영문 타이타닉 Titanic 영화 대사

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영문 타이타닉 Titanic 영화 대사에 대한 자료입니다.
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TV REPORTER: Treasure hunter Brock Lovett is best known for finding Spanish gold off islands in the best Caribbean. LIZZY: It’s OK, I’ll get you in a minutes. Come on. TV REPORTER: Now he is using Russian subs to reach the most famous shipwreck of all, the Titanic. He is with us live via satellite from the research ship Keldysh in the North Atlantic. Hello, Brock. BROCK: Hello, Tracy. Of course everyone knows the familiar stories of Titanic. You know, the nobility, the band playing at the very end and all that. But what Im interested in are the untold stories, the secrets locked deep inside the hull of Titanic. Were out here using robot technology to go further into the wreck that anybody has done before. TV REPORTER: Your expedition is at the center of a storm of controversy over salvage rights, and even ethics. Media are calling you a grave robber. BROCK: Well, nobody ever called the recovery of the artifacts LIZZY: What is it? OLD ROSE: Turn that up, dear. BROCK: I have museum-trained experts out here making sure that these relics are preserved and catalogued properly. Take a look at this drawing that we found just today, a piece of paper that has been under water for 84 years, and my team were able to preserve it, intact. Should this have remained unseen at the bottom of the ocean for eternity when we can see it and enjoy it now? OLD ROSE: Well, Ill be goddamned! BUELL: There is a satellite call for you! BROCK: Buell, we are launching! Cant you see these submersibles going in the water? BUELL:Trust me, buddy! You want to take this call! BROCK: Great! This is Brock Lovett. How can I help you, Mrs..... BRULL: Calvert. Rose Calvert. BROCK: Mrs. Calvert. OLD ROSE: I was just wondering if you had found the Heart of the Ocean yet, Mr. Lovett? BUELL: I told you wanted to take the call. BROCK: All right. You have my attention, Rose. Can you tell us who the woman in the picture is? OLD ROSE: Oh, yes. The woman in the picture is me. OLD ROSE: Yes? BROCK: Are your state rooms all right? OLD ROSE: Oh, yes. Very nice. Oh, have you met my granddaughter, Lizzy? She takes care of me. LIZZY: We met just a few minutes ago, remember Nanna, up on deck? OK. OLD ROSE: There. Thats nice. I have to have my pictures with me when I travel. BROCK: Can I get you anything? Is there anything you would like? OLD ROSE: Yes. I would like to see my drawing. BROCK: Louis the Sixteenth wore a fabulous stone that was called the Blue Diamond of the Crown, which disappeared in 1792, About the same time old Louis lost everything from the neck up. The theory goes that the Crown Diamond was chopped too, to be cut into a heart-like shape that became known as the Heart of the Ocean. Today it would be worth more than the Hope Diamond. OLD ROSE: It was a dreadful heavy thing. I only wore it this once. LIZZY: You actually think this is you, Nanna? OLD ROSE: It is me, dear. Wasnt I a dish? BROCK: I tracked it down through insurance records, an old claim that was settled under terms of absolute secrecy. Can you tell me who the claimant was, Rose? OLD ROSE: I should imagine it was someone named Hockley. BROCK: Nathan Hockley. Thats right. Pittsburgh steel tycoon. The claim was for a diamond necklace his son Caledon had bought his fiancee-you-a week before he sailed on Titanic. It was filed right after the sinking. So the diamond had to have gone down with the ship. Do you see the date? LIZZY: April 14, 1912. BUELL: Which means if your grandmother is who she says she is, she was wearing the diamond the day the Titanic sank. BROCK: And that makes you my new best friend. BUELL: There are some of the things we recovered from your state room. OLD ROSE: This was mine. How extraordinary. And it looks the same as it did the last time I saw it. The reflection has change a bit. BROCK: Are you ready to go back to Titanic? BODINE: OK. Here we go! She hits the berg on the starboard side, right? She kind of bumps along, punching holes like Morse code, Dit, dit,dit along the side, below the water line. Then the forward compartments start to flood. Now as the water level rises, it spills over the watertight bulkhead, which unfortunately dont go any higher than E-deck, so now as the bow goes down, the stern rise up, slow at first, then faster and faster, until finally shes got her whole ass sticking up in the air. And thats a big ass. Were talking 20,30 thousand tons. OK. And the hulls not designed to deal with that pressure, so what happens? Schkee-she splits right down to the keel and the stern section just kind of bobs there like a cork for a couple of minutes, floods, then finally goes under about 2:20am, 2 hours and 40 minutes after the collision. The bow section planes away, ending about half a mile away, going 20 or 30 knots when it hits the ocean floor. Brrrroo! Brrooo! Pretty cool, huh? OLD ROSE: Thank you for that fine forensic analysis, Mr. Bodine. Of course, the experience of it was somewhat different. BROCK: Will you share it with us? LIZZY: Im taking her