Jessie M.
Member
So after watching a couple snippets of James Cameron's Titanic I found an interesting line said by an extra that goes a little something like this...
First Class Female Passenger: I felt a shudder, is everything alright?
Butler: Nothing to worry about Miss, we've likely just thrown a Propeller Blade, can I get you anything?
Now; I know this scene was most likely to express both the effects of the collision within the ship and how the staff did their damndest to keep folks calm but that bit about Propeller Blades made me a touch confused. Just the way he said it... Like it was somehow normal? It also felt somewhat genuine in the sense that that was something likely said at some point during the sinking.
So that leads to my question... Was "throwing" a propeller blade (Which I assume means one of the Propeller blades came free of the ship) a common occurrence for ships back then?
First Class Female Passenger: I felt a shudder, is everything alright?
Butler: Nothing to worry about Miss, we've likely just thrown a Propeller Blade, can I get you anything?
Now; I know this scene was most likely to express both the effects of the collision within the ship and how the staff did their damndest to keep folks calm but that bit about Propeller Blades made me a touch confused. Just the way he said it... Like it was somehow normal? It also felt somewhat genuine in the sense that that was something likely said at some point during the sinking.
So that leads to my question... Was "throwing" a propeller blade (Which I assume means one of the Propeller blades came free of the ship) a common occurrence for ships back then?