Ghosts of the Abyss

Written by Tom Johnson
Published May 12, 2003

I have been a Titanic junkie since I was a teenager, falling deep under the ship's spell when Dr. Robert Ballard discovered her battered hull lying on the ocean floor. I built model after model, each increasing in complexity, finally culminating in a large scale reproduction of Titanic as it exists today, or at least what we could gather from fuzzy black and white video footage at that point in the late 80s. That model went to the Arizona State Fair and took Best Of Show honors, an accomplishment of which I am still proud. The model now resides in the back of a closet at my parents house, slowly decomposing as glues and paints dry out. I have thought many times of attempting to save my monument to the great ship, but ultimately I feel it is more fitting to allow nature to have its way with my cobbled-together replica. Titanic rests on the ocean floor, slowly returning to nature what man defiantly fused together.

Cameron and crew descended to the ocean floor dozens of times, equipped with the massive IMAX cameras, this time set up for 3-D imaging. Make no mistake, the 3-D aspect is not just a gimmick. Where countless other films touting their use of 3-D have frequently used it as a crutch, IMAX simply used it to accentuate already stunning footage. With Cameron's dramatic eye, Titanic is explored in intimate detail, but the viewer never feels that any moment of the ship's filming was treated with anything less than reverance. Cameron uses a deft touch throughout, never retreating to pure nostalgia, never cheaply tugging at your emotions, and yet the film spirals toward a beautifully developed and delivered emotional punch. Where his Hollywood-romance story Titanic failed is exactly where Ghosts of the Abyss succeeds immeasurably. Cameron carefully builds a narrative that arrives at the final moment of the ship, of the 1500 passengers and crew who will go down with her. The story of officers Lightoller and Murdoch is utilized to ratchet up the tension. These two officers, who assigned passengers to the lifeboats, are responsible for nearly every life that was saved - and lost - on the ship. As we follow the events, Bill Paxton, who provides narration for the film, explains that Murdoch follows his rules by the book - women and children first, but neglects to fill the lifeboats in standing by the rules. Two thirds of the survivors, Paxton says, have Lightoller to thank.

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Ghosts of the Abyss
Published: May 12, 2003
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Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Documentary
Writer: Tom Johnson
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