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| | Titanic (Movie - 1997) | Movie Review | Entertainment Weekly |
 | | In Titanic, he restages the defining catastrophe of the early 20th century on a human scale of such purified yearning and dread that he touches the deepest fairy-tale levels of popular moviemaking. |
 | | Titanic, which stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet as winsome, class-torn, angel-eyed young romantics, is a resplendently old-fashioned cornball love story that, in its collision with the reality of technological disaster, takes on the resonance of genuine tragedy. |
 | | Organized by tiers, each of which houses its own social class, the Titanic, though a product of a new era's technology, is also a kind of floating version of the 19th century, the last mighty bulwark of a Victorian world that has no idea it's literally about to perish. |
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