous luxury liner in full-size scale the 780 foot ship floated in a 17 million gallon water tank covering the equivalent area of two football fields new sound stages house more than a hundred thousand square feet of the ship's recreated interiors from the boat deck you could go down the stairs deck after deck and end up on that D deck landing with that beautiful candelabra they look great and the furniture all faithfully reproduced the carpets woven by the same company that wove the carpets for the Titanic in 1912 every corner of every room was designed with meticulous detail to history and matched as closely as possible to items found in the wreckage of the Titanic [Music] that's even more [Music] and this wall became cascading in with such a brutal force that it actually caused the grand staircase itself to rip from its foundation and it was very representative but we believe the most likely happened on the ship itself the key to the disaster sequence was a system of computerized cables and hydraulics which raised and lowered the elaborate sets at a rate of one foot per second for actors who spent hours at a time in the chilly waters the task was sometimes grueling a lot of the water stuff of the new rough just because I'm really temperature sensitive [Laughter] telling us that when you're down underneath the water in the beginning of the movie and those shots that is the real title that's the real Titanic yeah yeah I mean I love the shot just wind up when the plates start to go it just can they just float up just float off the water and the such nice china to break yeah if anyone was really in that space on the real ship that's what they would have heard that kind of wind chime like sound of the plates all clinking together because we sank it at the same angle that the ship sank at at about the same rate that it was sinking at that point and the tables were all dressed for for breakfast the following morning and the lights were on so it would have looked like that oh my god I know it got got eerie sometimes like like the when we when we shot the scene with the band playing right toward the end and the ship is actually sinking because I heard that the band did play to the end the art you know the story and our consultant can sort of tell you more about that knows everything knows everything he's a man yeah definitely so they played to the very end yeah and then he and and the bandleader did say at the end gentlemen we don't know what he said you know I mean that's that's a little bit of writing you know magic there but what I was gonna say yes okay coming up how did they make the horrifying disaster scene surprising special-effects secrets when we come back back in a moment [Applause] [Music] [Music] in the details that's one of the most elaborate scenes in the blockbuster Titanic as the ship departs from the southampton pier and it's a testimony of director James Cameron's dedication to detail so what we saw there was not exactly what you shot right we actually built the other side of the ship from what you see so and but we only built one side just save money and don't start with and so we had to mirror-image it for the film so all of the writing and all of the signs like when the truck drives by and says Southampton it actually said in L Fisher you know whatever whatever you know I mean it was backwards on their hats and things yeah and it was like the fun was to go around and like try to pronounce all the signs he's everything everything was all mirror image backwards well take a look at some more of the movie magic aboard this Titanic it took a unique blend of stunts performance computer wizardry and creative genius to make the special effects in Titanic to create just one shot of that epic bon voyage scene in Southampton England took days first a background of computer-generated water appears here comes the tugboat and finally Titanic was added complete with waving passengers here's a little Titanic secret ship you're looking at now is a smaller model only 45 feet long so in many cases the actors motions were captured by computer recreated and placed on the model Titanic oh and what about the sinking scene just after that monster ship snaps in there that left the stern of Titanic props straight up in the air well it took months of preparation to determine exactly how these stunt people would tumble and for extra dangerous stunts Computers the stunt person in the red only fell about 40 feet but digital imagery made it seem more like 200 bumpy feet hanging from the flagpole gotcha again filmmakers replaced the real stunt guy with a computer image that's not all a small portion of the set was built on hydraulic rigs so it could be tilted that means everybody wasn't quite as high up as you think once again by the magic of computers the rest of the ship was added later to give the illusion that people were hanging on for dear life so now when you see Titanic for the third or fourth time because you know it's that good you can say oh I know how they did that [Applause] [Music] that's a model it's a model and and he's on and Leonardo was shot on against a green screen and put into the model and all the water is computer animation didn't there was no water in that shot no real water the dolphins the Dolphins are real the Dolphins are real dolphins are real the Dolphins are you know the Titanic is fake yeah Titanic but the dolphins are real yeah okay now when he's drunk oh I love that jug okay now when he when he is drawing a drawing and all the beautiful sketches right that's not real okay no that's a real drawing but that's not Leonardo drawing sketch your hand my hand right but see Leonardo's right-handed non left-handed and so how did you do I had to draw the hand that's that's Leonardo and that was me there that's your that's my 43 year old hand they're trying to try to pretend to be 20 Wow do you have a favorite scene I like the scene at the bow where they kiss for the first time what you were talking about earlier yeah yeah just because it's one of those moments that is just magical you know the gods of cinema smiled on us and gave us a beautiful sunset and Kate was jumping up and down that was the sunset was a real son's help real dolphins real sick I was thinking this is a great sunset but you never know like that I made it yeah it's a real sunset yeah Wow it was fabulous I know when I saw it I said that's the poster shot yeah it was really really beautiful which is precisely why I didn't think about the fact that I was kissing Leonardo DiCaprio others to the sunset we didn't have time the Sun setting it's going we had eight minutes to shoot that shot and Kate was standing up on the bow of the ship screaming at me shoot shoot it looked beautiful I mean I've never heard an actor say shoot shoot I mean it I'm not ready I'm not ready you know okay so you shot the wide shot the side angles all of you must have lots of different points no it was it was the one the one beautiful shot where she puts her arms out and he kisses her it's cut up you know into several shots and then of course the wide shot is a digital effect shot that took six months okay no but we knew what it was going to look like we knew what the sky was going to look like because we had this great sort of eight-minute I'm so happy to know it was the real Sun James it was so stunning I can't tell you it really was it was dreamlike well you won't afraid in the water sometimes and how cold was the water I know that a lot of times wasn't it cold it was a scientific term did you make up breath though yeah we added breath it wasn't because it wasn't freezing it was I think the water was 50 50 degrees or something like that but yeah it was pretty cold that's cold enough but but in the scene where we added the breath you know sort of toward the end the water was like 80 degrees well yeah it was that was warm in that in that scene so was that a tank there in yeah yeah yeah thanks do we have we had any yeah we do have many you are you actually on the driftwood yes absolutely yep and I know because before I had seen it my best friend Gail call me it's it Gail who was so hysterical during the movie her 11 year old daughter said mom it's going to be okay I said you know I hear there's a lot of special effects as before I'd seen it I said so maybe she's really not on the driftwood and Gail says I don't want to know if she's not up but you were on the driftwood yeah in the water yep yeah absolutely holding Leo's hand and and and getting through all that together that was it was tough that was a tough day that was a tough day for us right it was my 21st birthday and I remember I told Leo during one of the text in here my birthday today and he said sweetie I really don't care it's my clothes there's been a lot of press about how difficult this movie was to make here's what leading man Leonardo DiCaprio had to say about working with mr. James Cameron this is what he said Jim is certainly unlike anybody I've ever worked with I think he really not only understands the technical side of how to make something look unbelievable but he you know throughout all his films he's really had a lot of concentration on performances too you know but at the same time he's extremely demanding of course you all know we asked Leo to be here today but he couldn't make it I wanted him I wanted him as much as you did we all did we all did but coming up Cates on-screen fiance is here we're gonna talk to Billy Zane the villain of Titanic oh did we hate him and then when he picked up that little girl in the end oh my I said how are you gonna live with yourself but we have to build him up now he's really not like that at all Billy Zane tonight good gracious perhaps as a reminder of my feelings for you is it a diamond yes 56 carats to be exact was worn by luther 16th and they called it occurred in a mare the hard way [Music] nothing like thoughts proceeded according to class [Music] shut up don't you understand the water is freezing and there aren't enough boats not enough by half half the people on this trip we're going to die not the better half come on Ruth get in the boat first my seats are right up here you know it's a pity I didn't keep that drawing it'll be worth a lot more by morning Hugh unimaginable bastard [Music] there's some useful party line is filled unimaginable Bastion but see the beauty of it is that all men fall into one category or the other put your hands on me or you summer in both every epoch every great epic needs a villain and then the Titanic Billy Zane is about it's cold and unlikable as that iceberg but that's just his character and boy can he act acted so well but we really boy by the end of the movie didn't you want to kick him off the boat that's good acting Billy Zane is here [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] hey are you taking a lot of heat like because people think that's who you are yeah just a little just a little just a little but was it fun to play it was a gas yeah it was fun to be an unimaginable bass it's good to be bad it's good it's fun but you know and you're back home I am indeed in blue be back in Chicago so what were you looking for for that character that you saw in Billy and you said he's the minion dimension you know I mean just come come come complexity you know Billy's a complex guy and then and I felt that right away you know he's he's brilliant and and in ways that have nothing to do with acting also I mean writing directing all that other stuff and there was just something about him that I knew he would bring a lot of complexity to a character that could be very simple and he fought for a kind of vulnerability yeah and the character that I think makes it more than just kind of like a cardboard villain yeah he grabs the kid and jumps in the lifeboat but he also loves her you know and when he's searching for her yeah at the end the fact that he was searching for her afterwards and to the very end was something what's your favorite scene Billy perhaps the most memorable uh-huh was the spitting sequence oh yeah [Applause] wasn't really better after the imaginable unimaginable bastard yeah it was it was the most humbling experience I think I could imagine we did this 27 times yeah better each time so I didn't wanna stop you did do it a lot we did it a lot and she got a little dry at a point at which point someone thought of the brainchild of including a little assistance by means of KY so I had Mike just before before you know Jim would yell action and this blob of KY jelly on my tongue it was pretty brutal but the problem is there was like 400 people standing around watching this you know between tanks and it was 27 times I was I was it was like I don't know some kind of like extra treat or something it was it was a trouper though I could see him sort of closing down like the first few takes he was kind of like but she gets better each time she should I wonder and a lot of people ask him but people have been asking around my office would you have gotten for true love would you have gotten off the boat off the off the lifeboat and gotten back onto the Titanic the true love uh-huh for true love I would have done you would have done yeah how many of you think you would have done that don't see a lot of male hands going I'm like you're on the lifeboat honey just you know if I was if I had ever been I mean I don't think I have but if I if I had been as in love with Jack as rosewall's with Jack there's no way I would have wanted to go to go it alone I mean even if he was gonna die I would have wanted to die with him and somebody did that you know the the wife of Isidor Straus Ida Straus said you know I've been with you for 40 years and where you go I go and she knew she was gonna die and she got out of the lifeboat and got back on the ship so there's a historical precedent but these characters these characters Billie's characters Kate Kate's characters of course Leonardo they're all fixed those were all in your hands yeah they're made of amazing bringing the Titanic back to life was a process that involved as we've been talking about thousands of bodies literally take a look the faces of the Titanic the 2228 passengers whose lives were lost or changed forever when that mighty ship went down thousands of extras brought the giant ship back to life but before filming could begin they had to enroll in Titanic boot camp to transform themselves into passengers that meant more than 1912 style makeovers traveling on this ship meant a crash course in history and survival when we get up we don't strap the other side to get up please a choreographer and etiquette coach put the team through the paces of proper behavior with meticulous attention paid to table manners I also made an etiquette video which was specifically aimed at the table manners because dinner was the most formal time of the holiday and we wanted to get the table manners correct with an eight point four million dollar costume budget designers combed the world for vintage fabrics and gowns they spent months recreating and researching the period a process which included the careful restoration of dozens of elaborate costumes the dining room definitely was the hardest to do a lot of that stuff is vintage garment just incredible patterns and fabrics and colors and textures [Music] and you were saying how extraordinary the extras were you all were saying how extraordinary the extra extras were so into it they were into the history of it they would correct us if we went right and eventually what I wound up doing was saying okay you're so and so you're you're John Thayer you're you know you're Eleanor whiner giving them names of people that were actually on the ship so they could you know feel like I said you're all actors you don't have lines but you're actors they had to have a reason for what they were doing for being right how panicked they were you know we sort of had a panic scale of 1 to 10 and you're do that well because they didn't always know where the scene fit in the grand scheme of things and so if you just said panic they just they'd go right to the max I had to back them off and say no you're not at that point yet some of you are and the way the ad would do it he would say if you were born in the month of January June and September you're out at 9:00 on panic and if you're in the other months you're at a 7 or something like that and they and in two languages because it was you know bilingual extras and it all worked somehow they were down in what most of the extras were retired Americans and living hands fair skinned Mexicans and the retired Americans and I understand went down to Baja from California from all over the country basically to retire as it were and they never worked a harder day in their life what is this I worked my pension I'm down here to fish find out what treasures have been found from the real Titanic and who's got them now and hear about Jim's dangerous dies to the shipwreck we'll break back more Titanic big break [Music] we're talking to James Cameron he's the mastermind behind the master Titanic he took his keen eye for detail on a dangerous deep-sea mission to see the Titanic wreckage for himself and what he found became an integral part of this film from its very first frame look at this when the cameras take us underwater look closely and many of the shots it really is the actual Titanic two and a half miles down to get those shots the production team chartered a Russian vessel equipped with two $25,000,000 submarines and a special camera designed by director James Cameron's brother Mike on this particular project I was my brother's keeper if the camera housing had failed he was genuinely in jeopardy of being killed the four point five million dollar mission provided them with just 12 minutes of underwater footage but to Cameron it was an invaluable journey into the past never seen anything like this confronted with the wreck itself and it's it's the fact of it lying on the sea bottom sort of created a sense for us collectively certainly for me personally that after that point everything else had to live up to that level of authenticity [Music] that's why the movies so spectacular you feel all of that on the screen but what was that like down there it was a it was a religious experience I'm sure I mean first of all I've been fascinated by shipwrecks all my life and I've done a lot of scuba diving in wrecks but this was I mean I think of it as the Mount Everest of shipwrecks because it's so inaccessible it's two and a half miles down you you freefall through black water for two hours just to get to that depth get out really yeah and and then you know you see it it comes up on the sonar screen and then it comes into your lights and there it is and it's enormous I mean you can't even you can't even see the whole thing the people who yeah yeah I mean I don't necessarily believe in ghosts but but there's really a sense energy the energy is the energy of the place coming up find out what treasures have been found from the real Titanic and who's got them now [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] Don Lynch has interviewed more than 20 survivors of the Titanic director James Cameron was so impressed with his book Titanic which is an illustrated history that he signed Don on as a consultant on the film you too man thank you very much yeah so you know about those stories who said goodbye to whom yes yes yeah quite a few talk to a number of survivors who and people who had left family behind people on the ship there are survivors alive today who lost their fathers in the sinking of the Titanic well because the more men died then women of course because all the women did all the women get out no they're over about a hundred and twenty women went down with the ship in probably 67 children I think 50 or 60 70 oh wow and I understand you personally acquainted with a lot of the survivors yeah yes I've met quite a few over the years yeah the ones who are left why did it go down was the captain at fault you know the captain is ultimately responsible for his ship he's the ultimate authority even if the president of the companies on board and so I I think did because he did abandon the bridge when he knew they were against the real cap that's a real captain who looks like the movie captain yeah that's a real captain that's the real guy Wow they're caring good jobs very good did the stillness of the waters contribute to the the hazardous condition why it's it's ironic that the calm waters were almost what sank the Titanic because one of the ways of seeing an iceberg is by the ring of foam around the base of it and if you can't see that the kite ice of course is gonna be the colour of the water itself so it's gonna be hard to see you need that white ring at the base and so there really were too few lifeboats because of for appearances sake yes the the lifeboats who was designed to have way more lifeboats as many as 48 lifeboats it had 20 which was in excess of the law it had more than met the law's requirements but it wasn't enough for everybody on board amazing was that a real axe you used yeah that's what the rubber one the rubber one when you did the hit that was a rubber one we did one sure I know cuz I said really I said to somebody I was watching one who'd seen the movie I said tell me his hands not gonna fall off in the water that is not what I want to go through right now a hand is now not gonna fall off into the water we got to deal with that well since its discovery thousands of relics have been taken from the shipwreck by treasure hunters like a pair of gold-rimmed glasses remember those in the movie a top hat perhaps the one worn by Guggenheim a silver spoon a crystal Vaz with ship line logo an enormous wrench probably used in the boiler room a pocket watch and a bejeweled necklace but not the heart of the ocean which we all have seen it have our own opinions up which is fictional by the way the heart is yes it's a big diamond it's a made-up diamond sort of based on the Hope Diamond which is almost that size and has a similar history okay we'll be right back right back [Applause] [Music] one of the greatest confidence I can give you you don't know you know my life partner Stedman but Stedman fell asleep during the fugitive and during the train scene but Stedman went to see this movie I was actually shooting a movie another movie and said I want to see this movie by himself and call me and told me I needed to go see the movie and he's the one who said I needed to get you guys on here cuz he is never he said I've never seen a movie in my life like that so there's there's a beating heart in there there's a beating heart absolutely what you want to say I just want to say thank you so much for not giving up because you reached right into my heart and ripped it out there's something about it and we can't forget it can't forget it I'm gonna say this America you might just lose your citizenship if you don't go see this movie so we're gonna excuse y'all too early so y'all can go and get some tickets now thank you so much James Cameron guests of the upper wing features day at the old sweet hotel located in the heart of Chicago's Magnificent Mile you [Music]
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Channel: Old Dusty VHS Tapes
Views: 464,788
Rating: 4.9150491 out of 5
Keywords: titanic, oprah, oprah winfrey, oprah life class, oprah winfrey show, leonardo dicaprio oprah, oprah interview, the oprah winfrey show, oprah where are they now, where are they now oprah, oprah show, titanic 1997, titanic movie, frances fisher titanic, rms titanic (ship), kate winslet titanic, james cameron titanic, titanic behind the scenes, oprah super soul sunday, greatest moments with oprah, kate winslet oprah, oprah winfrey network, titanic oprah
Id: GdQ63Pi0xXY
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 42min 59sec (2579 seconds)
Published: Sat Jul 04 2020
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