Conveniently coinciding with the announcement that Titanic will be rereleased in December (just in case someone somehow missed it the first time round), people have rediscovered a deleted scene from the film showing the survivors’ rescue in full.
In this lengthier version of the scene, we see Joseph Bruce Ismay, one of the officials behind the doomed ship, boarding the rescue vessel. Although the latter was portrayed as remorseless in the original, people reckon he shows a bit of compassion in this version because now he looks at the survivors instead of ignoring them. That’s something, I guess.
We also see Rose being hauled aboard, shell-shocked from losing Jack (or leaving him to die, depending how you look at it). Now we get to see the full extent of her trauma, held back from the theatrical cut; the poor woman can’t even hold a cup of tea.
All of this is, theoretically, about 30 seconds long, but thanks to the magic of slow motion and James Cameron’s tendency to draw things out, it clocks in at a minute and a half.
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An alternative ending to the movie also resurfaced a while ago, showing Rose having a weirdly tense showdown with Brock Lovett before preaching about making each day count and throwing the heart of the ocean back into, well, the ocean.
Fingers crossed James Cameron puts both scenes into the rerelease and confuses everyone entirely.
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This article originally appeared on The Debrief.