Why would you want two? Surely you can watch the same one again.
shaman
10 May 162#11
I remember queueing for ages to see this at the cinema, and then the usher coming out and saying Woman and children first please
missingman
10 May 16#12
Went to see this with my grandparents when it came out. My grandma's first name was Pearl and grandad was called Dean. Of course I referred to them as Grandma and Grandpapa papa papa pa.....
cicobuff
10 May 16#13
sarahjrobinson
10 May 16#14
Thanks :smiley:
Zuulan
11 May 16#15
What other 3D Blu-ray's were there?
rabbitmoon
11 May 16#16
Incredibly witty iceberg/ruined endings jokes aside, this 3D version is actually excellent. The conversion alone cost more than most films entire budgets ($18m, just to convert to 3D!) and took 14 months. The extras on the blu are fantastic, so many good documentaries. The time-lapse shot of the replica Titanic being built is incredible. I personally find the scale, detail and direction of the production itself far more interesting than the movie, its mind-blowing what Cameron achieved (2 decades ago already).
cicobuff
11 May 16#17
It's always remarkable what Cameron achieves, remarkable bluster. He should never script write.
rustydad
11 May 16#18
On subject of the Titanic, I love Lew Grade's Quote,regarding the flop of Raise The Titanic, "It would have been cheaper to lower the Atlantic "
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