James Cameron on Obtaining Underwater Footage of the Titanic

James Cameron: Well we photographed the ship. We did what we planned to do. We tried to get the haunting provocative image of it. The thing that we didn’t expect to do which we ended up doing was that we sent our robot camera inside the ship and photographed things that people hadn’t seen since the ship sank. The kind of ghostly remains of that luxury, the chandeliers and the hand carved wall paneling and the swinging door that you would have come through as you went into the beautiful reception area. They were all still there just kind of down in blackness. That was the most exciting and most emotional part of the whole expedition.
James Cameron: Well we photographed the ship. We did what we planned to do. We tried to get the haunting provocative image of it. The thing that we didn’t expect to do which we ended up doing was that we sent our robot camera inside the ship and photographed things that people hadn’t seen since the ship sank. The kind of ghostly remains of that luxury, the chandeliers and the hand carved wall paneling and the swinging door that you would have come through as you went into the beautiful reception area. They were all still there just kind of down in blackness. That was the most exciting and most emotional part of the whole expedition.
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DETAILS

Editorial #:
1168047714
Collection:
Archive Films: Editorial
Date created:
20 November, 1997
Upload date:
Licence type:
Rights-ready
Release info:
Not released. More information
Clip length:
00:00:45:07
Location:
United States
Mastered to:
QuickTime 10-bit ProRes 422 (HQ) HD 1920x1080 29.97i
Originally shot on:
Betacam SP NTSC 486 29.97i
Source:
Archive Films Editorial
Object name:
a07428_01.mov