No for two reasons. It would be suicide to risk such a valuable gem to add a little color to an already top-heavy sea drama. 2. There is no connection between the Hope Diamond and the Titanic disaster- though there is some rumor about the French Revolution as Louis XVI briefly held it as a national treasure. Icebergs are one hazard- priceless gems (also called Ice- and in a sense Ice Blue) no, it would be- another museum piece- like using the Spirit of Saint Louis (Lindbergh aircraft) as a stunt prop doing dangerous stunts for something like ( barnstormers of the air) the museum would never consent- and risk losing such a priceless exhibit! same logic holds- avoid the crash- and the Museum Motto is- One Nation, Under Glass! we don"t like scratche on the glass- let alone exhibit crash damage! Titanically Out of the question.
The Hope Diamond, which was in reality worn by Louis XIV in a royal necklace, was not aboard Titanic. In 1912, it had been mounted in New York and sold by Pierre Cartier to an American couple in Washington DC, Ned and Evalyn Walsh McLean.
The fictional 'Heart of the Ocean' from James Cameron's epic movie was, according to the story, was not worn by Louis XIV, but by Louis XVI.
However, there really was was a blue sapphire pendant on the ship. It was given to RMS Titanic passenger Kate Florence Phillips by her married lover, Samuel Morley, as the pair fled to America to make a new life for themselves. Morley perished in the sinking, and it is believed that this tragic love story was the inspiration for James Cameron's film.
I loved her when she played Rose in Titanic!She loves greens but she also does enjoy Pizza sometimes to! Hope I helped :)
Hope Diamond
His name is Shane Lee Yaw, his changed his last name to Dawson because of his favorie movie, Titanic. James Cameron is his idol and the character in Titanic is Jack Dawson, so he changed his name. Hope this helpssxxx
The ocean viewed from this side of the island is affected by Ralph's attitude of hope and rescue. When Ralph looks at the ocean from the cliff, he sees and wall of hope and rescue to which he cannot reach, he cannot go over. The wall is what he See's, to which he loses hope in rescue and survival.
The boys have become undisciplined and the ocean is like an impenetrable wall blocking all hope of being rescued.
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.
There was no actual "Heart of the ocean" in the movie Titanic it was based upon the Hope Diamond which is estimated to be worth around 250 million dollars.mabey that is what they think but there is a Heart of the ocean because i have seen it in a museums
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 Heart of the Ocean The Heart of the Ocean is a fictional diamond, featured in the plot of the movie "Titanic." It is believed to be based on the real, and priceless, Hope Diamond, which may or may not have once been owned by King George IV of England.
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.
Well you can get lots of different sorts of liners. eye liner, ocean liner, bin liner, etc. It depends really. i hope that helped. Though i didnt really awnser your question. Sorry.
The 'heart of the ocean', properly cœur de la mer -- heart of the sea -- is a prop used in James Cameron's film, Titanic.Some say that this prop was patterned after the Hope Diamond, which is stored at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum in Washington, DC.You can read more about the movie, Titanic, below.You can read more about the Hope Diamond and its ownership by the Smithsonian, below, also.
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.
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.
Since the Heart of the Ocean does not exist, then no, it cannot be cursed. On the other hand, the legendary Hope Diamond which was cut from the French Blue diamond, made for King Louis XIV, is supposedly cursed.
No. The painting of "Rose Dewitt Bukater" (who is by the way a fictional character and was never on the Titanic) never existed.