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IMDbPro

La última noche del Titanic

Título original: A Night to Remember
  • 1958
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 3min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.9/10
19 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
La última noche del Titanic (1958)
Three Reasons Criterion Trailer for A Night To Remember
Reproducir trailer1:28
1 video
72 fotos
DramaDrama de ÉpocaHistoriaTragedia

En su viaje inaugural en abril de 1912, el RMS Titanic supuestamente insumergible choca contra un iceberg en el Océano Atlántico.En su viaje inaugural en abril de 1912, el RMS Titanic supuestamente insumergible choca contra un iceberg en el Océano Atlántico.En su viaje inaugural en abril de 1912, el RMS Titanic supuestamente insumergible choca contra un iceberg en el Océano Atlántico.

  • Dirección
    • Roy Ward Baker
  • Guionistas
    • Walter Lord
    • Eric Ambler
  • Elenco
    • Kenneth More
    • Ronald Allen
    • Robert Ayres
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.9/10
    19 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Roy Ward Baker
    • Guionistas
      • Walter Lord
      • Eric Ambler
    • Elenco
      • Kenneth More
      • Ronald Allen
      • Robert Ayres
    • 217Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 81Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominada a1 premio BAFTA
      • 2 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    A Night To Remember: The Criterion Collection
    Trailer 1:28
    A Night To Remember: The Criterion Collection

    Fotos72

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Kenneth More
    Kenneth More
    • Second Officer Charles Herbert Lightoller
    Ronald Allen
    Ronald Allen
    • Mr. Clarke
    Robert Ayres
    Robert Ayres
    • Maj. Arthur Peuchen
    Honor Blackman
    Honor Blackman
    • Mrs. Liz Lucas
    Anthony Bushell
    Anthony Bushell
    • Capt. Arthur Rostron
    John Cairney
    John Cairney
    • Mr. Murphy
    Jill Dixon
    Jill Dixon
    • Mrs. Clarke
    Jane Downs
    Jane Downs
    • Mrs. Sylvia Lightoller
    James Dyrenforth
    James Dyrenforth
    • Col. Archibald Gracie
    Michael Goodliffe
    Michael Goodliffe
    • Thomas Andrews
    Kenneth Griffith
    Kenneth Griffith
    • Wireless Operator John 'Jack' Phillips
    Harriette Johns
    Harriette Johns
    • Lady Richard
    Frank Lawton
    Frank Lawton
    • Chairman J. Bruce Ismay
    Richard Leech
    Richard Leech
    • First Officer William Murdoch
    David McCallum
    David McCallum
    • Assistant Wireless Operator Harold Bride
    Alec McCowen
    Alec McCowen
    • Wireless Operator Harold Thomas Cottam
    Tucker McGuire
    Tucker McGuire
    • Mrs. Margaret 'Molly' Brown
    John Merivale
    John Merivale
    • Robbie Lucas
    • Dirección
      • Roy Ward Baker
    • Guionistas
      • Walter Lord
      • Eric Ambler
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios217

    7.918.6K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    Snow Leopard

    A Worthwhile Straightforward Treatment

    The Titanic disaster has provided material for quite an assortment of films, and a number of them have at least something to offer. This is one of the more effective, with its straightforward and, based on the knowledge then available, factually accurate approach. One particularly worthwhile aspect is that it spends more time detailing the reasons for the disaster than do most movies on the subject.

    Often movies that try to stay close to the facts suffer from a lack of focus, especially when there is/are no central character(s) to hold things together. In this adaptation of "A Night to Remember", they solved the problem by focusing much of the action around Second Officer Lightoller, who was involved in some way in so many different aspects of what happened. As a device it works well, and there is enough action involving the other characters to keep it balanced.

    Another inherent challenge in the story is that there are so many characters, and most of them hold some interest. In this adaptation, they chose simply to depict as many brief situations as possible, often without giving much with which to identify the characters. If you are familiar with Walter Lord's book, it is often possible to identify many of them, but otherwise, it might be a little confusing to sort through so many characters.

    For such a detail-heavy story, this is an effective and commendable movie. With very few frills, it tells the story believably and sometimes memorably.

    It does a pretty good job of meeting the main challenges, not telling the complete story, of course, but providing a worthwhile overview of events.
    CalRhys

    A Riveting And Emotional Study

    The original adaptation of the "Ship of Dreams", 'A Night to Remember' is a riveting and emotional study of the fateful maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic. A British production made on location at Pinewood Studios, Roy Baker's meticulous re-creation of the sinking of the Titanic is an utter masterpiece of cinema. The scale of the sets, the ingenuity of the visual effects and the stellar performances all make this a 1950's Brit-blockbuster at its very best. Whilst the '97 adaptation from James Cameron is a powerful piece of cinema, this stunning and melodramatic 1958 flick spends its 2-hour duration focussing on the lives of everybody aboard the ship instead of wandering off to study a love story between two characters. A film that relies on real-life survivor testimony, 'A Night to Remember' is in my opinion the best adaptation of the tale of the "unsinkable" ship and one of the best British films to have ever graced the screen.
    uds3

    A FILM to remember too.

    Including the very first movie that dealt with the Titanic disaster, SAVED FROM THE TITANIC (1912) starring Dorothy Gibson, an actual survivor who wore the same outfit in the movie that she had on that fateful night just a few months earlier, there have been TEN movies made covering the sinking, A NIGHT TO REMEMBER, based on Walter Lords' ultimate reference work of the same name, was the 6th. The film has no equal! For those who are interested, the other nine ARE chronologically:

    TITANIC (1915) TITANIC: DISASTER IN THE ATLANTIC (1929) TITANIC (1943) TITANIC (1953) A NIGHT TO REMEMBER (1958) SOS TITANIC (1979) TITANIC (1984) TITANIC (1996) TITANIC (1997)

    The REASON that A NIGHT TO REMEMBER excels, is that it is a straight up docudrama of the event. Historical accuracy (lets forget the "split,"... although actually "suggested" by a few eye-witnesses at the time, it was believed the ship had foundered intact) was observed, the main characters were vastly better portrayed than in later films and the "scale" of the disaster far more keenly felt, for all James Cameron's $180 million! Kenneth More made an unimprovable-upon Captain Lightoller and Laurence Naismith simply WAS Captain Smith. (The less said about Bernard Hill's loopy characterization in Cameron's epic, the better!) Those who wish to compare multi million dollar digitization to that which was available in 1958 need to get REAL and for all that money, and exciting as Cameron's was - it just didn't either LOOK or feel anything more than, well...a massive film-set! The 1958 version went to the heart of the tragedy...and took the viewer with them. A NIGHT TO REMEMBER will remain a tribute...THE tribute to that night of madness. Little things, David McCallum fighting for his life-vest, Michael Goodliffe as Thomas Andrews - dignity personified waiting for his last moments, the drunken cook - they were all worth more than $100 million dollars worth of fx! You can't BUY credibility. This could never have been an American tale - it didn't work with the 1953 Barbara Stanwyck version and it didn't ring true for Cameron (good though it was as a movie rather than as the tragedy!) Did anyone notice dear old "Q" (Desmond Llewelyn) below decks and old Brit-turned-Aussie favorite Stuart Wagstaff, as a steward in Steerage?
    m0rphy

    A TRIBUTE TO WALTER

    Walter Lord sadly died in May 2002 aged 85 and is justly famous for his meticulous research of the circumstances surrounding the sinking on Monday 15/4/1912 of the White Star liner,RMS Titanic and stirring the public's interest in this disaster.There are a few factual errors in this marvellous Rank Organisation 1958 film.The ship is seen to sink in one piece but this was the received wisdom in 1955 when the book was first published.The picture above the fireplace in the first class smoking room is seen to be "The Approach to the New World (by Norman Wilkinson).In fact this hung in the equivalent location on her earlier sister ship, RMS "Olympic".The correct painting should have been "Plymouth Harbour" by the same artist.Also White Star and the ship's constructors, Harland & Wolff just launched their liners at their Belfast shipyard without flowery speeches such as "....I Name this ship Titanic.May god bless her etc etc".The launching scene is actually of the "Olympic" which you can tell because of her light grey painted hull made more photogenic for the cine cameras of the day - Titanic's hull was black. with white superstructure and a gold band separating these two colours.Lord admitted these understandable errors in his sequel "The Night Lives On" (1986) after Dr Robert Ballard ( of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute ,Massachussets) at last found the final resting place of the ship, 2 1/2 miles down on the Atlantic floor in 1985.

    That said, this is a riveting and unforgetable docu-drama of this historical event, arguably the most infamous maritime disaster (although loss of life has been greater in other shipwrecks).The fascination lies in the "if onlys".i.e. if only she had been going a few knots slower, if only she had had enough lifeboats for all instead of the maximum laid down by the British Board of Trade in their already out of date 1894 regulations, when the maximum tonnage was deemed to be up to 10000 tons.Titanic came in at 46000 tons.If the weather had been rougher, waves would have broken over the base of the iceberg thus making it more visible.If the crow's nest crew had been given binoculars (they were removed at Southampton).If the Titanic had not been delayed in her construction (and therefore her 31/5/11 launch) by her shipworkers being transferred to the repair in September 1911 of the RMS Olympic following a collision in the Solent with HMS Hawke.If 1st officer Murdoch had steered straight at the berg instead of trying to avoid it the ship may have stayed afloat (although deaths would have occurred by the crumpling of the bow).If the "California's" captain, Stanley Lord had raised wireless operator, Cyril Furmston Evans who had just retired for the night, instead of trying to contact the mystery ship with a Morse lamp.If Alexander Carlisle, marine architect who originally planned 32 lifeboats had not been over-ruled by White Star because it made the boat deck look "cluttered".In fact RMS Titanic ended up with 16 lifeboats, the regulation number required by law, but then White Star actually exceeded the quota by the provision of an extra two Englebert collapsible sided lifeboats with a further two lashed on top of the officers' quarters.If a vital ice message from the "Caronia" sent on behalf of Capt. Barr and received by senior Titanic Marconi operator John Phillips, had gone to the bridge in good time, warning of icebergs directly in the path of the ill fated vessel.And so the "if onlys" go on.

    The fascination is of a small Anglo Saxon floating town set in 1912 with all the social classes represented from the aristocratic and rich (first) class, to the professional middle (second) class down to the emigrant and poor (third/steerage) classes - and "never the twain shall meet".The "gilded age", as termed by Mark Twain, had begun in about 1890 and society was marvelling at the wit of man and the many technological innovations and inventions.Perhaps Mankind could outdo Nature but a Greek tragedy was waiting in the wings to punish man for his rash hubris and arrogance.

    There is a companion video available called "The making of A Night To Remember" which goes behind the scenes at Pinewood studios and shows the locations used.Actual Titanic survivors were invited as advisors to the Irish producer, William MacQuity, among them were Fourth Officer Joseph Boxhall, Lawrence Beesley, the science master from Dulwich College (who wrote the book "Titanic Its Story and Its Lessons, published by Houghton Mifflin 1912)- a second class passenger who escaped in boat 13.Captain Edward John Smith's daughter Helen stated that the actor Lawrence Naismith who played him, was uncannily like her father as evidenced in contemporay photographs of the two men at approx. the same age.Captain Smith died aged 62, (probably on his last voyage before retirement although this can never be proved).Actor Kenneth More is seen chatting to Sylvia Lightoller the widow of Charles Herbert Lightoller who was second officer,- read his biography "Titanic Voyager".The convincing creaking sound you hear as Andrews tries to sit down in the first class smoking room just before the end, was the actual sound of the hydraulic lifting gear in the studio as it progressively raised the floor.MacQuitty was very careful to ensure the accuracy of the film set angles (of the ever slanting deck as she sank by the bow and rose by the stern), were always matching the dramas recorded by witnesses, so there is a marvellous sense of continuity in the filmed sinking.The B&W photography merges seemlessly with the authentic period film and all the actors convincingly say their lines many based on actual speeches said by the principal characters as remembered by witnesses.This is a superb film.Watch Cameron's "Titanic" 1997 only for the special effects.
    cskocik

    This movie is staggering

    I am nothing short of amazed by what the filmmakers pulled off. Before I saw this movie, I tried to write a script that would encompass the whole story of the Titanic. I had stacks of Titanic books scattered around me, a huge map of the Titanic spread out in front of me, and I was overwhelmed by the sheer mountain of anecdotes and facts and technical details and contradictions in survivors' accounts. Reconstructing the event seemed impossible, and finally I abandoned the project by the time I got to about 1:30. Then I saw A Night to Remember, and wouldn't you know, it was exactly what I was trying to do! Kenneth More's portrayal of Lightoller is perfect. Laurence Naismith is heartbreaking as Captain Smith. The factual, historical, and technical detail is so thorough that this may be the most meticulous historical movie ever made -- certainly that I have ever seen. Somehow the stark black-and-white cinematrography is more realistically convincing than James Cameron's full-color treatment, in which things are inexplicably blue. The thing that disappointed me the most about Cameron's film was the lack of reverence for the historical characters. Lightoller, my personal hero, came off as an cowardly twit, Captain Smith as an incompetent fool, Ismay as the force of all evil in the universe, and Benjamin Guggenheim's change into evening ware as an excuse to get drunk! A Night to Remember had that reverence that was so sorely lacking in Cameron's film. Lightoller is portrayed as the hero that he was. Captain Smith is a fine captain who is understandably ovewhelmed by the magnitude of the tragedy facing him. Ismay is irritating, but tries to help out and be a responsible president -- and when he jumps into the lifeboat, well, would any of us do different? And Guggenheim's final stand brings tears to the eyes. The drama of the Carpathia is as exciting as any fictional Hollywood action film. This is the only Titanic movie that addresses the problem of the Californian, and though Lordites will object to the rather anti-Lord portrayal of the events, the facts speak for themselves. If you want to be picky, you can complain that the movie doesn't go into the politics behind building the Olympic and Titanic, or the near-collision with the New York, or lots of the little personal stories, but let's be fair: the movie has two hours to tell the story of, as Walter Lord put it, "the death of a small town." It's simply not possible for a movie, or even a really thick book, to cover everything. I don't think it's possible for a better movie to be made about the Titanic than A Night to Remember.

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    • Trivia
      It wasn't until 1985, when the wreckage of the Titanic was discovered, that they found out the ship had broken in two while sinking. In this film, the Titanic does not break in two, but goes down in one piece with most of her decks intact.
    • Errores
      As with most pictures about the Titanic, filmed before the discovery of the wreck in 1985, this film portrays the Titanic sinking in one piece. The discovery of the wreck revealed that the ship had broken in two, and most films about the ship, Titanic (1996) and Titanic (1997), have reflected this point. Although scholars debate to this day whether the break up happened while the ship was above the water line or while it was under the water, and out of the view of survivors, plunging towards the ocean floor. Eyewitness testimony to the sinking diverges in opinion about this fact, meaning that the movie's portrayal of the ship sinking intact, while above the water line, may not be incorrect.
    • Citas

      Mrs. Margaret 'Molly' Brown: Leadville Johnny, they call him. And he was the best golderned gold miner in Colorado! Fifteen I was when I married him.

      First Class Passenger: Really?

      [in deep upper-class British accent]

      Mrs. Margaret 'Molly' Brown: Uh-hmm. And he didn't have a cent. Well, three months later later he struck it rich and we was millionaires. Do you know what he did?

      First Class Passenger: No?

      Mrs. Margaret 'Molly' Brown: He built me a house and he had silver dollars cemented all over the floors of every room!

      First Class Passenger: I say, how very tiresome for you!

    • Créditos curiosos
      Just before "The End", the following is scrolled over a background of the water with flotsam and a life ring buoy with the words "Titanic" and "Liverpool" on it:

      But this is not the end of the story ~ for their sacrifice was not in vain. Today there are lifeboats for all. Unceasing radio vigil and, in the North Atlantic, the International Ice Patrol guards the sea lanes making them safe for the peoples of the world.
    • Versiones alternativas
      The 2012 ITV Studios DVD and Blu-ray features epilogue text at the end as well as the moment with the child.
    • Conexiones
      Edited from Titanic (1943)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Off to Philadelphia
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Played on violin and sung by Titanic passengers

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    Preguntas Frecuentes28

    • How long is A Night to Remember?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • What is 'A Night to Remember' about?
    • Is 'A Night to Remember' based on a book?
    • Is this movie based on a true story?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 2 de marzo de 1961 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Ruso
      • Polaco
      • Alemán
      • Italiano
    • También se conoce como
      • A Night to Remember
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Great Fosters Hotel, Egham, Surrey, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Sir Richard and Lady Richard set off from their mansion to board the Titanic at Southampton)
    • Productoras
      • The Rank Organisation
      • Rank Organisation Film Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 1,680,000 (estimado)
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 712
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 2h 3min(123 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.66 : 1

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