The Final Hours of TITANIC - 2023 Animation

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  • Опубліковано 13 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 10 тис.

  • @christinehasse3345
    @christinehasse3345 Рік тому +10342

    A very creepy note: one survivor said that the sound of people screaming was so loud that seemed a full stadium cheering. When a stadium was built next to his house he had to move because the people in stadium made him remember the Titanic dying people.

    • @EmmyPierz-ek7hi
      @EmmyPierz-ek7hi Рік тому +525

      WOW
      That poor tortured soul😢. CB

    • @jacquelynskye295
      @jacquelynskye295 Рік тому +413

      That's horrible! How many people have a statium built next to their house? Poor man.

    • @angeloddrev
      @angeloddrev Рік тому +632

      I've heard other survivors say the people screaming was unbelievably traumatic. And the silence after so eerie.

    • @SchindlersFiist
      @SchindlersFiist Рік тому +29

      ​@@jacquelynskye295lol!

    • @stevetrowbridge7425
      @stevetrowbridge7425 Рік тому +66

      That is so f$&@ed

  • @mattallen8136
    @mattallen8136 Рік тому +14475

    OceanGate has renewed my childhood obsession of the Titanic sinking.

    • @dewilew2137
      @dewilew2137 Рік тому +734

      That’s how I ended up here too.

    • @dewilew2137
      @dewilew2137 Рік тому +316

      Apparently someone in the submersible is the great great granddaughter of a couple who died together on the titanic.

    • @CharlestonSocietyOfHorror
      @CharlestonSocietyOfHorror Рік тому +351

      @@dewilew2137ocean gates CEO is on the submersible and his wife is the descendant

    • @dewilew2137
      @dewilew2137 Рік тому +57

      @@CharlestonSocietyOfHorror ah, okay, I assumed they both went. Very sad either way.

    • @elshem122
      @elshem122 Рік тому +116

      It’s official, they all died and the wreckage is not far from titanic herself.

  • @kaneki-ken96
    @kaneki-ken96 Рік тому +10394

    Gentlemen, it has been a privilege watching your animation tonight

    • @herondelatorre4023
      @herondelatorre4023 Рік тому +126

      Kaneki-ken : It's the end boys. The animators have done their duty. They can go and watch their finished work now.

    • @jessicabueno2722
      @jessicabueno2722 Рік тому +100

      A reference to the 1997 movie and A Night to Remember? Wow

    • @herondelatorre4023
      @herondelatorre4023 Рік тому +23

      @@jessicabueno2722 Thank you. 👍👍

    • @lascfd
      @lascfd Рік тому +27

      Funny point imma add but im glad they didnt show the sinking right at 2:20. We all know that was an "about" time, and it makes more sense for it to be a little after that by 2-3 minutes. More realistic

    • @jasonhowell-lg5ig
      @jasonhowell-lg5ig Рік тому +30

      Yes it was.. let's play Nearer my God To Thee...now.

  • @falsealaska
    @falsealaska Рік тому +1287

    The creaking metallic sounds of the ship twisting and breaking apart under the immense pressure and forces it wasn't designed to withstand is so haunting. You did an absolutely fantastic job on this!

    • @EGarrett01
      @EGarrett01 Рік тому +10

      Well said.

    • @BethKing-z1d
      @BethKing-z1d Рік тому +14

      It must have been absolutely deafening and with the lights out and no moon how much would have been visible I don’t know which to me makes it all the more haunting.

    • @joshbess2521
      @joshbess2521 Рік тому +5

      Didn’t even include the ship snapping in half. How do you leave that out, poor video

    • @Snizzle_Fizzle
      @Snizzle_Fizzle Рік тому +13

      ​@@joshbess25212:37:50 they even time stamped it for you old bean

    • @maxonreese
      @maxonreese Рік тому +2

      The metal creaking to the eventual snapping is something I'm always keeping my ears open for. I know it's got to be a haunting sound.

  • @earlcristiangitgano592
    @earlcristiangitgano592 Рік тому +2857

    Am I the only one who renewed my childhood obsession with the titanic because of the recent tragedy that happened? I'm sitting in my chair for hours right now searching everything about the titanic and realized how tragic it was.

  • @davis6123
    @davis6123 Рік тому +2181

    I don’t think I’ll ever be able to comprehend how horrifying it must’ve been that night. To be on the stern and watching the water get closer, knowing no one coming to save you. All you can do is wait for it to all be over. Just terrifying.

    • @js09js09
      @js09js09 Рік тому +93

      The only fortunate thing is that the people didn't last too long once they finally hit the water. They didn't have to suffer in the freezing water and the complete black darkness for too long.

    • @togowack
      @togowack Рік тому +90

      The horrifying thing is that the people that did this are still doing it and running the Federal Reserve Bank right now

    • @gardenshock51
      @gardenshock51 Рік тому +31

      @@js09js09 to last only 10 minutes must've been a bit too cold.

    • @vinniethegooch7830
      @vinniethegooch7830 Рік тому +12

      @@js09js09 in all honesty, they completely ice cubed up.

    • @harleyb7880
      @harleyb7880 Рік тому +39

      Exactly...R.I.P. to all those who passed😔

  • @aeshaalberts7560
    @aeshaalberts7560 Рік тому +2650

    If you’ve ever been on a cruise then you know how dark the ocean is at night. I simply could not imagine how they felt as the lights went out. Or even just being on a life boat or in the water.

    • @SavageSalad69
      @SavageSalad69 Рік тому +117

      Yup I've been out there a few times at night. It is DARK

    • @zoelisn
      @zoelisn Рік тому +114

      yeah, i stayed up late on cruises and walked around with my mom and sister and when u looked out it was pitch black..

    • @iMakeKnviesFly
      @iMakeKnviesFly Рік тому +17

      @@zoelisn did you see stars?

    • @pauric7765
      @pauric7765 Рік тому +63

      You don't need to be on a cruise to feel the power of the ocean, the darkness of the night, or the strength of the wind. Moonless nights under a clear sky give the best view of the stars. T'was arrogance ego and pride which sunk that ship. The California should have done more to save this ship's people.

    • @zoelisn
      @zoelisn Рік тому +7

      @@iMakeKnviesFly not rlly, i only saw through windows so it was kinda hard

  • @Shesanavocado
    @Shesanavocado Рік тому +859

    Can we just appreciate and acknowledge the orchestra. Real heroes for sure. Mad respect

    • @louisokpara9042
      @louisokpara9042 Рік тому +39

      The orchestra will still be playing till this day in heaven, standing b4 God, giving beautiful sounds meaning that goes like "may d name of d Lord be praise no matter what..may His will be done always no matter what..gracious God, wonderful Lord, d merciful God, eternal Father to all things re made" ..and i can imagine, d angels re standing by in amazement, acknowledging how wonderful humans re made despite d fact we're little lower than them, but in God we cast all our trust. Beautiful and bold orchestral..😪 beautiful Titanic pple..🙏

    • @polarplays43
      @polarplays43 Рік тому +41

      Same with the engine crew. The fact that they managed to keep the lights on right until the breakup is amazing.

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Рік тому +2

      Food 10 courses menu on board Titanic

    • @User_92020
      @User_92020 Рік тому

      The song they were playing was
      SIX NINE -GOOBA

    • @johnr8820
      @johnr8820 Рік тому +3

      Real musicians know that “the music never stops” not for anyone or event…whether you’re dead or alive. A perfect example of that phrase.

  • @Sarah8561
    @Sarah8561 Рік тому +2444

    I don’t care how bad they say the internet is, it’s videos like this that make it all worth it. Excellent work

  • @ScratRedemption
    @ScratRedemption Рік тому +1402

    Imagine being in a lifeboat slowly hearing the screams of thousands of people just slowly start going quieter....and quieter....until silence...and total darkness. I'd be scarred for life.

    • @boop53
      @boop53 Рік тому +157

      i’d have a lot of survivors guilt for sure

    • @kronicx8097
      @kronicx8097 Рік тому

      90% of survivors are women and children

    • @brokendreamchaser39s
      @brokendreamchaser39s Рік тому +212

      Many survivors had terrible lives after that titanic demise from depression to health problems,sudden suicide. That ship was cursed from the beginning, there was also a book that was written even before the titanic was build. It was called the wreck of the titan, look it up,it was published in 1898.and the story was equal to the real titanic disaster, now that is creepy! They even had the ship size correct and the route it was going.

    • @sandking8010
      @sandking8010 Рік тому

      @@brokendreamchaser39s inside job 🤔

    • @theexplorer_31
      @theexplorer_31 Рік тому +20

      Imagine you are at the top of the Atlantic Ocean with a boat. There are sharks appeared and you are just praying for your life. I am from Turkey and affected me. Condolences...

  • @sammi723
    @sammi723 Рік тому +3428

    It’s such a different experience watching this with no dramatic soundtrack, etc. Wow. So terrifying. Rest in Peace to all of the Titanic victims.

    • @richardlodge996
      @richardlodge996 Рік тому +88

      Yes those that perished suffered a horrible and terrifying death. I cringe when I think about the loss of life and the final moments several hundreds had left of their lives. The water was so cold it would have been equivalent to several knives stabbing you all over your body repeatedly until your body temperature became so low you lost consciousness

    • @ShouldHaveBeenAStripper
      @ShouldHaveBeenAStripper Рік тому +64

      That's how it is for me, too. No music makes it feel more personal and real.

    • @SquireVorak
      @SquireVorak Рік тому +17

      The only time I added music (in another tab) was immediately following the mention of Nearer my God to Thee. As decribed, chilling.

    • @allydeath
      @allydeath Рік тому +24

      This made me feel completely terrified. However, even with the soundtrack, the drama, and the adornments in the movie, the special effects and the voices of people -who sounded more realistic than here- made my body chill, back in 1997 at only 10 years old and every time I watch it. And today, seeing how a funnel fell right over people, as if I was there and it fell over me... my gosh, words can't describe it. I trembled and was panicking for a moment. Incredible.

    • @nichoyeah
      @nichoyeah Рік тому +15

      I agree, the cold facts delivered with the very telling animations and the subtle sounds of people screaming gave me goosebumps...

  • @valentinak.5853
    @valentinak.5853 Рік тому +667

    Capacity: 65
    Occupancy: 32
    These lines sent shivers down my spine each time they appeared. Horrific.

    • @shyranhilaw4352
      @shyranhilaw4352 Рік тому +143

      One boat only had 12 occupying it. Roughly 472 more people could have been saved had the lifeboats been filled properly.

    • @BioLivbanon
      @BioLivbanon Рік тому +35

      Truly horrific. What about the boat that only took 12 people?!
      But as is said many times, no one believed that Titanic could sink and didn't want to evaluate. Heartbreaking...

    • @marcusbaker830
      @marcusbaker830 Рік тому +3

      @@exxxz1999 OR they were probably new

    • @caseybanter
      @caseybanter Рік тому +31

      Nobody wanted to evacuate yet. They didn't understand the seriousness of the situation... "Unsinkable"

    • @jefferyboring4410
      @jefferyboring4410 Рік тому +7

      Cuz they lied to them so we’ll they thought it ignorant to get in the boat. After all they said they’d still be in NY but a day late! Not of any consequence! They were just lied to and 3rd class was locked below so not many ppl wanted to get in the dangerous little boats.

  • @juanolivar3219
    @juanolivar3219 Рік тому +1977

    111 years later, we still obsessed with this ship... and i don't think we will get over it any time

    • @monkemr
      @monkemr Рік тому +37

      Yep a lot of are including me

    • @WestValleyTransparency
      @WestValleyTransparency Рік тому +72

      What's keeping the fascination going is the breakthrough technology allowing researchers to answer a lot of questions which weren't answered over 100 years ago. Sonar mapping the wreckage, the debris field, finding the missing keel, determining the approximate depth she broke apart into now what is theorized into three sections

    • @kennethporter2910
      @kennethporter2910 Рік тому +20

      I be thinking about the Titanic every day I have been interested in the Titanic for 34 years I asked my teacher can I read it i love the Titanic ship forever and ever.

    • @brokendreamchaser39s
      @brokendreamchaser39s Рік тому +19

      This ship eventually disapears as the ocean and time consume it, when that happens only some videos and books and internet keep this memory alive , even people forget about this eventually. The last titanic survivor Eliza gladys dean died on 31 may 2009. How tragic it was in that time going on that big ship was a big thing as it was only for wealthy people. Guess they all believed that ship was perfectly build , constructors didnt have the knowledge to calculate all the things that could have gone wrong,thought there materials where indestructable against every possible disaster. Biggest mistake was that all binoculars where stashed in a locker and the key wasnt aboard because the sailor who was reassigned to another ship on the last minute and forgot to left the key behind when he left. The interesting question to me is where there no people on board with a single binocular as if it was me i would use it for nice views. The ship staff was arrogant to didnt ask people if they had one to borrow for safety. Also they all where stashed in a locker but found appart. A locker would hold water pressure and average damage , or did the ship sink busted the locker open? There was also a woman who went down with the ship with her 2 sons, creepy thing is she was very long under water but survived while her sons died her name was rhoda mary abott, also the only one survivor when the ship went down under, despite her survival she suffered respitarory and asthma complications all here life and after that titanic demise she could never be happy or feel happy and she died alone and lonely at 73 in 1946. Questions me? Are some things worth it to survive? Could miracles exist by a higher other dimensional force?.

    • @Kronr
      @Kronr Рік тому +42

      We said we made an unsinkable ship. God gave us a reminder.

  • @KYtheKaptain
    @KYtheKaptain Рік тому +2207

    I commend the 63 year old woman for not going on the life boat and staying on to spend her last moments with her husband. Heartwarming.

    • @gw6667
      @gw6667 Рік тому +131

      The *great-great-grandparents of the wife of the CEO on Titan who passed away are the ones you're referring to, I believe

    • @gw6667
      @gw6667 Рік тому +91

      Yeah, Ida Strause, that was the now-dead CEO's wife's *ancestor. Wild stuff

    • @HawaiianShirt
      @HawaiianShirt Рік тому +21

      @@gw6667 definitely not parents, probably more like great-great-grandparents

    • @gw6667
      @gw6667 Рік тому +19

      @@HawaiianShirt Haha, didn't do a sanity check. Yes, great-great-grandparents

    • @gw6667
      @gw6667 Рік тому +18

      They are also the ones who DiCaprio's and Winslet's characters were based off of for "Titanic"

  • @johnw8102
    @johnw8102 Рік тому +3400

    The orchestra playing till the end always gets to me. The courage for all 8 members to provide some sense calm in all of that chaos.

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Рік тому +22

      Titanic engine cylinder engineering room

    • @franciswahmont
      @franciswahmont Рік тому

      unfortunately that is a made up story, if you watch any survivor interview they deny that

    • @jgunther3398
      @jgunther3398 Рік тому +267

      it was journalism, you know...reliable witnesses say it never happened.

    • @somethingsomethang
      @somethingsomethang Рік тому +57

      I heard that going on the lifeboats was far more dangerous at the time due to the mechanisms to lower them and most thought that another ship would show up in time to save them

    • @mariset3971
      @mariset3971 Рік тому +89

      ​@@jgunther3398Reliable witnesses say it did happen

  • @Ry_dah
    @Ry_dah Рік тому +450

    All interior shots:
    1:59 Grand Staircase
    3:18 Cafe Parisian
    13:24 Luggage/Baggage Room
    18:32 Mail Room
    19:43 Cabin
    20:23 Staircase To The Squash Court
    21:03 Cargo Hold
    21:22 Hallway
    24:05 First Class Area Through A Window
    31:39 Second Class Diner
    1:09:57 One Of The Boiler Rooms
    1:10:12 E Deck Hallway
    1:25:31 F Deck Stairs
    1:25:50 Turkish Baths
    1:35:37 Bottom Of The Grand Staircase (E Deck)
    1:41:11 Another Hallway
    1:50:34 Top Of The Grand Staircase Looking Down
    1:54:01 Scotland Road
    1:59:32 Cafe Parisian Again
    2:00:13 Another Cabin
    2:05:48 D Deck Grand Staircase
    2:08:05 First Class Diner
    2:10:11 Yet Another Cabin
    2:10:42 Yet Another Hallway
    2:14:12 Water Flooding Through A Cabin Door
    2:14:23 One Of The Luxury Suites
    2:25:03 First Class Elevators
    2:29:06 Hallway
    2:36:23 Marconi Wireless Room
    2:36:48 A Deck Grand Staircase
    2:37:01 Cafe Parisian Final Shot
    2:37:05 Aft Grand Staircase
    2:39:45 Aft Grand Staircase Flooding Rapidly
    Please leave feedback and let me know if I missed any!

    • @Gabriel_Strelow
      @Gabriel_Strelow Рік тому +11

      The staircase that you wasn't sure about the location on 20:23 is the staircase that leaded to the Squash Court

    • @Ry_dah
      @Ry_dah Рік тому +6

      @@Gabriel_Strelow oh alright thanks!

    • @Gabriel_Strelow
      @Gabriel_Strelow Рік тому +3

      @@Ry_dah Ur welcome :)

    • @x-Phoenix_.A
      @x-Phoenix_.A Рік тому +2

      👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

    • @x-Phoenix_.A
      @x-Phoenix_.A Рік тому +6

      1:54:00 not sure what this is

  • @Haleigh_Tortilla
    @Haleigh_Tortilla Рік тому +3177

    Personally, I think the saddest part of the entire event was the fact that the lifeboats were severely under capacity. Half the ship could have been saved rather than only 700.

    • @G274Me
      @G274Me Рік тому +130

      That’s what happens when the going gets tough. The have nots are expendable, even if there’s room for them.

    • @BazingerBazinga-f3k
      @BazingerBazinga-f3k Рік тому +32

      That was the whole problem so yeah

    • @bluevitriol5128
      @bluevitriol5128 Рік тому +285

      Or the fact that if the SS California responded immediately they could have saved so many people. But as the video said it wasn't protocol yet so they just ignored Titanics distress calls. So many things went wrong in such a small amount of time

    • @dpetty71222
      @dpetty71222 Рік тому +169

      That theory was debunked by James Cameron himself. I just watched his experiments with the life boats and he timed each experiment. Even if all the life boats were in the process of lowering down into the water, there wasn't enough time. He said actually all the life boats being launched would have been in the way and the men on the ship was cutting the ropes attached to the life boat with pocket knives. So he timed himself cutting thick ropes with a pocket knife and yea...it wasn't enough time.

    • @jacekuntz5195
      @jacekuntz5195 Рік тому +155

      The Titanic wasn't being negligent - or at least overly so. It is like the 9/11 hijacking. Pilots were taught to give up the cockpit because no one ever thought the hijackers would actually want to crash the plane. That policy has changed.
      Until the Titanic, the idea of lifeboats wasn't "have enough boats to fit everyone". Rather, they were ferries to take passengers from the sinking ship to a rescue ship. So life boats would make multiple trips. The issue for the Titanic wasn't that they didn't have enough lifeboats, it's that there was no one to answer the distress signal (well, there was but they had shut off communications).
      After the Titanic, people realized they needed lifeboats not just for ferrying but also for carrying everyone should the boat sink.

  • @JCTG1
    @JCTG1 Рік тому +9466

    Just so people are aware, it was not this bright during the sinking. It was pitch black during the event, and when the power of the ship went out, it was nearly impossible to see anything.

    • @Wolfric_Rogers
      @Wolfric_Rogers Рік тому +634

      Most survivors who didn't entirely lose sight of the Titanic could only see the ship by watching the fourth funnel after the breakup and then see the stern as it went vertical.

    • @zafmo9829
      @zafmo9829 Рік тому +942

      I think you forget that eyes naturally adjust to light. Even in a room with blacked out curtains at night..your eyes will adjust and start making things out..and that's without a very clear sky with full moon light, like it was on the night it went down. For those witnessing the final sinking from lifeboats, they would have seen everything.

    • @Alawiggle
      @Alawiggle Рік тому +485

      ​@@zafmo9829there was no moon the night it sank

    • @andrijadjekic9368
      @andrijadjekic9368 Рік тому +102

      What about moonlight and starlight ?

    • @bombomos
      @bombomos Рік тому +449

      ​@@zafmo9829 black out curtains in you room has more ambient light than the middle of the Atlantic on a moonless night. Stars don't give off light onto our planet.

  • @nostalgia9338
    @nostalgia9338 Рік тому +1763

    It’s incredible that the Titanic continues to mesmerise us after all these years. Not even Queen Elizabeth was born at this time.

    • @mykoniichistorychannel
      @mykoniichistorychannel Рік тому +50

      God save the Queen. May she rest in peace.

    • @lotusinn3
      @lotusinn3 Рік тому +10

      @@mykoniichistorychannelAmen.

    • @chevysaregr8
      @chevysaregr8 Рік тому

      Who gives a f#@k

    • @themidwife1624
      @themidwife1624 Рік тому +41

      That's a random take lol. She also wasn't alive for the industrial revolution or the renaissance, or 99% of all notable historical episodes either.

    • @Kumire_921
      @Kumire_921 Рік тому +26

      Why even mention her? How is she relevant with this accident

  • @theinfinityscout3289
    @theinfinityscout3289 Рік тому +331

    I went to a museum about the titanic in Tennessee when I was a kid. It was an awesome experience. We got to see life size recreations of some of the rooms, there was a pool of water we could dip our hands in where they simulated the temperature of the ocean (stupidly cold btw), and they gave us an idea of how quickly the water was filling up. It was there that I learned the titanic broke in half as it was sinking. Awesome experience

    • @chloethebestngl
      @chloethebestngl Рік тому +16

      I went there a couple years back. Probably best museum I’ve ever been to other than Wonderworks. I definitely recommend going if anyone is thinking about it

    • @em.val170
      @em.val170 Рік тому +11

      I would love to go there one day…although it’s truly heartbreaking what happened, I would like to learn more about it

    • @sillyphyllic
      @sillyphyllic Рік тому +2

      I wanna go theree-

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Рік тому +1

      Jack and Rose

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Рік тому

      BBQ ribs 🤤🤤

  • @talltayls21
    @talltayls21 Рік тому +2690

    I think the bravest souls that existed amongst this entire collection of people on-board had to be the orchestra members. Assembling to play music, to help with OTHER people’s anxieties, knowing the entire time that not a single one of them would live. That has to be some of the kindest bravery ever committed.
    *EDIT* I was pleasantly surprised with the attention this comment got. Clearly there has been a lot of responses saying this never really happened, which I was unaware of, if true. Also, I had not took into consideration the boil-room workers, or the crew/engineer workers down below that continued shoveling coal to the last second. Another honorable mention is the communicator sending the SOS (yes, I am aware at the time SOS may not have been the exact code used for such emergencies) messages until his equipment room was flooded and he perished. ALL of those souls committed the type of bravery thats almost gone extinct in todays world.

    • @kelvinosahon7932
      @kelvinosahon7932 Рік тому +50

      Very true: even in dat tragic face of death

    • @Asif-leo10
      @Asif-leo10 Рік тому +112

      are you fr? yes, those band members were brave but I'm sure their music didn't help anybody considering the state they were in. i mean it was the last place where people would find peace. the actual brave men were those crew members who were lowering the lifeboats constantly without any break. calling the band members the bravest is an insult to those brave men who ACTUALLY saved lives that day. however, i do have respect for those band members as their intentions were good.

    • @love4life99
      @love4life99 Рік тому +102

      The bravest was the poor people from the lower decks that was caged in and weren’t allowed up to the upper deck.

    • @DerpyPossum
      @DerpyPossum Рік тому +70

      @@love4life99 1. They weren't caged.
      2. How exactly does this make them the bravest?

    • @SchindlersFiist
      @SchindlersFiist Рік тому +13

      @@DerpyPossum lol fr

  • @colinsean2931
    @colinsean2931 Рік тому +1165

    2:38:22 is a spectacular perspective choice. Something about pulling back and letting this larger-than-life disaster be just another spot on the vast ocean - and the way the ocean is so tranquil, the way it doesn't care - is so chilling.

    • @tbn22
      @tbn22 Рік тому +5

      The ocean is not a person, lol.

    • @Lunar_Capital
      @Lunar_Capital Рік тому +100

      @@tbn22
      "written in verse rather than prose" LOOK IT UP

    • @beefkilla
      @beefkilla Рік тому +41

      The cosmos is indifferent to our suffering; and somehow, I don't find that appalling. There is truth to it, a kind of stark beauty.

    • @Lunar_Capital
      @Lunar_Capital Рік тому +19

      @@beefkilla
      The cosmos suffers with us. Because “us” IS the cosmos. We came from it, right?

    • @acidsons3116
      @acidsons3116 Рік тому +89

      @@tbn22 Have you heard of figures of speech? You learn about them in high school. That one is called personification. So before you laugh at other people, make sure you’re not laughable yourself.

  • @InsaneThingsOfFun
    @InsaneThingsOfFun Рік тому +2101

    Craziest thing to me is that more then half of the life boats only had half the amount of people it could carry.

    • @Gravelgratious
      @Gravelgratious Рік тому +260

      Panic and an unwillingness to wait any further.

    • @yowaniasutilla
      @yowaniasutilla Рік тому +92

      Maybe because they don't have time to think math about the numbers of people to save at that moment. They think only of themselves out of selfishness. Meanwhile other boats (with 40 or more occupancy) took hour later than those (that launch earlier) with less than half capacity.

    • @heisenbergII
      @heisenbergII Рік тому +74

      Even if the life boats were at full capacity, at least half of the people would’ve been left behind

    • @Sarah_H
      @Sarah_H Рік тому +127

      @@yowaniasutilla the boats with more people in them were launching later. Maybe by that time the fact that Titanic was indeed going to sink was more obvious than it'd been at the beginning, when the crewmen and the passengers were still convinced that loading the lifeboats was an "unnecessary precaution", so they weren't yet loading them to capacity
      But also this was a panic/survival situation and people generally don't think rationally in such situations, so...

    • @harrybrar7635
      @harrybrar7635 Рік тому +133

      if lifeboats were full then around 500+ more people could have saved

  • @kimanimzalendo367
    @kimanimzalendo367 Рік тому +329

    It's crazy that the iceberg broke off and started its journey two years earlier, at about the same time of the commencement of Titanic's construction. Many other peculiarities and coincidences contributed to the sinking of Titanic, making the entire saga a perpetually and morbidly fascinating subject

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Рік тому +3

      RMS titanic

    • @drewberriesandcream
      @drewberriesandcream Рік тому +4

      *dives head first into rabbit hole*

    • @alexspader
      @alexspader Рік тому

      "Futility is a novella written by Morgan Robertson, first published in 1898. It was revised as The Wreck of the Titan in 1912. It features a fictional British ocean liner named Titan that sinks in the North Atlantic Ocean after striking an iceberg. The Titan and its sinking are famous for similarities to the passenger ship RMS Titanic and its sinking 14 years later. After the sinking of the Titanic the novel was reissued with some changes, particularly to the ship's displacement."
      taken from wikipedia. always gives me chills... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wreck_of_the_Titan:_Or,_Futility

    • @gratefuldad4083
      @gratefuldad4083 Рік тому +1

      so your saying that other ships hit the same iceberg the Titanic hit?

    • @yiman7370
      @yiman7370 11 місяців тому +1

      Yes, God. For challenging Him.

  • @davidheafield1436
    @davidheafield1436 Рік тому +1092

    I crossed the Atlantic on the Queen Mary liner and 10 mins before we drew parallel to where the Titanic sank the Captain announced that for anyone interested that “in 10 mins if we were to look at the port side , eleven miles over was the exact spot the titanic sank”
    You couldn’t help but look and try and take in the horror of what it must have felt like , the sea was pitch black and very foreboding , a very vivid memory for me even to this day……

    • @rare_red
      @rare_red Рік тому +1

      Did you see it in sunlight or night?

    • @rare_red
      @rare_red Рік тому +24

      @rizwana5684 i asked the question because i thought they won't allow anyone outside at night, so i asked it ( i have no experience in traveling ships).

    • @sheenamonae9070
      @sheenamonae9070 Рік тому +32

      I’ve been on two cruises with ocean view balconies, I used to sit on the balcony at night during my 7 days and it was pitch black to the point of looking scary. I could not imagine going through what they went through. I’m so sorry they went through that. 😢

    • @paddlefar9175
      @paddlefar9175 Рік тому +16

      @rizwana5684A$$hole, yes he did say the SEA was pitch black. The Sea, not the sky. I’ve been out at midday on the Ocean and the water looked pitch black because it was so deep.

    • @davidheafield1436
      @davidheafield1436 Рік тому +16

      @@rare_red ….it was the night time , plenty of light being emitted from the the ship of course but once you focused on the sea it became pitch black in very little distance. Like I said in my opening statement it was the captains announcement that we were drawing parallel to where the Titanic went down (parallel by 11 miles) that really hit home and let your imagination fill in your own horror story.
      You couldn’t help but whisper a few words of acknowledgment and salute to those that died that night.

  • @braydenlovetere4545
    @braydenlovetere4545 Рік тому +532

    I find it fascinating that the Titanic's lights only went out when she finally went under, due to the tireless efforts of the ship's engineers, who stayed behind to keep the electricity and pumps running while the ship sank. They also kept the radio running, which put out distress signals until minutes before the ship sank. Truly remarkable!

  • @retroradkat
    @retroradkat Рік тому +1131

    The most terrifying part of this: once the power goes out and there's no more artificial light, it's near pitch black on the open ocean. So for the people clinging to the stern, they would not be able to see the people around them but could hear their screams. They could hardly tell how close the water was, save for perhaps the reflection of the stars above. So the sound of the sloshing water growing closer would be their only way to determine how many seconds they had left.

    • @pintora14
      @pintora14 Рік тому +28

      Que horror.... Me dio miedo

    • @retroradkat
      @retroradkat Рік тому +68

      @screamingcolormusic Perhaps not pure black, but have you ever been out in the country with no street lights and only stars? It IS pitch black. The stars alone do not omit enough light to illuminate the earth. Also it was a moonless night! Human eyes aren't built for that extreme low level of light.

    • @Hue_Sam
      @Hue_Sam Рік тому +22

      The fateful night was so dark that you can only make up the cold and empty midnight sky. You won’t even see the ship at all at a distance without her lights on. The increased ambient brightness is only there so you can see the ship properly. If you want to see the video in roughly the actual brightness on a phone, lower it’s brightness level until you can only see half of the sun shaped brightness icon. It’s that dark.

    • @odenirongiant
      @odenirongiant Рік тому +6

      ​@@screamingcolormusicSomeone needs to show you how to grow a beard. Good heavens.😮

    • @odenirongiant
      @odenirongiant Рік тому

      @@screamingcolormusic Maybe you should go outside and do it or get your ✡️ boyfriend to pay your light bill.

  • @mannamedbanjo
    @mannamedbanjo Рік тому +259

    I can't imagine how absolutely frightening this was for anyone. Having to sit on the deck of the boat, watching the water coming closer to you, and knowing that you'd be freezing to death very soon, had to have been an awful fate. OR being in a life boat, watching people you knew going down and not being able to do anything about it.

    • @minnamiin
      @minnamiin Рік тому +30

      Even worse, I doubt they even saw the water, just the sound of the ocean coming closer to them

    • @FortniteDad39
      @FortniteDad39 Рік тому +17

      It was so dark, the ship wasn't visible. Only wat you could tell, was a dark shape blocking stars and the direction of the screams.

    • @Cosmic_Monster
      @Cosmic_Monster Рік тому +4

      @@minnamiin thats even more terrifying

  • @tylerroberts4613
    @tylerroberts4613 Рік тому +729

    As a soon-to-be professional musician myself, I've always seen the Titanic musicians as heroes. Trying to use their special power over emotions given to them by their abilities to play music in order to help others as they faced their deaths.

    • @StrangeScaryNewEngland
      @StrangeScaryNewEngland Рік тому +40

      The violin of one of the musicians was found floating in the water, possibly with his corpse. It was a wedding gift from his wife. Look it up!

    • @blackcougar1959
      @blackcougar1959 Рік тому +16

      They were a very special humans indeed. Professional, loyal and stoic beyond measure. I have no other words to describe them that would give them justice and the admiration which they so richly deserve.

    • @jospenner9503
      @jospenner9503 Рік тому +5

      Nearer My God to Thee.

    • @tylerroberts4613
      @tylerroberts4613 Рік тому +8

      @@jospenner9503 I'm actually performing an Independence day program at a Titanic Museum in America (I know it wasn't an American ship but that's just how they're doing things) and I was glad that we put "Nearer My God to Thee" on there. A good way to honor them.

    • @Connor22231
      @Connor22231 Рік тому +1

      ​@@tylerroberts4613well, it was owned by Americans tbf!

  • @roadkillz78
    @roadkillz78 Рік тому +289

    I just recently visited the Titanic museum in Belfast. They have a great dedication to the victims and survivors by having a huge wall with a list of all that were lost or survived, including a database to look up details on some of them. It was one of the best museums I've ever visited.

    • @togowack
      @togowack Рік тому

      it's too bad the people that did this (the Rothschilds) were never held accountable and are still doing it to this day

    • @ryanbuck8680
      @ryanbuck8680 Рік тому +3

      That’s so cool!

    • @slider903
      @slider903 9 місяців тому

      There was a moving museum of the ship when I was in New York. I got a chance to see it. 10/10 would go again.

    • @lucyrobinson2814
      @lucyrobinson2814 9 місяців тому

      I agree. Visited just before the 111th anniversary last year. The most awe inspiring museum I think I've ever visited.

  • @cosakita6120
    @cosakita6120 Рік тому +675

    2:38:01 . Many survivors said that the ship lights had slowly been fading as power diminished... but that the lights briefly flashed at full intensity for a moment before going out. An amazing small detail that shows how superb THG's attention to detail and accuracy is!

    • @jpawhees
      @jpawhees Рік тому +36

      That's probably because of most of the circuts and wiring breaking sending the remaining power to whatever was still connected.

    • @tomghzel
      @tomghzel Рік тому +5

      @@jpawhees It would have extra ampères but not voltage. So this wouldn't let remaining lights shine brighter I think.

    • @jpawhees
      @jpawhees Рік тому +25

      @Tom Its also possible that the generators became overpressurized and overloaded them. Either A: the water hit the boiler connected to the generators creating extra steam pressure. Or B: the water itself got into the steam lines with enough force to create enough air pressure that remained in the line to overload the generators.

    • @kasiddy_samuelle4
      @kasiddy_samuelle4 Рік тому

      ​@@jpawhees let it tag please not @

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 Рік тому

      @@jpawhees Not letting it tag is kinda obtuse.

  • @lorrainesantana4731
    @lorrainesantana4731 Рік тому +95

    I spent 2 hours and 46 min of my day watching this and I regret nothing

    • @igot5onit423
      @igot5onit423 Рік тому +1

      Your comment gives me faith in the remainder of my viewing endeavors.. minutes in But the Apprehension I had evaporated.🫡

    • @notfreeman1776
      @notfreeman1776 10 місяців тому

      wow! you watched a *movie?!* congrats you're so adventurous!

    • @lorrainesantana4731
      @lorrainesantana4731 10 місяців тому +1

      @@notfreeman1776if you were smart enough you'd know that most movies are not that long and slow instead of thinking that your comment was funny or audacious. you're be more useful playing video games lol

    • @notfreeman1776
      @notfreeman1776 10 місяців тому

      @@lorrainesantana4731 a movie is anything longer than 40 minutes and there is absolutly nothing in the definition of filmaking that involves any specific definition of what should be done with that runtime, there are experimental movies that are just 12 whole hours of city footage

    • @lorrainesantana4731
      @lorrainesantana4731 10 місяців тому +1

      @@notfreeman1776 For you to live in this world and not have in mind that maybe an average person can think that an almost “3 hour video” of the titanic sinking is too long is way out of reality. Or you just think you’re special and refined because you know a bit about cinema to brag that 3h is not long, and came here to comment you’re superior for that since for you your own existence isn’t special by itself. Bye

  • @hankgodyt8909
    @hankgodyt8909 Рік тому +524

    TIMESTAMPS
    Iceberg 2:18
    Bow / Forcastle deck flood 1:52:39
    Wireless room flood 2:36:27
    1ST funnel fall 2:37:28
    2ND funnel fall 2:37:48
    Breakup 2:37:54
    Final plunge 2:42:59
    Empty seas 2:44:45
    Carpathia arrival 2:44:57
    Credits 2:46:05

  • @DerpyPossum
    @DerpyPossum Рік тому +434

    Reminder; this was made by one member of the team in their spare time.
    *Freaking. Phenomenal.*

  • @jacquelynroe9036
    @jacquelynroe9036 Рік тому +881

    It’s wild to think about the communication with the Carpathia with them asking if Titanic required assistance, and then showing up to those coordinates a couple hours later and the whole ship is just gone.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung Рік тому +32

      And yet Capt. Rostron made it to the scene 35mins earlier than his own estimate :-)

    • @bcshelby4926
      @bcshelby4926 Рік тому +45

      ...sadly the the intrepid rescue ship of Titanic's survivors met a tragic fate itself 6 years later on the morning of July 15th 1918 when it was struck by three torpedoes from a German submarine and sank about 190 km west of Fastnet Ireland. . At the time of the attack he Carpathia was part of a multi ship convoy that was steaming towards Boston using a zig zag course to try and evade German U-Boats. Of the 223 persons on board 218 survived and were rescued.
      Unlike the Titanic the remains of which are resting about 3,800 m below the surface, the Carpathia sunk in far more shallow waters (about 150 m deep). The wreck was discovered to have settled upright on the seabed by author Clive Cussler (who wrote numerous adventure novels including "Raise the Titanic").

    • @judygantz1005
      @judygantz1005 Рік тому +8

      ​@bcshelby4926 Hey😊 thanks for history lesson! ❤
      I had no idea. God bless!💖🥰

    • @xragdoll5662
      @xragdoll5662 Рік тому +2

      @@bcshelby4926fastnet is a lighthouse in ireland, not a place lol

    • @Philipludwell4
      @Philipludwell4 Рік тому +2

      @@bcshelby4926this is an excerpt from Cosmo Kramer’s “Astonishing Tales of the Sea”

  • @INTOASECRETLAND
    @INTOASECRETLAND Рік тому +80

    wow....this is so well done. PTSD in those days was never heard of....you would never forget that experience if u survived. Haunted their entire lives I would think. Survivors guilt is the other thing.

  • @ShreyButle
    @ShreyButle Рік тому +982

    It's undescribable how terrifying the fact that the 1997 movie lasted longer than the actual sinking...

    • @missyriley2099
      @missyriley2099 Рік тому +140

      Well, they had to have build up to the actual hitting of the iceberg.

    • @calvinjewett8216
      @calvinjewett8216 Рік тому +77

      @@missyriley2099 true, but I think it's the fact that a movie took longer than the sinking that's so terrifying

    • @winterlynn9012
      @winterlynn9012 Рік тому +106

      @@calvinjewett8216 I never realized that. Interesting, and sad. One minute the passengers were on a gorgeous boat, relaxing, perhaps sleeping, and in under 3 hours they were panicking and drowning in freezing cold water in the middle of the night

    • @philpants44
      @philpants44 Рік тому +6

      @@missyriley2099 plus the before setting sail.and after and flashback scenes...

    • @BobbyAeros
      @BobbyAeros Рік тому +60

      @@winterlynn9012 By ship sinking standards, Titanic actually held up for a long time. Other disasters the boat sinks in 30 minutes to an hour.

  • @HerrinSchadenfreude
    @HerrinSchadenfreude Рік тому +1510

    This was significantly more horrifying than any of the big budget film portrayals. The sounds of the ship dying remain some of the most eerie and haunting sounds I've ever heard. I can't imagine what this must have been like. And for Nurse Jessop to have gone through this, Britannic, AND Olympic and come out alive? I don't think I'd be taking a bath without a life preserver on.

    • @nuclearcasserole
      @nuclearcasserole Рік тому +55

      experience pays, in case of an emergency, go first to the life raft, all other considerations are secondary. don't panic! she survived because she knew what to do.

    • @DealwithitHand
      @DealwithitHand Рік тому +26

      nah, those screams sounded like they were ripped straight from the movie.
      in fact all the sounds do.
      also the ONLY thing that was animated in this "animation" was water and a few sparks

    • @SofaKingShit
      @SofaKingShit Рік тому +11

      Aye, she probably couldn't go out in a light mist down to the corner shop to get milk without dragging a dinghy behind her the poor wee thing.

    • @timkasansky2528
      @timkasansky2528 Рік тому +18

      Movies obviously take some liberties to look more exciting and interesting to wider audiences, so i see little to no reason to compare this to a big budget movie.
      Two completely different things.

    • @benja4218
      @benja4218 Рік тому +13

      Well, she had the benefit of being a woman. Women and children were always loaded onto life boats first, so even though I also can't believe she kept getting on these ships, if she were a man, she likely wouldn't have survived all that tragedy.

  • @TheJames1912
    @TheJames1912 Рік тому +269

    Timestamps for interior shots if you need them:
    1:59 :First Class Staircase, Before the collison
    3:18 :Parisian Cafe, Mid-Collison
    13:24 :First Class Cargo Hold, Flooding
    18:32 :Mail Room, Flooding
    19:43: First Class Stateroom+ Flooding stairwell
    21:03 :Forward Cargo Hold, flooding+ Flooding Corridor
    24:06 :First Class Lounge, From Outside
    31:39 :Second Class Dining Room
    1:09:57 :Boiler Room 6(?) Flooding +Forward E Deck First Class landing flooding
    1:25:31 :F Deck landing+ Turkish Baths flooding
    1:35:37 :E Deck Landing, flooding
    1:41:11 :Abandoned First Class midships Corridor
    1:50:35 :First Class Staircase, showing E deck flooding
    1:54:01 :Scotland Road, flooding
    1:59:32 : Parisian Cafe, as lifeboat 13 passes by+ First Class Cabin flooding
    2:05:48: D Deck landing+ First Class Dining Room, flooding
    2:10:11 :First Class Cabin flooding
    2:10:42 :First Class C(?) Deck forward Corridor
    2:14:12 :First class cabin flooding+ B Deck suite
    2:25:03 :First Class Staircase C(?) Deck elevator landing flooding
    2:29:06 :Abandoned First Class Midships Corridor, flooding
    2:36:23 : Marconi Room, flooding
    2:36:48 :First Class Staircase, flooding+ Parisian Cafe+ B Deck Reception room
    2:39:45 :Aft First Class Staircase flooding

    • @ShawnieP512
      @ShawnieP512 Рік тому +7

      Thanks so much for this. Made it easy to find the good scenes!

    • @claian12
      @claian12 Рік тому

      I do think it is the c-deck elevator foyer which is flooding in timestamp 2 : 25 , because the elevator indicators show the cabs are on B deck, so if it was b -deck you'd expect to see the cabs, not the dark shaft, through the grill doors.

    • @titantanic7255
      @titantanic7255 Рік тому +1

      Thank you!

    • @TheJames1912
      @TheJames1912 Рік тому +2

      @@claian12 That's the same logic I used to determine where it was, as at this point as well A deck was still dry and the D Deck landing had already flooded

    • @Garsons-oq4lh
      @Garsons-oq4lh Рік тому +2

      Presumably, the elevator cabs were left down on E deck, or they all crashed down to E deck at some point, either during the sinking or over the years. I do remember that on one of the Cameron expeditions, the cables of one of the shafts was photographed.

  • @JessicaYoung-on1yq
    @JessicaYoung-on1yq Рік тому +136

    the creaking and groaning noises are so well done, chills down my spine. better than any horror movie 10/10

  • @0-_X.E.N.O.N_-0
    @0-_X.E.N.O.N_-0 Рік тому +520

    This is the only Titanic animation that genuinely terrified me. The sounds of the structural integrity of the ship being compromised, while water ominously fills up the luxurious interior where people once met for a good time, seeing everything left the way it was, signs of panic and distress, chairs and other objects strewn about, the orchestral music playing as the ship sank, the recounts from survivors, it all felt very real, as if I were standing on the Titanic in her final hours on April of 1912. Very well made reconstruction of what happened that fateful night that shook me to my very core.

    • @goaway8610
      @goaway8610 Рік тому +3

      Music was not playing as the ship sank . That is a grotesque myth.

    • @vapesnob7603
      @vapesnob7603 Рік тому +4

      @@theflamingeagle572everyone has seen James Cameron’s found footage video.

    • @goaway8610
      @goaway8610 Рік тому +5

      @@theflamingeagle572 no but interviews from people who were tell another story.

    • @Roscoe.P.Coldchain
      @Roscoe.P.Coldchain Рік тому +2

      It’s haunting 😢

    • @thefatdindon
      @thefatdindon Рік тому +1

      They did play until the final plunge begin. Not a myth when there are testimonies.

  • @kalikoda7648
    @kalikoda7648 Рік тому +591

    i didn't realize how many of the details from the movie Titanic were actually historically accurate, i thought it was just things that were inferred. The way one lifeboat was being lowered onto another, the warning shots that were shot to obtain order from the frantic crowd of people trying to board the lifeboat, even Ismay getting onto one of the last boats when the other crew members thought he should have gave his seat to other passengers. I genuinely didn't realize how many of those details actually happened in real life and were probably first-hand witness accounts from the survivors. Soooo insane to conceptualize, even 111 years later.

    • @RobbieStacks90
      @RobbieStacks90 Рік тому +41

      Titanic was heavily inspired by A Night to Remember. Walter Lord was able to interview several Titanic survivors for his film because there were several survivors with memories of the sinking still alive in the 50s. James Cameron gave the event a modern twist with the 90s thriller atmosphere intermingled with a love story.

    • @gothenmosph5151
      @gothenmosph5151 Рік тому +14

      The UK/US inquiries each produced thousands of lines of testimony from people onboard so there is a lot of go off of as far as what was happening.

    • @JaneDoexxx
      @JaneDoexxx Рік тому +47

      One thing the movie sadly got wrong was William Murdoch. He didn’t accidentally shoot a passenger and then turn the gun on himself. Right up to the end he was helping people into the lifeboats and supposedly, according to Charles Lightoller who witnessed it, Mordoch was trying to release the last collapsible boat before he was swept off the deck. He was a hero.

    • @Connor22231
      @Connor22231 Рік тому +11

      Your point about ismay isn't true. The lifeboat was half empty and he was told to get in, after he'd encouraged other passengers to get into boats first (though he was told off for doing so because he was getting in the way). Cameron actually knew he wasn't a complete villain but he portrayed him that way because "it's what people expected to see"

    • @Connor22231
      @Connor22231 Рік тому +7

      ​@@JaneDoexxxpretty sure lightholler didn't witness it all, he'd have been nowhere near. Lightholler was well known to say things to defend the white star line and ofc he'd try to, understandably, defend Murdoch's honour instead of letting people think he was a coward (it was 1912 remember). Lightholler was adamant that the ship didn't break, because he was a company man. And he was believed because he was the highest ranking survivor, not because of the accuracy of his testimony

  • @Mia444
    @Mia444 Рік тому +502

    Somehow this animation touched and haunted me more deeply than any other depiction of the tragedy has done. Kudos to the team who put it together.

  • @babahow
    @babahow Рік тому +142

    I thought this would be boring but it's actually quite contemplatively absorbing. I like how they use indistinct distant crowd audio to convey varying moods

  • @joshhuffman
    @joshhuffman Рік тому +158

    The slow fade of the color temperature from bright yellow to dull red, as the power to the lights is reduced, was a detail I never even thought about until presented here... what a terrifying detail.

    • @HugoGHA
      @HugoGHA Рік тому +41

      And this is actually accurate, some survivors reported the lights dimming towards the end of the sinking to that dull orange/red color.

    • @-_deploy_-
      @-_deploy_- Рік тому +24

      Last month my house started having a electricity deficit, and I noticed the lights were getting weaker and weaker. The one in my fridge went red, before a complete blackout, exactly like the ones presented on the video. Excellent job

  • @man8785
    @man8785 Рік тому +590

    Best shot is 2:38:30. Puts the whole thing into perspective. The shots I liked most from the Titanic movie were the extreme long distance shots where you realise they are in the middle of absolutely nowhere.

    • @gagebyers1057
      @gagebyers1057 Рік тому +33

      Yes you are in the middle of nowhere but with the added element of the freezing cold Atlantic Ocean on top of that!

    • @Posavac90
      @Posavac90 Рік тому +20

      The iceberg is like "Huehuehue"

    • @alucardmorningstar2296
      @alucardmorningstar2296 Рік тому

      ​@@Posavac90😂😂

    • @Kareragirl
      @Kareragirl Рік тому +5

      Nature's indifference, man.

    • @Nuthing
      @Nuthing Рік тому +20

      I think the true horror lies in the scale of the catastrophy and the scale of the universe. To us, the sinking of the titanic was a huge catastrophe, but as the starry night with the milky way shows, this event in comparison with the scale of the universe is nothing. It is so pathetically small that it might have as well never happend.

  • @chegeny
    @chegeny Рік тому +370

    In the North Atlantic Ocean, on a moonless night, the darkness can be a black void where it's hard to see your hand in front of your face. It must've been absolutely horrific when the Titanic's lights went out, knowing you've got only moments left to live, blinded in the darkness, hearing the massive groans of the ship and the cries of the dying.

    • @conflict7269
      @conflict7269 Рік тому +18

      And falling into stuff and stuff falling into you also

    • @ukisa3rdworld586
      @ukisa3rdworld586 Рік тому +36

      That steel bending noise must been horrendous

    • @viktoriyagereluk8463
      @viktoriyagereluk8463 Рік тому +8

      @@ukisa3rdworld586 Moronic pfp.

    • @ukisa3rdworld586
      @ukisa3rdworld586 Рік тому +8

      @viktoriyagereluk8463 oh really! I think the same thing about yours... and I also DGASF what do you think.

    • @dannycruz2679
      @dannycruz2679 Рік тому +3

      And in freezing waters 🥶

  • @SoBor911
    @SoBor911 Рік тому +113

    The Titanic will never be forgotten. It's always great seeing people keep the memory of it's story and tragedy alive.

  • @aninaholbek
    @aninaholbek Рік тому +378

    Carpathia ❤ Hero ship. They shut off heat, hot water, steam to all passenger cabins to increase her top speed. The efforts increased her speed from 14.5 knots to 17, which shaved off more than an hour off the journey through an ice field. They had additional lookouts set up, to avoid the dangers. Chefs spent the time preparing soup for the survivors, hospitals were set up in the dining area. I've always wondered how many souls would have survived, had the nearby ship done the same.

    • @Tomb-Wraith
      @Tomb-Wraith Рік тому +17

      None. Because by the time Lord was aware of Titanic's distress, even if she had sailed her top speed, she would have arrived 10 minutes after she sank. The Californian simply wasn't as close as people think and was not a passenger ship.

    • @aninaholbek
      @aninaholbek Рік тому +24

      That is still being discussed today. Survivors say that the ship was really close. Not just "some distant lights in the horizon", but they could see it was there. Either way, it doesn't change much about how things went.

    • @Tomb-Wraith
      @Tomb-Wraith Рік тому +1

      @Anina Holbek Survivors think the Californian was so close because they thought they could see the front lights. In reality, what they saw was a mirage caused by the conditions that night. We now know the Californian was close to 15 miles away, as opposed to the 8 thought previously.
      It doesn't, but Lord is unfairly villified in my opinion.

    • @pauldee7504
      @pauldee7504 Рік тому +7

      @@Tomb-Wraith Some people even said that SS Californian was trapped in the icefield that they couldn't move around much.

    • @shanerobertson6267
      @shanerobertson6267 Рік тому

      It was the mount temple

  • @rockinmoshin
    @rockinmoshin Рік тому +260

    Folklore says that this boat is still taking lives to this day

    • @BarrelofBurger9554
      @BarrelofBurger9554 Рік тому +31

      I get What you are referering to.

    • @gw6667
      @gw6667 Рік тому +4

      This isn't as clever as you're desperate for it to be

    • @FD_and_B
      @FD_and_B Рік тому +21

      @@gw6667 calm down

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Рік тому +1

      You aren't wrong

    • @fweepthegod-pu5nc
      @fweepthegod-pu5nc Рік тому +1

      @@FD_and_B I wish I could double like ur comment 😂

  • @kiikii3254
    @kiikii3254 Рік тому +793

    I can't imagine how the people, especially the men were watching their children and wives fled to safety while probably knowing they weren't going to live. Such a tragic event.

    • @erculinal.60
      @erculinal.60 Рік тому +83

      Yeah and also their women and kids from lifeboats seeing their beloved ones going down on that titan of ship - I am not sure if I could have made that decision 😢

    • @abercrombieuser12345
      @abercrombieuser12345 Рік тому +34

      i feel like if the same thing were to happen today, lots of couples would not want to split up.

    • @Snookscat
      @Snookscat Рік тому +32

      I don’t think anyone would have WANTED to split up. But in those days it was seen as the right thing to do, for men to protect the women and children. Men wanting to leave ahead of some other child or child’s Mother would have been seen as cowards.

    • @rachealfaucher4520
      @rachealfaucher4520 Рік тому +4

      @@Snookscatyou jump i jump

    • @Lord_ofcinder
      @Lord_ofcinder Рік тому +19

      Isn’t it the thing with men that we don’t really give much importance to our wellbeing. I think the men who died in this died with knowing their wife and children are safe.

  • @Naneet72
    @Naneet72 Рік тому +22

    The sounds of the hull bending inside the ship was so loud in the video, I can't imagine how loud it actually sounded like on board. I was genuinely terrified by how real it sounded.

  • @austinreed5805
    @austinreed5805 Рік тому +348

    The animation of this was astonishing. I watched it during the livestream and it was absolutely incredible of how much detail there was. Fantastic job from the animators.

  • @caleb12naruto
    @caleb12naruto Рік тому +121

    WOW just stunning!
    The sounds of the ship, the updated model, the pristine water graphics, the interior flooding shots, the cinematic angels, the screams... EVERYTHING about this outshines ANY Titanic animation from any studio in the past. My BF watched the final plunge with me and he said it looked more like a movie then an animation
    BRAVO to the THG team!!!

  • @ScottALanter
    @ScottALanter Рік тому +347

    This affected me profoundly, especially the captions showing how few were in the lifeboats. To those who painstakingly put this together, thank you.

    • @alisha_madariaga
      @alisha_madariaga Рік тому +5

      Yes! It did me as well! In many ways, this allows you to really and truly conceptualize how this unfolded far better than all the movies because it’s literally JUST the ship sinking and the viewing perspective it gives you is really profound!

    • @multioptioned
      @multioptioned Рік тому +8

      712 people survived. If the lifeboats had been filled and lowered orderly and calmly 1178 could have. But during a sinking that lasted 2.5hrs who would have been orderly and calm? And most people died of hypothermia not drowning.

    • @alisha_madariaga
      @alisha_madariaga Рік тому +4

      @@multioptioned yes. hypothermia from being in the water…
      If they’re in a lifeboat, then they would not have been in the water.
      However you are correct in that not all would have been saved if they had an adequate number of lifeboats for the reason you stated. But it still would have been many more survivors than what it ended up being..

    • @sherylchilders6
      @sherylchilders6 Рік тому

      A lot of people focus on this, and it really perplexed me, so I looked it up - even the lifeboats that were not loaded to capacity LOOKED quite full when rescued. It turns out that the max capacity was VERY full, and they were not trained properly on it. I actually find it quite remarkable how calmly & professionally that they loaded & lowered the boats continuously up until the end, considering. They almost got people in every single boat!

    • @multioptioned
      @multioptioned Рік тому +1

      @@sherylchilders6 Yes you are right, should focus on the fact 712 people WERE saved. A lot of passengers refused to leave the "safety" of the huge ship and or leave husbands and fathers behind too and didn't feel safe on the lifeboats. They would have looked overcrowded on that dark cold night to the average person. They were meant to do a lifeboat drill that day I believe but never got to it.

  • @crazyfox9oh
    @crazyfox9oh Рік тому +46

    I'm 31 years old, I watched this in my room with all the lights off at midnight. I have to honestly say, this has actually left me a little traumatized and I wasn't even there. With that being said, you did an excellent job.

  • @twistedrules1
    @twistedrules1 Рік тому +178

    As a kid i was fascinated but also scarred learning about the Titanic, in the 5th grade we took a class trip museum where Titanic was the featured display. Everyone got a ticket of a person whether it be a crewman, 1st, 2nd, or 3rd class passenger. At the end of the exhibit there was a board of all the name's on the ship separated from who lived and tragically died, there was a book where you could write down your feelings/condolences.
    Later in the school year while doing a project on my family heritage I found out from my great grandmother that my great-great grandfather was supposed to be on the Titanic but ended up missing the ship.

    • @bloomeye6969
      @bloomeye6969 Рік тому +3

      Trippy

    • @pre-dawnraid9037
      @pre-dawnraid9037 Рік тому

      Today they'd rather teach gender indoctrination ideology........

    • @honeybun9142
      @honeybun9142 Рік тому +4

      imagine having a museum like that but for 9/11

    • @SoonerStateProspector
      @SoonerStateProspector Рік тому +3

      I remember this. My mom took me to the Omni-Plex in Oklahoma City in the late 90's/early 2000's for the Titanic exhibit.
      My mom lived and I died. Thanks mom.

  • @Sintaxx
    @Sintaxx Рік тому +444

    Jeez, what a horrific night. You did justice to the tragedy. You give people today a chance to experience what it was like back in 1912. Congrats on an amazing piece of film. Each lifeboat being undermanned was just heartbreaking. What a way to go as you're hanging on at the stern and your whole world is slipping into 28 degree water. May this type of accident never happen again.

    • @CitygirlRayA
      @CitygirlRayA Рік тому +18

      Right. Plus I hate the fact they didn’t have enough life boats on the ship to cover the maximum amount of passengers the ship could hold if anything like this happened which it did. So sad.

    • @spiritmatter1553
      @spiritmatter1553 Рік тому +7

      I read that the top deck was the equivalent of nine stories above the water, imagine leaping off. It would be fatal, I think.

    • @5skdm
      @5skdm Рік тому +17

      ​@@CitygirlRayAat the time, they didn't add enough lifeboats because they used the lifeboats as like a ferry to a rescue ship. At the time, there was a previous incident just before the titanic where wireless telegraph can be used to send distress calls, and a ship used it to great success (all passengers saved except those who died during the initial collision). Because of that, and the titanic's design that supposedly can buy enough time for rescue ships to arrive (the underwater compartments can hold if there was breaches in a few compartments), made them not use that much lifeboats, because the designers thought the titanic can rely on the new wireless technology. But, the iceberg sracped way too many of the conpartments, so the ship sank faster than anticipated, and the nearest ship didn't even respond because its operator and radio was off plus it was the middle of the night. Its pretty bad timing

    • @kevinmenard6792
      @kevinmenard6792 Рік тому +4

      @@spiritmatter1553better to die of the fall than swimming while slowly succumbing to hyperthermia then still being alive to drown without any ability to prevent it.

    • @goilo888
      @goilo888 Рік тому

      @@5skdmndeed. I’m pretty sure it ruptured just one too many of the compartments. Had that one held then it wouldn’t have sunk.

  • @Tamity
    @Tamity Рік тому +1091

    Honestly, you absolutely improved from your last animation. The final plunge of this animation had to be the scariest depiction of the Titanic since the 1997 movie. The break-up especially. The way the ship buckles and slowly comes down with frightened screams gave me goosebumps. You almost got everything in the final plunge accurately.

    • @Kristyle187
      @Kristyle187 Рік тому +49

      Agreed! I watched this in real time last night and the final moments were absolutely harrowing. I could NOT look away, and I had the same thoughts about it somehow feeling just as intense and frightening as the 1997 film. The creators were having a fascinating discussion throughout the video, but they went silent for the final 10 minutes or so as the ship began the final plunge. Those images, along with the sounds of people screaming in terror and despair, will haunt me for a long time to come.

    • @andrewparker318
      @andrewparker318 Рік тому +18

      Was there anything is got wrong?

    • @Tamity
      @Tamity Рік тому +30

      @@andrewparker318 As a Titanic Enthusiast, there are some nitpicks I have. I sort of dislike the aft tower not being dislodged. Also, the stern in the animation rises too slowly for the fourth funnel to behave like that; the stern needs to rise faster than that. One last thing that really bothers me is that the break-up occurs at 2:14 A.M.
      But it is a lot better that last year. If I were to scale the sinking of this final plunge, I'd put it at 8 or 8.5/10.

    • @SamuelRamos1138
      @SamuelRamos1138 Рік тому +11

      @@andrewparker318 Well, if you get nitpick, maybe the lights staying on while breaking up. But i'm not an expert, maybe has an explanation

    • @uniontrains.8631
      @uniontrains.8631 Рік тому +11

      ​​​@@TamityBasically what you said.The Most noticeable to me was how the fourth funnel was still standing and i was like : "Shouldn't it also fall?"

  • @rossjeffeaux3380
    @rossjeffeaux3380 Рік тому +14

    I don’t know why but I keep looking at stuff about The Titanic. It’s been one hundred and eleven years and yet, it still gets to me that this happened.

  • @logrego4195
    @logrego4195 Рік тому +345

    Much respect and big shout out to the orchestra band.. they need more recognition in the comment section

  • @OCDTraci
    @OCDTraci Рік тому +248

    That really brings it home.
    Wasn't expecting the animation to be this good....or to watch the whole thing......or to even begin to get a sense of the unimaginable terror those poor souls felt that night.
    Well done, guys. Well done.

    • @EmmyPierz-ek7hi
      @EmmyPierz-ek7hi Рік тому +3

      AGREED. CB

    • @melbourne-heat.69-71
      @melbourne-heat.69-71 Рік тому

      I've seen many huge ships hit Icebergs and other objects head-on if the Titanic would have hit the iceberg head- on most likely it would have never sank with only a couple casualties if that..I've seen ships completely destroyed in the front and made it all the way back to Port..Look it up that's 100% a fact..🛳🛳🛳

  • @namseer
    @namseer Рік тому +484

    This video is an absolute classic and an example of the best work to ever appear on the UA-cam platform.

    • @phoenixkb134
      @phoenixkb134 Рік тому +14

      Beautifully said and absolutely correct.

    • @julijajaramaz8127
      @julijajaramaz8127 Рік тому +5

      I agree with you. It's just as we are watching the scene at this moment. Poor people 😪😪😪😪

    • @brenomoraes8799
      @brenomoraes8799 Рік тому +3

      you are right Sir I was in awe watching this

    • @Alexandriah.E
      @Alexandriah.E Рік тому +1

      Agreed

  • @MizBoriMoon
    @MizBoriMoon Рік тому +30

    In reality it was very pitched black that late morning. Their only light was from the boat until it sank completely. But this whole simulation is absolutely amazing. Great work!

  • @FlyingHiigh
    @FlyingHiigh Рік тому +431

    This is so sad , knowing you gotta just accept your fate in this situation is horrible and I ache for the people who lost their lives on that ship , this took me down a serious rabbit hole and I’m hurt for the lost souls

    • @biggiesmalls3096
      @biggiesmalls3096 Рік тому +2

      Luckily it didn’t last too long for some of them who drowned

    • @ginaanelli9717
      @ginaanelli9717 Рік тому +5

      I heard if they hit it head on, not tried to avoid the iceberg, it was equipped with the ability to withstand..maybe 😔

    • @darwinian7974
      @darwinian7974 Рік тому +1

      sounds more like a k-hole... hope you found your way out.

    • @FlyingHiigh
      @FlyingHiigh Рік тому

      @@darwinian7974 I did for a min

    • @SillyChickens222
      @SillyChickens222 Рік тому +16

      It’s way worse to die knowing you’re about to die. There’s probably no other feeling like it. And to watch and see your children die in front of your eyes knowing you can’t do anything. What terrible last moments to live the only life you’re given.

  • @Absynthexx1
    @Absynthexx1 Рік тому +183

    I don't blame Mr. Ismay for taking a spot on the boat. He was a human being desperate for his survival like anyone. He didn't put the iceberg there, he didn't crash the ship into it, he didn't prevent others from getting on the boat which still launched under capacity. I suspect the anger at him was misplaced emotion due to the tragedy and a desperate search to blame someone, anyone.

    • @drygnfyre
      @drygnfyre Рік тому +43

      The newspaper of the days were far more propaganda driven than they are today. (And people today think politics is highly polarized). Specifically, William Randolph Hearst owned many of them and he had a personal falling-out with Ismay. So when the tragedy happened, he had all his newspapers solely blame Ismay for the disaster, and list him as the only survivor. He made sure his public image was destroyed and that people blamed him. There is plenty of evidence that Ismay assisted many people into the lifeboats, and he testified that only when there was no one else nearby did he get into one. The official inquiry at the time did not blame him for what happened.
      There is a long-standing hearsay rumor that Ismay pressured Smith to go faster, but no solid evidence of this exists. Furthermore, Titanic's maximum speed was already known, and the ship was built for size and comfort, not speed. Titanic couldn't have gone any faster, it was already being driven at full speed, and only slowed slightly due to the iceberg field.

    • @dubvuchyea502
      @dubvuchyea502 Рік тому +16

      Not to mention how Many empty seats had already been established

    • @juancarlosmendieta8206
      @juancarlosmendieta8206 Рік тому +5

      Didn’t he suggest to Captain Smith more speed in order to get to New York City earlier than anticipated? Despite of multiple warnings that there were bergs across the ocean of Newfoundland

    • @drygnfyre
      @drygnfyre Рік тому +20

      @@juancarlosmendieta8206 That has been oft rumored, but it's hearsay. There is no concrete evidence he ever made such a suggestion. Getting to New York a day early wouldn't have made a lot of sense, either. Passengers paid a lot of money for their tickets, and being told to leave a day early would have messed up their arrangements. Timekeeping was the top priority for shipping companies, and so that meant getting to an advertised destination when stated, not a day earlier, not a day later.
      Granted, we'll never truly know if he pressured Smith to go faster. But it doesn't make a whole lot of sense, and there simply wasn't much motivation for him to even suggest doing so.

    • @juancarlosmendieta8206
      @juancarlosmendieta8206 Рік тому +10

      @@drygnfyre yup I completely agree it doesn’t make any sense to me either. I guess that’s just something that was added to the movie in particular. At the same time, Ismay had it rough post Titanic; I read on his Wikipedia that he was labeled a coward by the public and he became anti social and depressed.

  • @eboleen
    @eboleen Рік тому +194

    For anyone who’s Titanic obsession has been resparked from recent events and has Disney+ there is a really good documentary called Titanic: Case Closed, which looks into the scientific reasoning as to why they didn’t spot the iceberg in time and why no one came to help. It’s about 1hr30mins. Really good watch..

    • @XXYY-u2o
      @XXYY-u2o Рік тому

      Groomer dogshit company. No.

    • @nagehanbastan
      @nagehanbastan Рік тому +9

      Wow thanks you're so nice for recommending it ❤

    • @eboleen
      @eboleen Рік тому +8

      @@nagehanbastan no worries, you’re welcome ☺️

    • @loveyourself_8720
      @loveyourself_8720 Рік тому +1

      Thank you! ❤

    • @martimcshy
      @martimcshy Рік тому +1

      Thank you, watching it now

  • @FixHart
    @FixHart Рік тому +44

    I didn't think this would be so traumatizing to watch... I just feel empty inside. Watching this made me thing of what happened to the students during the Sewol Ferry incident. It really hits you in the gut and makes you cry.

    • @RM-fb6sj
      @RM-fb6sj Рік тому +6

      They were told to say in their rooms by the captain while he escaped.

  • @Rayrard
    @Rayrard Рік тому +538

    The interior shots were worth the watch alone. Added immersion and intimidation to what was happening. The shots of the water in the Marconi room were amazingly realistic. Hope to see future animations adding to the interior views to compliment the main sinking shots. The way you handled the lights was interesting. Would be cool to have a shot looking through a porthole as the interior room floods

    • @explorationgmer1336
      @explorationgmer1336 Рік тому +10

      Yessss I would love to see the whole dinning room, reception room sinking and the whole E,C,B,A deck, furniture falling down etc.

    • @torasmith6204
      @torasmith6204 Рік тому +2

      the titanic is worth the same now as a epic adenture now and one back then

    • @preselectlee3192
      @preselectlee3192 Рік тому +7

      Yeah the wireless room was near photo realistic. Incredible!

    • @Garsons-oq4lh
      @Garsons-oq4lh Рік тому +1

      @Aced They should just be doing a remake of Out of Time.

    • @Garsons-oq4lh
      @Garsons-oq4lh Рік тому

      @B CC The dimming lights of the a la Carte restaurant next door to the Cafe.

  • @lundske
    @lundske Рік тому +46

    i love that even included a detail such as the 4th smoke stack not actually producing smoke because it was for aesthetics only

    • @HugoGHA
      @HugoGHA Рік тому +19

      Actually, the fourth funnel was not just for aesthetics.
      The fourth funnel was used for ventilation in certain areas of the ship (kitchens, engine room and medical compartments) and to vent smoke from the 1st Class smoking room's fireplace. It did vent smoke, just as not as much as the other three funnels.

  • @Josh86_559
    @Josh86_559 Рік тому +239

    That's crazy ! The 1st distress call happened 47 minutes after they hit the berg. So for nearly 50 minutes, that ship was taking on water non-stop before they reached out for help.

    • @sandking8010
      @sandking8010 Рік тому +45

      I think that’s with every disaster. They always try to assume the best possible outcome. Same thing happened in Chernobyl.

    • @notcardlinsytaccount1355
      @notcardlinsytaccount1355 Рік тому +55

      @@sandking8010 They also didn’t know the full extent of the damage, though. The ship’s watertight compartments were designed to withstand all levels of severe damage recorded at the time. Little did they know, the damage the Titanic received was worse than anything that had ever been seen on a ship before.

    • @marywilburreed
      @marywilburreed Рік тому +19

      I read somewhere that the radio operator was busy sending telegraphs to New York that had backed up. Also the wireless rules allowed for the stations to be shut off and unmanned. That sort of thing. Because of Titanic many of the wireless rules were changed.

    • @sandking8010
      @sandking8010 Рік тому +5

      @@notcardlinsytaccount1355 I find it hard to believe that nobody checked the damage. I mean I'm sure they had an idea that the ship is sinking seeing how much water is constantly flowing in.

    • @bestboy1986
      @bestboy1986 Рік тому +24

      @@sandking8010They sealed the compartments at the front of the ship and so weren’t able to access them to get a proper sense of the damage. It wasn’t until water started to seep over the bulkheads that the true extent was known.

  • @shipnerd27
    @shipnerd27 Рік тому +24

    1:41:11 I don't know why, but this scene scared me. An empty hallway with suitcases with creaking and bangs in the background. It just makes me feel the amount of fear the passengers had when this all happened. Creaking, screaming, the sound of lifeboats lowering, glass breaking, it's terrifying. I love Titanic very much, but I don't like the idea of dying on a beautiful ship. Terrifying.

    • @Garsons-oq4lh
      @Garsons-oq4lh Рік тому +2

      I doubt there was any luggage abandoned in a first-class corridor such as this.

  • @marywilburreed
    @marywilburreed Рік тому +431

    I wonder about the countless people who spent years putting their heart and soul into building and decorating Titanic. What must they have thought about this beautiful unsinkable marvel that became a tomb for so many.

    • @A.Netizen.Since.2010
      @A.Netizen.Since.2010 Рік тому +58

      ..It's truly heartbreaking for those poor H&W workers...Total 8 people died during her construction...Mostly the entire ship was built by their hands. .cause, not much ship building machineries were available back then...And just think about those magnificent woodwork in the ship's interiors...Wooden artistry around that Honor&Glory Crowning Time clock at the 1st class grand staircase...All went to the bottom of the Atlantic... .

    • @american236
      @american236 Рік тому +5

      Heart broken

    • @american236
      @american236 Рік тому +6

      @@A.Netizen.Since.2010 wow

    • @JohannaLeigh
      @JohannaLeigh Рік тому +11

      It's almost a tragic irony that so many who put so much time into building this animated replica of RMS Titanic KNEW they would have to destroy their own work. Those who built the ship, back in the early 1900's made a ship they assumed would never sink. That HAD to be heartbreaking!

    • @globaltrance86
      @globaltrance86 Рік тому +8

      @@JohannaLeigh The people who created this animated replica did so with the intention of creating the sinking as well, so they accomplished their goal. Moreover, the animated replica pre sinking is probably backed up in memory saves, so it's not like it's actually lost.

  • @PixarShark
    @PixarShark Рік тому +642

    We lost my sister earlier this year. She was such a huge history lover, and she especially loved the history and people and stories of the Titanic. Seeing the passenger stories in this video, I do get a comfort in picturing her finally meeting these people she studied so much, hearing more about them than any of us could know through search and study, and all the friends she’s making. 💖

    • @madhatter2970
      @madhatter2970 Рік тому +50

      That is a lovely thing of you to say for her.

    • @helllllloworld
      @helllllloworld Рік тому +31

      literally sobbing over this comment

    • @odapunkt
      @odapunkt Рік тому +25

      Thats beautiful ❤ I dont think death is scary, I also think the Titanic passengers found peace looking at the magnificent night sky

    • @phoenixkb134
      @phoenixkb134 Рік тому +13

      Beautifully said and absolutely correct.

    • @BEEYSE
      @BEEYSE Рік тому +7

      So sweet and touching, I love that she was so interested in the history, she must have been such an awesome person! Sending my condolences ♥♥♥

  • @BenRai2k
    @BenRai2k Рік тому +228

    It gives me chills to imagine all of that huge metal structure just falling down into the depths of the ocean.

    • @lukeessman8030
      @lukeessman8030 Рік тому +13

      And imagine being inside of it while it happens 😳

    • @tstafford81
      @tstafford81 Рік тому +21

      RIGHT?!? The sheer enormity of it just blows my mind. Imagine how shatteringly LOUD it would have been when the ship actually BROKE. And the downward force it created when it finally sank altogether. It's freaking surreal!

    • @JushRay
      @JushRay Рік тому +5

      ​@@lukeessman8030 you'd die pretty quickly at least because the only area possibly survivable to go under was the stern, which quickly would have heated the water around them before she imploded.

    • @podomuss
      @podomuss Рік тому +1

      They could hear it as well. There were multiple implosions and breakages heard underneath the oceans surface.

    • @ThomasJr
      @ThomasJr Рік тому +1

      Yes, down to 3.8Km below.... it may take more than 2 hours to get there

  • @simonharwar8083
    @simonharwar8083 Рік тому +23

    I remember reading about Titanic survivor, Frank Goldsmith, who live near a baseball stadium in Detroit, and said that when the crowd would cheer during the game, it sounded much like that horrible night, with so many people screaming in terror . just chilling.

    • @sonamytmnt9783
      @sonamytmnt9783 Рік тому +3

      Oh so that was his name. Someone else talked about it in the comments too. He moved to a new house later on. Thanks for tell me.

  • @danigia6720
    @danigia6720 Рік тому +342

    Wow. This was incredible. 111 year later and the obsession with the titanic is still like it was yesterday. I’ve watched the movie 40 times. It’s weird. Watching it minute by minute was so real and sad. 😢

    • @joshuairwin3385
      @joshuairwin3385 Рік тому +18

      lol for a second i thought you meant you watched this video 40 times. i was about to say "obsession" is an understatement 🤣

    • @PaleBlueDot711
      @PaleBlueDot711 Рік тому

      ​@@joshuairwin3385lol

    • @TheTrueKingSr.
      @TheTrueKingSr. Рік тому

      Ship going down big ? What u watch movie because its a story with seasonings

    • @Chris-Weaver
      @Chris-Weaver Рік тому

      *That* movie with… DiCaprio and Winslet ?

    • @EmmyPierz-ek7hi
      @EmmyPierz-ek7hi Рік тому

      @@Chris-Weaver I NEVER seen it. CB

  • @cuppycakey5013
    @cuppycakey5013 Рік тому +1038

    I think one of the most heartbreaking parts of all of this is how many rockets and SOS signals they tried to send out, but no one came to help. The other part that’s very tragic is the number of people put in the lifeboats being so much lower than capacity. So many more lives could have been saved.

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Рік тому +346

      "No one came to help."
      The Carpathia, an Ocean Liner built for 14 knots at maximum, went 17 and a half knots through a foggy ice field to reach the Titanic as fast as possible.

    • @mandii91gates
      @mandii91gates Рік тому +115

      Yes genius, no one came to help cuz literally the second they signal, help should have popped up. The ocean isn't filled with ships, you know, it's not there was one traveling right next to them. And why do you expect a ship to travel at the speed of light. Did you not watch the movie and hear the stories of Titanic. A ship did respond but they said they wouldn't get to them until 4 hours

    • @TheSilenthvok
      @TheSilenthvok Рік тому +54

      @@concept5631 absolute giga chads

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Рік тому +57

      @@TheSilenthvok Absolutely.
      It was the captain's first rescue mission as well.

    • @gopakumar537
      @gopakumar537 Рік тому

      Anyway women’s and children’s they saved. About men’s don’t care. Those women’s will get other husband. Don’t worry. Be selfish every time ok

  • @nextcallcircle
    @nextcallcircle Рік тому +537

    I thought I had a rough week, but after watching this I have nothing to complain about 🙏🏻

    • @ThomasJr
      @ThomasJr Рік тому +37

      true, I have my demons who terrorize me every day, but some times the realization that some people have it worse makes me feel a little better

    • @logrego4195
      @logrego4195 Рік тому +5

      Same

    • @Jacey2001
      @Jacey2001 Рік тому

      Except for the fact that the Titanic story almost resembles western civilization at the current time....

    • @rjhomola2157
      @rjhomola2157 Рік тому +1

      @@Jacey2001lol chillll

    • @theflamingeagle572
      @theflamingeagle572 Рік тому

      ​@@Jacey2001Don't you mean Russia 😂

  • @mrkinla
    @mrkinla Рік тому +92

    Brilliant work to the Honor and Glory team. I have no words. Your animation and commentary was more than I anticipated. I am still stunned.

    • @rojasramosdiegoalonso104
      @rojasramosdiegoalonso104 Рік тому

      Totalmente, es increible que tratan de actualizar la forma en como se hundio, de hecho esperaba esta teoria, pues un oficial o nose quien, menciono que vio la popa hundirse como si estaria dando vueltas, estaba en un bote muy cerca del Titanic. El angulo hasta el que se elevo es lo mas cercano que pudo pasar en esa noche siento yo, espero que hagan otra version con la oscuridad esa noche como en una de sus simulaciones pasadas, porque aquí lo sentí tan real, tan probable

    • @slinkiegirl2001
      @slinkiegirl2001 Рік тому

      i can not believe how a magnificent ship like that just went down

  • @aaronjones7260
    @aaronjones7260 Рік тому +189

    On behalf of historians and Titanic enthusiasts everywhere, thank you so so so much for this absolutely epic and exquisite recreation of the sinking, I’ve never seen an animation so perfect! Thank you all of you from the bottom of my heart for keeping this tragic story alive ❤️❤️

    • @NewMexicoCountrySongs
      @NewMexicoCountrySongs Рік тому +2

      You're welcome.

    • @NewMexicoCountrySongs
      @NewMexicoCountrySongs Рік тому +1

      Happy to assist. Tips hat

    • @playdiscgolf1546
      @playdiscgolf1546 Рік тому +1

      Quick question, would it have been better for the ship if it would have just smashed the iceberg head on? Instead of skipping off the side?

    • @aaronjones7260
      @aaronjones7260 Рік тому +1

      @@playdiscgolf1546 yes it would have likely saved her, however doing that would have very quickly ended Officer Murdochs career so he was never going to do that lol

    • @kostan55
      @kostan55 Рік тому +1

      @@playdiscgolf1546 It would have destroyed the ship's structural integrity, sinking it in minutes

  • @MankindFilm
    @MankindFilm Рік тому +345

    It was so dark the ship standing straight up was a mere silhouette against a sea of stars.

    • @A.Netizen.Since.2010
      @A.Netizen.Since.2010 Рік тому +6

      ..Correct... .

    • @Nuthing
      @Nuthing Рік тому +30

      I think the true horror lies in the scale of the catastrophy and the scale of the universe. To us, the sinking of the titanic was a huge catastrophe, but as the starry night with the milky way shows, this event in comparison with the scale of the universe is nothing. It is so pathetically small that it might have as well never happend.

    • @completezach3279
      @completezach3279 Рік тому +5

      @@Nuthing erm, what the deuce?

    • @Jonesy1701
      @Jonesy1701 Рік тому +14

      @@Nuthing Yeah, except we aren't at the scale of the universe, we're people and to people this is a big deal. Just because something is small by comparison, doesn't make it less important.

    • @TheRagingRayn
      @TheRagingRayn Рік тому +7

      @@Jonesy1701 You took that comment the wrong way. 🤦‍♂

  • @BreadMasterduck
    @BreadMasterduck Рік тому +102

    Absolutely incredible. The way the final plunge is depicted shows how scary the experience was. The break-up especially was accurate to survivor accounts. Extremely well done!

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Рік тому +1

      Titanic Radioactive ☣️☢️☣️☣️

    • @Thel2552
      @Thel2552 Рік тому

      The entire last minutes is pure horseshit

  • @theburitoticito3647
    @theburitoticito3647 Рік тому +69

    This was so haunting. I never knew that SS Californian could see the distress rockets and chose not to wake their operator. Imagine how many lives could have been saved if the captin had actually just checked. It astonds me how so many things went wrong for the Titanic and the people onboard to make it such a tragedy. Fantastic animation of events.

    • @Tomb-Wraith
      @Tomb-Wraith Рік тому +2

      None could have been saved, regardless of if the Californian had checked or not.

    • @adamdavis5312
      @adamdavis5312 Рік тому +23

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@Tomb-Wraithwell thank god we found the expert 🙄

    • @Tomb-Wraith
      @Tomb-Wraith Рік тому +2

      @adamdavis5312 Its almsot as if people don't like the truth. I'd be happy to explain.

    • @margaritapeggyschuylervanr2486
      @margaritapeggyschuylervanr2486 Рік тому +19

      @@adamdavis5312the californian had already shut down its engines because of the ice fields. by the time they had started the engines they would arrive at the same time as the carpathia. they would not be able to save any more people, still, they should have tried.
      the titanics flairs were white which signify celebration and not distress (red). so they thought the titanic was celebrating

    • @RM-fb6sj
      @RM-fb6sj Рік тому +8

      Back then, distress rockets were red. Titanic was launching white. Big misunderstanding.

  • @yametekudasaii01
    @yametekudasaii01 Рік тому +553

    This simulation perhaps be the closest or the most accurate, especially the vertical Plunge of the stern.
    According to a survivor named Charles Joughin, he rode the stern down as if it were an elevator, not getting his head under the water (in his words, his head "may have been wetted, but no more"). he was the last survivor to experience the vertical descent of Titanic's stern.

    • @heyodi3092
      @heyodi3092 Рік тому +16

      So he was rescued from the water?

    • @yametekudasaii01
      @yametekudasaii01 Рік тому +74

      @@heyodi3092 Yup one of the 6 survivors...

    • @SmokingLaddy
      @SmokingLaddy Рік тому +28

      @@heyodi3092 He paddled and then managed to get aboard a lifeboat

    • @mspennyisaac
      @mspennyisaac Рік тому +10

      @Adrian-pl3ui in the water.

    • @sunlightliquid8420
      @sunlightliquid8420 Рік тому +25

      ​@Adrian-pl3ui only 6 that weren't on a life boat

  • @andrewjames3908
    @andrewjames3908 Рік тому +28

    At 2:40:50 you should also have quoted Eva Hart: 'I didn't close my eyes. I saw that ship sink, and I saw her break in half, and for years people have argued with me about that and now at last it has been proved beyond all doubt that she did break in half I know she did I saw her'

  • @jelenacolorcode
    @jelenacolorcode Рік тому +184

    This ship is equal amounts beautiful, haunting and mysterious. The more I find out about it the more I believe its fate was wrapped around it as soon as it was declared unsinkable. The unusually calm sea surface, the mist and no moonlight, an iceberg in its place, like a stage set for a tragedy.. almost feels planned. And that is the eerie part. A wonderful manmade creation, and yet I cannot shake the feeling that the arrogance it inspired in its creators was its doom, a challenge to the much mightier forces a man cannot hope to stand against. A dreadful lesson in humility and caution.

    • @Tomb-Wraith
      @Tomb-Wraith Рік тому +8

      It was never declared unsinkable by any of her designers. That's an entirely made up myth.

    • @jelenacolorcode
      @jelenacolorcode Рік тому +26

      Thank you for the reply.
      "I cannot imagine any condition which would cause a ship to founder. I cannot conceive of any vital disaster happening to this vessel. Modern ship building has gone beyond that."
      -Captain Smith, Commander of Titanic - This is the quote that inspired my comment. And as it was noted in this very video, many people stayed in their beds believing the ship is okay, while it was visibly dipping very low with millions of galons of water already filling it. I accept that the creators themselves may have not declared it unsinkable, but it was a belief at the time and it was implied in almost every documentary I've seen so far.
      On the other side, the same Captain Smith also said: "We do not care anything for the heaviest storms in these big ships. It is fog that we fear. The big icebergs that drift into warmer water melt much more rapidly under water than on the surface, and sometimes a sharp, low reef extending two or three hundred feet beneath the sea is formed. If a vessel should run on one of these reefs half her bottom might be torn away." So, there was a bit of caution, even though the trust in "modern" ship building and engineering had vastly overwhelmed it, I guess?

    • @sudiptachakraborti5872
      @sudiptachakraborti5872 Рік тому +5

      Beautiful presentation of words. Well said

    • @EmilyS-gk3st
      @EmilyS-gk3st Рік тому +6

      Yes! Unfortunately, it seems humanity still hasn't taken this lesson on pride, though. There are rich people today who think those who have less money are far less valuable, maybe even not really human beings. I get the feeling modern society is mirroring the Titanic; society is the ship, crew society's leaders, and everyone else as passengers.

    • @jelenacolorcode
      @jelenacolorcode Рік тому +1

      @@EmilyS-gk3st Yes, it does feel like a solid metaphor, sadly...

  • @andrewcherpeski3180
    @andrewcherpeski3180 Рік тому +71

    The interior shots really solidified the experience for me. You guys really have made a lot of progress.

  • @zShynux
    @zShynux Рік тому +462

    the craziest thing to me is how many people could've survived if the water wasn't that cold. its not like they drowned, fell from too high or got swallowed by waves; it was only the temperature that killed them

    • @ufink
      @ufink Рік тому +22

      That’s so true

    • @fighterinmkiwiscience3517
      @fighterinmkiwiscience3517 Рік тому +3

      How they would have survived? They can't breathe in water

    • @RikuKujala
      @RikuKujala Рік тому +137

      ⁠@@fighterinmkiwiscience3517it’s the cold water that makes one’s body lose temperature more than it generates. Though if the water temperature was higher, there wouldn’t have been the iceberg in the first place.

    • @charliealex81
      @charliealex81 Рік тому +44

      This was also the Edwardian age so the vast majority either couldn't swim or were weighed down in corsetry and heavy fabric.

    • @zShynux
      @zShynux Рік тому +35

      @@charliealex81 they had lifevests on so I assume they would’ve been fine

  • @mjbarbaraconstantestremera5509
    @mjbarbaraconstantestremera5509 Рік тому +231

    This was so well done. It made me feel like i was a passenger, or part of the crew, reliving that fateful night

    • @fackynaxicht8603
      @fackynaxicht8603 Рік тому +4

      0 baboons aboard that night

    • @roxasbuddy
      @roxasbuddy Рік тому

      ​@@fackynaxicht8603kick rocks

    • @mukimamko3908
      @mukimamko3908 Рік тому

      @@fackynaxicht8603 People like you need to be aboard there.

    • @averys3627
      @averys3627 Рік тому

      @@fackynaxicht8603 Racist fool

    • @rosadestina7007
      @rosadestina7007 Рік тому

      @@fackynaxicht8603 random racism. and you're wrong there was actually a black couple on board you idiot. They had perished as well.

  • @mykoniichistorychannel
    @mykoniichistorychannel Рік тому +263

    This left me awestruck. I couldn’t imagine being in a situation of near-certain death as I watch my safe space as it were slipping into the frigid blackness of the sea whilst hearing the screams and pleadings of everyone around me.

    • @chevysaregr8
      @chevysaregr8 Рік тому +3

      Safe space lol

    • @Wonderful-lz2mq
      @Wonderful-lz2mq Рік тому +1

      Ego death

    • @htatesil4192
      @htatesil4192 Рік тому

      Just ask slaves on ships

    • @zleyow
      @zleyow Рік тому +1

      ⁠no, just ask your uncle who’s also your dad. or your mom who’s also your grandmother. @@htatesil4192

    • @CitygirlRayA
      @CitygirlRayA Рік тому

      @htatesil4192… you people with that mindset are dying out faster than you think. Your kind is very angry, belligerent and provoking, always attacking an innocent person. That great man didn’t say anything to you for you to say such evilness.

  • @De5vi3s
    @De5vi3s Рік тому +182

    I know this is a tragedy but can we take a moment to appreciate the hard work animations that they put into this to describe to us how it would’ve been like on the titanic during sinking
    Edit: Am I being attacked?

    • @chadczternastek
      @chadczternastek Рік тому +2

      Oh God really? Always someone to state the obvious.

    • @De5vi3s
      @De5vi3s Рік тому +2

      @@chadczternastek is that a good thing?

    • @drewberriesandcream
      @drewberriesandcream Рік тому +4

      there were some really sobering shots, especially of the view from the lifeboats.

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 Рік тому +3

      It's all this "can we take a moment" all the time on almost very video on youtube. Kind of gets annoying

    • @drewberriesandcream
      @drewberriesandcream Рік тому +12

      @@paulanthony5274 you just took a moment to type that reply though

  • @jakeacake6899
    @jakeacake6899 Рік тому +115

    2:38:00 this moment has to be the most terrifying for those on the ship. When it really happened, they would have been plunged into absolute pitch blackness right there, not to mention the feeling of the entire structure beginning to fall down. Just darkness, disorientation and deafening screams. Like, that's it, their death warrants have been signed, and they can do nothing but wait

    • @Nuthing
      @Nuthing Рік тому +4

      I think the true horror lies in the scale of the catastrophy and the scale of the universe. To us, the sinking of the titanic was a huge catastrophe, but as the starry night with the milky way shows, this event in comparison with the scale of the universe is nothing. It is so pathetically small that it might have as well never happend.

    • @mela6885
      @mela6885 Рік тому

      @@Nuthingumm there’s as many stars as there are grains of sand, try that for scale

    • @jacobstathers8823
      @jacobstathers8823 Рік тому +1

      @@Nuthingexactly, all this commotion on and in the background is still just darkness and nothing going on

    • @Nuthing
      @Nuthing Рік тому +1

      @@mela6885 And we are not even taking into account higher dimesions that are all around us, but we can’t see them or experience them, all we can see are artifacts of them existing.
      Or the theory of many worlds, that there are infinite paralel universes.
      Scary to think how we just don’t matter in anything really, but we should all enjoy life and try to ignore this :)

    • @Nuthing
      @Nuthing Рік тому

      @@jacobstathers8823 Just tranquility. Even if the world should “end”. It still wouldn’t end, it would just end as we know it. Even if the planet should somehow be destroyed, all things just move on

  • @cameronjm9114
    @cameronjm9114 Рік тому +13

    2:10:10 The red carpet making the water appear as blood is excellent. Eerie. Great job

  • @shootstraight29
    @shootstraight29 Рік тому +173

    Without question the most gut wrenching animation I have ever seen. You just know that the screams were 10 x louder. Utter horror to imagine waiting for that water to take you.
    Amazing and respectful job by the folks that made this.

    • @jtblcksheep3376
      @jtblcksheep3376 11 місяців тому +2

      It’s a disturbing mixture of screaming because they’re afraid to die and sobbing because they know they’re going to.

  • @Jennyjen6
    @Jennyjen6 Рік тому +16

    The creaking…..sent chills down my spine

  • @MaskedViolinist07
    @MaskedViolinist07 Рік тому +195

    Titanic has such a hold over me-always has since childhood. I can’t explain it, but I can feel her journey and the night of that horrific event in my bones. Before the tragedy of the Titan, if you had asked me my most far fetched dream, it would have been to see her resting at the bottom of the ocean.

    • @DrewShiiesty
      @DrewShiiesty Рік тому +2

      😢

    • @hasicazulatv2078
      @hasicazulatv2078 Рік тому +2

      Same.

    • @sepnyte9422
      @sepnyte9422 Рік тому +28

      Idk if you believe in former lives or re-incarnations but there are sayings that claims that if you have an obsession or a part of history really has a hold on you, it's likely that you were a person living through that historical event in a former life.

    • @MaskedViolinist07
      @MaskedViolinist07 Рік тому +14

      @@sepnyte9422 I’ve definitely thought about that. I don’t really have a founded belief in reincarnation, but I can imagine, if there is such a thing, this is exactly how I would feel.

    • @debbiecrosno7849
      @debbiecrosno7849 Рік тому +4

      ​@sepnyte9422 I have kinda believed that too. My daughter and I have had a lifelong obsession with Titanic and the tragedy of it. My ancestors on my dad's side are from Ireland, and there was a stoker on board with my maiden name. He disembarked at Southampton however, so was not involved with the wreck and sinking. But we have always felt that the ship was involved in our bloodline.

  • @Dorothy.Vivian
    @Dorothy.Vivian Рік тому +20

    Instantly looked in the comments for a list of the interior shots. I didn't find them, so heres the timestamps for y'all.
    (Not including the A-Deck promenade as an interior for the most part)
    8:31 - Lower Mailroom level - Orlop Deck
    19:42 - (No flooding) C-55 - C-Deck
    20:23 - Squash Racket Court - G Deck
    21:03 - View down No.1 Cargo hatch - From D-Deck
    21:26 - Unidentified hallway, likely third class or crew space on G-Deck
    31:40 - (No flooding) Second class dining room - D-Deck
    1:09:57 - Boiler room No.6 - Looking down from E-Deck
    1:10:10 - The E-Deck landing of the Grandstair case - E-Deck
    1:25:34 - Turkish Baths - F-Deck
    1:35:37 - E-Deck Landing grand staircase - E-Deck
    1:41:11 - (No flooding) C-Deck companionway
    1:50:34 - Grand Staircase flooding, viewed from A-Deck - D-Deck
    1:54:00 - Scotland Road - E-Deck
    1:59:32 - (No flooding) Café Parisian - B-Deck
    2:00:13 - Unknown First class cabin, probably on E-Deck or D-Deck (Personally, I suspect it is E-23)
    2:05:48 - Reception Room & First class dining room - D-Deck
    2:10:10 - Unknown First class cabin - (Perhaps D-Deck or C-Deck?
    2:10:43 - Unknown first class corridor - (Perhaps D-Deck?)
    2:14:13 - B-51 - B-Deck
    2:25:03 - C-Deck lifts
    2:29:06 - First class companionway on B-Deck
    2:36:23 - Wireless room
    2:26:49 - The Grand staircase - A/Boat-Deck
    2:37:00 - (No flooding) - Café Parisian - B-Deck
    2:37:04 - (No flooding) - Restaurant Reception room/Aft grand staircase (B-Deck)

  • @justanothermortal1373
    @justanothermortal1373 Рік тому +142

    Even more than a hundred years after the tragedy, the Titanic still continues to captivate people.

    • @nzgirl2105
      @nzgirl2105 Рік тому +6

      It will never stop.

    • @ChrisCre8tor
      @ChrisCre8tor Рік тому +8

      I think the movie ensured that.

    • @neurotoxicity
      @neurotoxicity Рік тому +9

      who wouldve thought your comment would have been just as relevant as it has been the past few days

    • @Flatearth69
      @Flatearth69 Рік тому

      The stark manner of it is striking

    • @ultimatelifeform9741
      @ultimatelifeform9741 Рік тому +1

      both figuratively and literally

  • @dampflokfreund
    @dampflokfreund Рік тому +17

    I really like that as the time progresses, smoke stops coming out of the funnels one by one. First, the black smoke of the first funnel disappears as boiler room 6 is flooding. After quite a while, funnel 2 stops emitting black smoke as well as the respective boiler rooms are completely gone. Funnel 3 keeps smoking until the end as the last boilers are fired up to keep the dynamos running for electricity. Nicely done! Rest assured, those details are not unnoticed!