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Q: At the end of the movie, when the elderly Rose is shown lying in bed and then joining Jack and all of the people that died on the Titanic, is she supposed to have died at that point, or just dreaming?
A: Perhaps both. In James Cameron's screenplay, he describes the scene thus:
309 INT. ROSE'S CABIN / KELDYSH
A GRACEFUL PAN across Rose's shelf of carefully arranged pictures:
Rose as a young actress in California, radiant... a theatrically lit studio publicity shot... Rose and her husband, with their two children... Rose with her son at his college graduation... Rose with her children and grandchildren at her 70th birthday. A collage of images of a life lived well.
THE PAN STOPS on an image filling frame. Rose, circa 1920. She is at the beach, sitting on a horse at the surfline. The Santa Monica pier, with its rollercoaster is behind her. She is grinning, full of life.
We PAN OFF the last picture to Rose herself, warm in her bunk. A profile shot. She is very still. She could be sleeping, or maybe something else.
I think she is fulfilling Jack's promise that she will "die an old lady in a warm bed". The romantic spirituality of the film would allow Rose to be reunited with Jack and the other victims. Perhaps it's a dream or Heaven itself.
http://www.keyflux.com/titanic/mov_faq.htm
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13 ม.ค. 52 23:24:16
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