Movie · 1997 · Drama, Romance · 3h 14m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 7.2/10 (4.2M ratings)
Nothing on earth could come between them.
Overview
101-year-old Rose DeWitt Bukater tells the story of her life aboard the Titanic, 84 years later. A young Rose boards the ship with her mother and fiancé. Meanwhile, Jack Dawson and Fabrizio De Rossi win third-class tickets aboard the ship. Rose tells the whole story from Titanic's departure through to its death—on its first and last voyage—on April 15, 1912.
Ratings
Curator score: 7.2/10
IMDb: 8.0/10
Letterboxd: 3.83/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 88%
Metacritic: 75
TMDB: 7.9/10
Director
James Cameron
Production
Paramount Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Lightstorm Entertainment
Cast
Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Billy Zane, Kathy Bates, Frances Fisher, Gloria Stuart, Bill Paxton, Bernard Hill, David Warner, Victor Garber, Jonathan Hyde, Suzy Amis, Lewis Abernathy, Nicholas Cascone, Anatoly M. Sagalevitch, Danny Nucci, Jason Barry, Ewan Stewart, Ioan Gruffudd, Jonny Phillips
Where to watch
fuboTV, Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential
Curator Review
Verdict
A sweeping, emotionally direct disaster romance with enormous craft, iconic star chemistry, and a clean, crowd-pleasing tragic arc. It’s melodramatic by design, but the scale, momentum, and visual storytelling make it a defining blockbuster experience.
Best for
viewers who want a big, emotional romance
fans of disaster movies with strong spectacle
people who enjoy classic melodrama and star-crossed love stories
audiences looking for a major 1990s theatrical event
Skip if
you dislike earnest, heightened romance
you want a compact or subtle drama
you’re impatient with long runtimes and slow-burn setup
you prefer realism over spectacle and sentiment
Overview
Titanic is one of those rare studio epics that fully commits to being both a love story and a catastrophe movie. The framing device is simple, but the film uses it to build a huge emotional wave: class tension, forbidden attraction, and the sense that every small choice matters once the ship begins to fail. It is unabashedly romantic, but never forgets the machinery of doom underneath it.
Worth noting
What still stands out is how confidently it moves between intimacy and scale. Cameron stages the ship as a living world, then lets the disaster unfold with relentless clarity. The visual effects, production design, and editing are all in service of suspense, but the movie’s real power comes from how it makes the central relationship feel like the emotional center of a historical tragedy.
Bottom line
It can be broad, sentimental, and very knowingly melodramatic, yet that is part of its appeal. The film is built to be felt, not merely admired, and it succeeds because it understands exactly when to be tender, when to be thrilling, and when to be devastating.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Wood (4★) · 12569 likes
Watched this for the first time as GOD intended, on two VHS tapes.
dania (5★) · 10955 likes
oh boy i really thought jack was going to make it this time
robert · 10203 likes
haha wow fucked up if true
Ellie ✨ (5★) · 9083 likes
my life has never known peace since rose stared cal right in the eyes and said "i'd rather be his whore than your wife"