no one is sure that anyone has found the diamond from titanic
There was NO diamond
Another Answer
The diamond used as a plot device in the movie, Titanic, was simply that: a plot device.
Blue diamonds are very rare but can be found in nature. Some information about famous blue diamonds in the link attached.
Another Answer
The Hope diamond was never aboard the Titanic.
In the movie, Titanic, an iconic blue diamond was pictured, and since the film's context was a search for this iconic stone years later, it was not found in the wreck. Further, we watch 'Rose' drop the necklace into the sea.
Of course there were diamonds on the Titanic: the maiden voyage was populated by many first-class passengers who brought their best 'public displays of wealth', which had to include diamonds.
However, the diamond depicted in the movie Titanic, a very large blue stone -- about the size and shape of the Hope Diamond, by the way -- was probably not among the jewels that currently lie at the bottom of the Atlantic.
It was a story device invented by the screenwriter in order to appeal to those of us in the audience who are engaged by diamonds.
Well actually there was no real diamond ever or Jack and Rose that was just a movie with people that were acting, if you never heard of acting or actors then you should go to down town Los Angels there is a lot of them there. But titanic realy happend.
Yes, the Titanic was found by Dr. Robert Ballard in September 1985. It was located 13,000 feet below the surface.
yes it was found but they decided to leave it down there because of all of the dead people that are still lying there today!!! 2010
Well i don't know but if your talking about Diamond Rings that the ladies wore then yeah i guess so!
no it has not go look for it :)
YES
The titanic necklace wasn't entirely made up, from what I can gather there was a sapphire and diamond necklace very similar to the one in the movie on board the Titanic's maiden sail that night. It belonged to a young woman secretly sailing with a man, they were going to start a new secret life in America together, they were traveling in second class. So, being given this information, we can infer that the necklace was found, because unless one of them survived, we would not know this (presuming the source that I took this information from didn't make it up) we would not have known this. However, for the jewel in the movie, I cannot say.
The Hope Diamond is not mentioned by that name in the movie Titanic. The stone that is given as a gift, however, bears a remarkable similarity to the Hope Diamond set in a diamond necklace.
In James Cameron's film, Titanic, a large blue diamond becomes a plot device, given its visibility throughout the film. In real life, the Hope Diamond and the Titanic are only related by existing today in the Northern Hemisphere.
The necklace from the movie was fictional but a replica can be purchased from a company in the UK called White Star Momentos and a society in Massachusetts called the Titanic Historical Society. Having said that, 19 year-old Kate Florence Phillips was eloping to America on Titanic with Henry Samuel Morley, her boss, who had given her a sapphire necklace set-in-diamonds. He was lost but she lived and wore the necklace.
Get a picture and draw it. Also, it's spelt The Titanic, not 'the titanic'. Hope this helped.
You can get a "revised draft" of the 1997 Cameron script for $19.95 here: http://scriptcity.com/details.asp?search=titanic&submit.x=63&submit.y=6&ID=17273 The screenplay isn't a shooting script, though, and it does not track editing. So it may not match the film. Or you can look for one on eBay.
The Hope Diamond is not mentioned by that name in the movie Titanic. The stone that is given as a gift, however, bears a remarkable similarity to the Hope Diamond set in a diamond necklace.
No. The film Titanic may be what you reference in your question. The blue diamond in the film was a fabrication of the screenwriter. In the real Titanic tragedy, there was no 'Hope diamond'. The (one and only) Hope Diamond is safely displayed in the Smithsonian Natural History Museum in New York City.
In James Cameron's film, Titanic, a large blue diamond becomes a plot device, given its visibility throughout the film. In real life, the Hope Diamond and the Titanic are only related by existing today in the Northern Hemisphere.
no
Check the link below. While not a Holmes fan, I have never heard of this. There was a story about a missing diamond called the Southern Star. It had an odd conclusion . as it turned out the missing gem was eaten by a peacock or an Argus Pheasant or some similar bird and could not be recovered. odd as it is, the story was originally written by Jules Verne, better known for Science Fiction. The introduction of a Blue Rock resembling the Hope Diamond in the (Titanic) film is totally Off-base and unfounded. Had the Hope Diamond ANY connection with the Titanic disaster- well it would be history, and documented at that. Hope Diamond, an actress, was probably enamored by who else- Willie Sutton.
no it was never in Egypt
no it was on lord siva's snake
The Titanic was built in Belfast it was the biggest ship ever made. Extra information it then went to south Hampton. Hope that answers your question.
something bad will happen to who ever touches it
Supposedly, but this is a sort of dystopic bad luck charm. There are many unconfirmed angles of deception or repose here. There is not one documented historical tragedy linked to the Hope Diamond. It was temporarily missing during the French Revolution, but in no way did it cause the uprising. The Hope Diamond may well have been the inspiration for the Steinbeck novel, The Pearl, essentially a male variation. There have been attempts to link the Hope Diamond with the Titanic disaster but this will not float! The Titanic only made one ( disastrous) voyage, not counting test trials before entering service, and the Hope Diamond was never carried on the doomed ship- as it is currently in the Smithsonian Institution. a first edition of the Rubiyat of Omar Kayamm was on the doomed liner- and lost, but not the Hope Diamond. The Egyptian mummy story that is another matter.
No. Have you ever watched the movie titanic? They said that they can never find it.. Because it was still in Rose's hands. It is now in the ocean, and at the bottom, no one has yet found it. (suffice to say, it never existed at all) The 'Heart of the Ocean' is fictitious. It is based off of the Hope Diamond, but is otherwise complete myth.
What has repeatedly been heard,a man stole the Hope Diamond from a forehead or eye of a statue,and it's said that whom ever touches it, will get bad luck. Death and bad luck will follow whom ever touches it. So,yes,the Hope Diamond is cursed. It is now in the Smithsonian Museum due to what has happened in the past.