“I take it we may be in the same both together.” Quite possibly referring to both of them going down with the ship. What an absolute gentleman by convincing his wife that they will just be late to New York by a day and the captain is being paranoid for no reason. True Gentleman!
He is being ironic and understating the peril deliberately (stiff upper lip) he doesnt say in the same "both" together he says in the same "boat" together meaning ironically they wont be in a boat at all (there were only enough life boats for women and children) i.e they are both likely to die.
I'm very upset for the man but at least all of his children were saved in the end that's a relief if we had to choose between children and men we must all ways choose children all the way to save right Titanic fans
Such English character. Carrying on calmly, yet fully aware of the dire consequences. Stiff upper lip indeed. This quality seems to have diminished over the years.
O. M. F. G. She under😂stood EXACTLY what he was saying...and accepted it it. THATS a man..and a woman..save the kids as best you can. And at the end...she knew. Absolutely. I'm an Army vet. Respect. Even if it's just a movie
I always knew the wife looked familiar, but it took a while to realize she was Honor Blackman. Six years later, she would play Pussy Galore in Goldfinger.
This is such a sad part of the movie, brought me to tears
Totally heartbreaking Bunnie
When he says goodbye my dear son
To think that would have been said so many times for real
Just rips heart in two
@@richardjones2187Lightoller was a lowlife,refused passengers all night because he didn’t check on orders of women and children first Not only !
@@shanet5604 Try not to talk nonsense you halfwit.
Such a powerful scene in an incredibly underrated movie
“I take it we may be in the same both together.” Quite possibly referring to both of them going down with the ship. What an absolute gentleman by convincing his wife that they will just be late to New York by a day and the captain is being paranoid for no reason. True Gentleman!
Of course - he knew his fate and was prepared to accept it with grace. Heartbreaking stuff.
If you know, you know.
Not that she believed him for more than a moment
He is being ironic and understating the peril deliberately (stiff upper lip) he doesnt say in the same "both" together he says in the same "boat" together meaning ironically they wont be in a boat at all (there were only enough life boats for women and children) i.e they are both likely to die.
"goodbye my dear son" damn broke me
Yes
OMG I love the 50s
So sad at the end when it shows him hanging on the railing as the stern goes down. Saved his family and accepted his fate like a man.
Don't assume their gender.
@@KLC6432You saddo,it was 1912 you moron !
Not me crying over here 😔✋🏽
Oh that's heartbreaking
I'm very upset for the man but at least all of his children were saved in the end that's a relief if we had to choose between children and men we must all ways choose children all the way to save right Titanic fans
Such English character. Carrying on calmly, yet fully aware of the dire consequences. Stiff upper lip indeed. This quality seems to have diminished over the years.
Indeed.
O. M. F. G. She under😂stood EXACTLY what he was saying...and accepted it it. THATS a man..and a woman..save the kids as best you can. And at the end...she knew. Absolutely. I'm an Army vet. Respect. Even if it's just a movie
The same boat meaning the titanic
He means the boat that ferryman comes to pick you in when you die…
I always knew the wife looked familiar, but it took a while to realize she was Honor Blackman. Six years later, she would play Pussy Galore in Goldfinger.
Esse filme é tão bom (e mais realista) quanto ao filme de Cameron de 1997.
That British stuff upper lip.
Stiffer upper lips have been reported but never seen.
You just don't get this classy behaviour this days, (I'm in England, it's a right mess sadly). Such a shame of a bygone era...