This week in 2012 marks the centennial of the RMS Titanic's fateful maiden voyage. Titanic had been described as “unsinkable” in the press of its time, of course, but it nonetheless struck an iceberg and went down. You already know these historical details by rote: There were not enough lifeboats aboard Titanic to preserve all the passengers and many people drowned in freezing waters that terrifying night.
The
world has mourned the loss of Titanic
ever since in fiction and film, and the doomed ship has become the stuff of legend in cult television too.
In
1959, the paranormal anthology One Step Beyond presented in its
second episode, “Night of April 14,” a tale about the “psychic” web surrounding
the sinking of Titanic. Here, a woman
named Grace experienced recurring dreams of drowning in freezing waters. She soon discovered she would be honeymooning
with her fiancé aboard Titanic. Later in
“Night of April 14,” various personalities across the globe (including a Methodist
preacher in Canada and a cartoonist in the Big Apple) experienced precognitive visions
regarding the loss of Titanic.
The Titanic was also the central location
of the first episode of Irwin Allen’s The Time Tunnel, in September of 1966. In “Rendezvous with Destiny,” Project Tic-Toc
scientists Newman (James Darren) and Phillips
(Robert Colbert) were hurled
through time and ended up on the deck of the doomed ocean-liner. They attempted to convince the captain, played
by Michael Rennie, that the ship was in grave danger.
After they tried to take over the radio room (to call for help), the scientists were dismissed as dangerous lunatics. Even a newspaper with a headline describing Titanic's sinking could not sway the Captain. The
unusual thing about this particular adventure is that neither Newman nor Phillips evidenced any concern for the idea that by saving the Titanic on its maiden voyage, they would be changing their own history, since they were born after the disaster
occurred. Never once in the episode was the idea questioned that they should interfere in history and try to save the ship and passengers.
Rod Serling’s Night Gallery featured the Titanic in an episode
entitled “Lone Survivor.” Here, a
cowardly passenger aboard the ship, played by the late John Colicoswas doomed
to repeat, over and over again, the events that led to the sinking of the vessel, as well as his unethical behavior to ensure his own survival. In this case, the Titanic story was a milieu
for moral commentary. What lengths would
you go to in order preserve your own life, even if women and children could be saved
instead? And what cost should you pay
for making that choice?
A Friday the 13th: The Series episode in the late 1980s -- entitled “What a
Mother Wouldn’t Do” -- starred Lynn Cormack and involved a “cursed” antique from
the Titanic: a wooden cradle. The malevolent
cradle demands human sacrifices (drowning victims…) to keep a terminally-ill
infant alive. Here the curse of Titanic was seen to extend to artifacts from the ship itself.
In 2011, the CW’s Supernatural aired an episode called
“My Heart Will Go On” that involved the Titanic. In this case, an angel named Balthazar saved
the doomed ship, not to preserve lives, but so that he would no longer have to endure Celine
Dion’s song from the 1997 James Cameron film.
Unlike “Rendezvous with Destiny” on The Time Tunnel, “My Heart Will Go
On” explored what the world would look like if everyone had survived on Titanic.
In this case, 50,000 new souls would exist…souls that could be
(eventually) harnessed in a Heavenly war.
In some instances, the
Titanic has been seen in futuristic terms on cult television. Both Futurama and the new incarnation of Dr. Who have imagined
space vessels called Titanic…which actually resembled the infamous sea-going ship. And in both instances, the temptation has
been to see (tragic) history repeat itself., only in the final frontier. The question of interest, however, is this: would
you board a spaceship named after the famous, sunken ocean liner?
I doubt that I would…
Termed “the ship of dreams” in Titanic (1997), the
unsinkable ship has proven itself the ship of nightmares in cult TV history for over fifty years now.
This may interest you that I posted on one of my blogs, about the Raise the Titanic miniature.
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