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To mark the anniversary of the Oscar winning film Titantic, Dylan Pank from the Faculty of Creative and Cultural Industries explores how it captured pre-millennium audiences imagination, as well as their fears for the Conversation UK.

4 min read

Titanic (1997) arrived as disaster films were experiencing a comeback. Compared to the apocalypses visited on the world in Michael Bays Armageddon (1997) or Roland Emmerichs Independence Day (1996), sinking a single ship may seem like small fry.

But James Camerons film played on the same worries about humanitys fragility in the face of overwhelming forces (and the hubris of our technological prowess) that many films of the 1990s were exploring.

And yet, despite using pioneering techniques (computer animated figures, virtual environments), Titanic structurally harks back to older models of film making.

For all the film shares with other late-1990s blockbusters, as well as disaster movies of the 1970s, the genres Titanic most aligns with are from decades earlier still.

Titanics cinematic catastrophe reflected the pre-millennium anxieties that abounded towards the end of the century, from  (the fear that the year 2000 would bring about the end of days) to more mundane worries about the .

In his 2016 documentary, Hypernormalisation, filmmaker Adam Curtis interprets the spate of late 1990s Hollywood disaster films as a  His memorable movie montage, set to , of upturned faces gawping at oncoming obliteration does not include Titanic. But, the films Edwardian setting aside, it would have fit right in.

Titanic is explicitly structured as a microcosm of wider society. The story takes Rose (Kate Winslet) and Jack () to all ends of the ship, from the first class dining room, through steerage class in the lower deck, to the cargo hold and even the infernal engine rooms. James Cameron crammed a world into his giant floating metaphor then sent it to its destruction.

The director had already considered the threat of worldwide apocalypse in his Cold War era  (1984) and The Abyss (1989).

Despite the historical setting, Cameron imbues his film with the feel of epic science fiction. He wows audiences and characters alike with the technological marvel of Titanic, the ship and the film, as it heads towards its doom.

Yet for all of the movies end-of-millennium unease, the scale of Titanics production in its narrative, budget and run time most clearly recalls the  of the 1950s and 1960s. These blockbuster productions were designed to wring the maximum experience from films, deploying widescreen formats, new colour film processes, stereo sound and extensive spectacular visual effects.

Roadshow pictures encompassed historical and biblical extravaganzas, lavish broadway musicals and other grand productions. Charging premium ticket prices and playing exclusively in upscale theatres, they featured overtures and intermissions with run times designed to justify their expense.

Titanics runtime is over three hours, but the ship does not hit the iceberg until 90 minutes in. In this manner the film resembles such  as the nearly three hour musical, The Sound of Music (1964). Though remembered as a film about the Von Trapp family fleeing the Nazis, it is for the first half a light musical comedy in which Nazis feature little beyond some mild foreshadowing.

Framing scenes set around modern exploration of Titanics shipwreck aside, Titanics first hour and a half largely foregrounds Rose, the teenage daughter of a wealthy American family.

Rose struggles against the oppressive expectations of her family, especially her mother. In this regard she initially resembles the heroine of the womans film, a phantom genre name coined by  to describe those golden age films which aimed to appeal to the fears and fantasies of an adult female audience.

With its plot of escape from the cosseting of a traditional marriage (Rose chafes against etiquette, family duty, traditional gender roles and even her clothing) Titanic replicates the womans film for the first 90 minutes. That is, until Roses world is overturned and then destroyed by the slowly sinking ship.

This disaster transforms Rose into a version of what professor of American film  calls the final girl.

More common to horror films, the final girl is the plucky tomboy who survives the onslaught wrought by the monster. She was an archetype familiar to Cameron, having co-created Sarah Connor for the Terminator franchise and Ellen Ripley for Aliens (1986).

In the path Titanic set for the technological, digitally powered film making that went on to dominate 21st century production, it looked forward to the new millennium. But with its subject matter, structure and archetypes, Titanic kept one watchful eye firmly in the past.