By registering with our site you will have full instant access to:
268,000 posts on every subject imaginable contributed by 1000's of members worldwide.
25000 photos and videos mainly relating to the British Merchant Navy.
Members experienced in research to help you find out about friends and relatives who served.
The camaraderie of 1000's of ex Merchant Seamen who use the site for recreation & nostalgia.
Here we are all equal whether ex Deck Boy or Commodore of the Fleet.
A wealth of experience and expertise from all departments spanning 70+ years.
It is simple to register and membership is absolutely free.
N.B. If you are going to be requesting help from one of the forums with finding historical details of a relative
please include as much information as possible to help members assist you. We certainly need full names,
date and place of birth / death where possible plus any other details you have such as discharge book numbers etc.
Please post all questions onto the appropriate forum
As I feel there are quite a few on here that have NOT updated their Email addresses, can you please do so. It is of importance that your Email is current, so as we can contact you if applicable . Send me the details in my Private Message Box.
Thank You Doc Vernon
-
5th September 2009, 03:26 AM
#51
satirical publication ?
Or, un-funningly: Titanic is a German satirical magazine which is published monthly. It is based in Frankfurt and probably Germany's best-known satirical publication, and it is one of the country's largest (approx. 100,000 copies printed). Sick or what ?
-
5th September 2009, 03:38 AM
#52
Or: NAZI GERMANY: Propaganda film “Titanic”
Some movies are more famous for their troubled production histories than for anything that actually reaches the screen. But few, if any, pictures have as depressing a back-story as !Titanic” (1943), a German re-imagining of the British maritime disaster that was actually produced by the Nazi party. In fact, Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels grew so disgruntled with original director Herbert Selpin’s political opinions, he had him arrested and murdered during filming! Although it was intended as one of the crown jewels of German cinema, this altogether twisted film came to stand as a metaphor for the crumbling of Hitler’s brutal regime.
Forget everything James Cameron ever told you- there’s not much of a love story here. Instead, we’re treated to a steady stream of increasingly absurd anti-British propaganda. The screenplay contends that the real reason the luxury liner crashed into an iceberg resulting in more than 1,500 passenger deaths - was that the company that owned it was trying to set a speed record in order to drive up the price of its stocks. All the British characters are portrayed as greedy incompetents, if not outright pigs, and the ship’s solitary German crew member is the only hero. Leave it to the Nazis, of all people, to assert that Britain cared little for the sanctity of human life.
During filming, Selpin, who co-wrote the script with Walter Zerlett-Olfenius, unwisely made some negative remarks about the German Navy around the rest of the crew. Someone informed the Gestapo, and Selpin was promptly thrown into Prinz-Albrecht-Palais prison in Berlin. He was later found hanged in his cell, the result of a not particularly believable “suicide.” (The rest of the picture was shot by Werner Klingler, who, one can reasonably assume, kept his opinions about Hitler’s war machine to himself.)
When “Titanic” was finished, the building where its debut print was stored was leveled in an air raid (luckily, the film negative was housed in a different location). Then Goebbels began to worry that its scenes of mass panic would disturb German audiences that were experiencing their own terror during Allied air raids. The release was postponed, and the movie was finally shown, in highly edited form, only in Nazi-occupied Paris. Goebbels also barred one of the film’s lead actresses, Jolly Bohnert, from appearing in any more movies for reasons which were never made clear.
Most Germans never saw the film until it was finally released, to little fanfare, in 1949. The only good that came out of the entire production was that the rescue sequences were eventually used in “A Night to Remember” (1958), so the British got the last laugh by incorporating Goebbel’s best footage into their own movie.
Even the ship that was used during the filming of Titanic ended up in a hellish tragedy. Called the “Cap Arcona”, the vessel was commissioned to transport liberated prisoners from the brutal Nazi camp, Neuengamme. During what should have been a voyage to freedom, Allied forces accidentally fired at the Cap Arcona and sank it. The vast majority of the prisoners who didn’t die as it went under were shot and killed by nearby Nazi forces. Such horror casts a sinister shadow across what little dramatic impact the film itself generates.
-
5th September 2009, 04:14 AM
#53
What a Titanic iceberg!
Just as we thought, all answers had been covered:
Article Found: What a Titanic iceberg! German collector claims world first with photo taken days after sinking.
It sank a so-called 'unsinkable' ocean liner claiming more than 1,500 lives 90 years ago.
Now a photograph of the iceberg which holed the Titanic is going on display for the first time.
The huge mass of ice was photographed by a seaman on board a German vessel which passed through the area where the liner went down just six days after the disaster.
Stephan Rehorek, a Czech sailor on board the passenger steamer Bremen, took photographs of icebergs in the area which he had made into postcards and sent to his parents.
The prints, together with several depicting the Titanic, were found years later by a Czech ...
K.
-
5th September 2009, 07:28 AM
#54
Good going!
NAZI GERMANY: Propaganda film “Titanic”
Spot on Keith!
Cheers
Senior Site Moderator-Member and Friend of this Website
R697530
-
5th September 2009, 10:39 AM
#55
Titanic Ticket
Terry,the date on the ticket states 10/4 /12 did'nt she sail on the 2/4/12. maybe hit the berg on the 10th.
Also no port of departure.
regards
Jim Brady.
-
5th September 2009, 01:26 PM
#56
Hi Captain Kong!
Brian,in just a few short paragraphs,you've done it again....managed to convey the emotion of that anniversary commemoration that you did.....so much can be read between the lines as well.
Your descendants will be truly grateful you've recounted your memories in this way.
Thank You
Davey(Gulliver)
-
5th September 2009, 06:46 PM
#57
spot on vern

Originally Posted by
Castleman
Mmm! I dont think too many Miles away Terry!
As this was an unused 1st Class ticket owned by the Reverend John Stuart Holden who was unable to take up his first-class ticket when his wife fell ill the day before the luxury liner was due to make its maiden voyage from Southampton on 10 April 1912.
Museum archivists have uncovered the story behind the only known surviving first class ticket for the doomed ship Titanic.
We feel immensely privileged to have this ticket. It is priceless.
Dawn Littler, Merseyside Maritime Museum
its the only one in existence an original first class ticket as dawn says, you where on the right track vern but not the answer i was looking for, after viewing the ticket at the liverpool maritime museum myself recently. regards vern terry.
{terry scouse}
-
5th September 2009, 06:51 PM
#58
new one
TITANIC/POPPY FIELDS ? regards all terry.
{terry scouse}
-
5th September 2009, 10:10 PM
#59
Poppy!
The poppy image is particularly apt. Poppies, which thrive in areas where the ground is churned up and no other vegetation survives – e.g., a battlefield,Site of the Titanic Snking – have for millennia been a symbol of sleep
Hence the Song! In Flanders Field where Poppies Grow!
May they rest in Peace!
Last edited by Doc Vernon; 5th September 2009 at 10:18 PM.
Senior Site Moderator-Member and Friend of this Website
R697530
-
5th September 2009, 10:22 PM
#60
APTLY NAMED BALMORAL LEADS 2012 REMEMBRANCE.
http://www.titanicmemorialcruise.co....Fd4B4wodpFG-LA
Lest we Forget.
K.
Last edited by Keith at Tregenna; 5th September 2009 at 10:26 PM.
Similar Threads
-
By vic mcclymont in forum Merchant Navy General Postings
Replies: 27
Last Post: 25th February 2017, 05:52 AM
-
By happy daze john in oz in forum Swinging the Lamp
Replies: 9
Last Post: 14th September 2014, 08:21 AM
-
By jimmys in forum Royal Navy
Replies: 2
Last Post: 20th June 2009, 07:56 AM
Tags for this Thread
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules