Raise the Titanic!

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Raise the Titanic! is an adventure novel by Clive Cussler published in the United States by the Viking Press in 1976. In 1980, the book was adapted for a feature film of the same name, minus the exclamation point.

Contents

[edit] The Novel

Title Raise The Titanic!
First edition cover
Hardcover 1st Edition
Author Clive Cussler
Cover artist Garden Studio
Country United States
Language English
Series Dirk Pitt Novels
Genre(s) Adventure, Techno-thriller novel
Publisher Viking Press
Released 1976
Media type Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages 314 pp (Hardcover edition)
ISBN ISBN 0-670-58933-0
Preceded by Iceberg
Followed by Vixen 03

Raise the Titanic! was the third published book to feature is the author's protagonist Dirk Pitt.

[edit] Plot introduction

In 1912, the RMS Titanic went to the bottom of the North Atlantic in one of history's most famous maritime disasters. Seventy-five years later, it is discovered that Titanic's hold contains a shipment of a rare mineral, the only available supply in the world large enough to power a top-secret and vital United States defense program. When no method can be found of extracting the mineral under more than 12,000 feet of water, Pitt and his crew set out to do the impossible: raise the Titanic.

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Dr. Gene Seagram leads the top-secret Pentagon program Meta Section, which secretly attempts to leapfrog current technology by 20 to 30 years. One result: the Sicilian Project, which uses sound waves to stop incoming ballistic missiles.

The immense power needs of the Sicilian Project can be met only by an extremely rare mineral called byzanium. After satellite data pinpoints the most likely source of byzanium, Meta Section sends Sid Koplin to a small island off the northern coast of the USSR. There he discovers that the Byzanium vein has already been mined. While making his way back to his hidden boat, Koplin is shot and captured by a Russian guard but is rescued by Pitt.

Using clues found by Koplin, Seagram determines that the byzanium — a chunk worth more than a quarter of a billion dollars in 1912 figures — was mined in the early part of the 20th century by a group called "The Coloradans." The group was hired by the French, but persuaded by the U.S. government to steal the mineral for the United States. Joshua Hayes Brewster and his men engage in a running battle with French assassins as they crisscross Europe trying to get their stolen goods home. Only Brewster reaches England alive, and he books passage on the maiden voyage of the great White Star Line ship Titanic.

Realizing that the only supply of Byzanium sufficient to power the Sicilian Project now lies at the bottom of the North Atlantic, Dr. Seagram approaches Dirk Pitt and the National Underwater and Marine Agency and gives them the near impossible task of raising the Titanic. Using data from drop tank experiments Pitt is able to narrow down the search area and began searching with deep sea submersibles. When they find a presentation model coronet that they can link positively to a member of the Titanic's band they know they are searching in the right place. After discovering that the Titanic is in one piece they set out on audacious plan to patch all of the holes and then raise the wreck using compressed air.

While this is happening the CIA convinces the president to leak information on both the Sicilian Project and the Titanic mission to the USSR in the hopes of setting a trap to capture one of the Soviet's best intelligence men. When the leaders of the USSR realize that the development of the Sicilian Project would throw off the balance of power in the world and leave their nuclear arsenal impotent they do just as the CIA hopes and launch an operation to sabotage the mission or if possible steal the Byzanium for themselves.

After Pitt is successful in raising the Titanic and exposing the Soviet spies all are shocked when it becomes apparent that the Byzanium was never actually on board the ship. This revelation, along with deep troubles with his marriage and the president's agreement to leaking word of the Sicilian Project to the Soviets eventually cause Dr. Seagram to have a nervous breakdown from which he never recovers. It is eventually revealed that Joshua Hayes Brewster, fearful that he would never make it to the United States with the mineral alive, buried the Byzanium in the grave of the last of the group to fall to the French assassins in the tiny English village of Southby.

[edit] Characters in "Raise the Titanic!"

  • Georgi Antonov - General Secretary of the Soviet Union who authorizes the attempt to sabotage the raising of the Titanic.
  • Adeline Austin - The widow of Jake Hobart who reveals that the nine men did not die in the Little Angel mine disaster but instead were hired by the French to mine ore in Russia.
  • Commodore Sir John L. Bigelow K.B.E.,R.D., R.N.R - The last surviving member of the Titanic crew, Bigelow was a junior ship's officer on the Titanic the night of her sinking who was forced at gunpoint to take a crazed Joshua Hayes Brewster to the ship's cargo hold. As he locks himself in the vault in the cargo hold of the Titanic Bigelow hears him mutter the last words "Thank God for Southby".
  • Joshua Hayes Brewster - A well-known and respected mining engineer who, along with eight of his men, allegedly perished in the Little Angel Mine disaster near Central City , Colorado. In reality he and his men were hired by the French to secretly mine Byzanium in Russia.
  • Marshall Collins - Chief Kremlin Security Adviser to the president who convinces the president to leak information about the Sicilian Project in order to start a black bag operation in the hopes of developing a priceless conduit into Russian intelligence.
  • Mel Donner - One of two chief evaluators for Meta Section.
  • Ben Drummer - Russian spy in the employ of NUMA who killed Henry Munk.
  • Graham Farley - The coronet player on the Titanic who received a presentation model cornet from the White Star line the discovery of which helps pinpoint the location of the wreck. He and the ship's musicians continued to play while the ship sank to help calm the frightened passengers. The last song played as the waves closed over the ship was the old hymn Autumn, Not as myth would have it, Nearer My God to Thee.
  • Al Giordino - Assistant Special Projects Director for the National Underwater and Marine Agency.
  • Commander Rudi Gunn - Commander of the Lorelei Current Drift Expedition.
  • Jake Hobart - One of "The Coloradans," an elite group of minors that dug mines in the Colorado Rockies in the early 20th century. His body was discovered by Sid Koplin in a secret Russian mine having frozen to death on February 10, 1912.
  • Officer Peter Jones - Washington, DC police officer who prevents Gene Seagram from committing suicide when he becomes despondent because the president has allowed the CIA to leak information about the Sicilian Project and it appears that the Titanic will not be able to be raised due to Russian sabotage
  • Admiral Joseph Kemper -the United States Navy's Chief of Staff.
  • Sid Koplin - Professor of mineralogy sent to Novaya Zemlya by Meta Section in search of Byzanium who was rescued, after being shot by a Russian guard, by Dirk Pitt.
  • Lieutenant Pavel Marganin - Aide to Captain Prevlov who is in fact an American spy named Harry Koskoski.
  • Sam Merker - Brother of Ben Drummer and also a Russian spy on the NUMA crew.
  • Henry Munk - Sappho II crewmen who was murdered inside a submersible while working on raising the Titanic.
  • Warren Nicholson - Director of the CIA who convinces the president to allow him to risk the Titanic and the Sicilian Defense in the hopes of intelligence coup.
  • Captain Ivan Parotkin - Captain of the Soviet oceanographic research vessel Mikhail Kurkov sent to keep an eye on the Titanic raising expedition.
  • Dirk Pitt - Special Projects Director for the National Underwater and Marine Agency.
  • Vladimir Polevoi - Chief of the Foreign Secrets Direction of the KGB.
  • Captain Andre Prevlov - Russian intelligence officer for the Soviet Navy's Department of Foreign Intelligence. Prevlov is the Soviet Navy's top spy master and the fish just choose one the CIA is hoping to catch using the Sicilian Defense and the Titanic as a trap.
  • Admiral James Sandecker - Director of the National Underwater and Marine Agency.
  • Dr. Dana Seagram - The wife of Dr. Gene Seagram of Meta Section. Dana is a marine archaeologist employed by Numa. She is an unhappy marriage with Dr. Gene Seagram and has a brief dalliance with Dirk Pitt.
  • Dr. Gene Seagram - Physicist and a chief evaluator for Meta Section. Seagram is the driving force behind the Sicilian Project who sacrifices everything including his marriage and eventually his sanity trying to bring it to reality.
  • Dr. Murray Silverstein - Director of the Alexandria College of Oceanography. His group conducted drop tank studies using a model of the Titanic which gave Pitt and his group the best spot to look for the wreck.
  • Admiral Boris Sloyuk - Director of Soviet Naval Intelligence.
  • Vasily Tilevitch - Marshal of the Soviet Union and Chief Director of Soviet Security.
  • John Vogel - Chief curator for the Washington Museum's Hall of Music. Vogel restores the coronet recovered by Giordino which helps pinpoint the location of the wreck.


Spoilers end here.

[edit] Allusions/references to other works

The author credits The Maiden Voyage by G. J. Marcus as an invaluable source during the writing of Raise the Titanic!.

[edit] Literary significance & criticism

Like many folks in the action adventure and thriller genres, Raise the Titanic! did not receive much critical attention from the mainstream literary press. It is however an important milestone in the career of its author Clive Cussler. Raise the Titanic! was the first of his novels to become a bestseller which helped ensure that Cussler can continue as a full-time writer and not have to go back to the advertising industry. It also showcases the continuing development of the Cussler style including a prologue set in the past, large numbers of characters, and multiple plot points that eventually come together in a riveting climax.


[edit] Allusions/references to actual history, geography and current science

The author references a number of real-life people, places, and events including: Ukrainian chess grandmaster Isaac Boleslavsky; The newspaper The Rocky Mountain News; United States Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson; President of the United States William Howard Taft; French mining conglomerate Société des mines de Lorraine; the opening of the tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh King Tut; Project Jennifer an operation run by the CIA and funded by Howard Hughes successfully recovered portions of a Soviet nuclear submarine in 17,000 feet of water 1974; and the Cuban Missile Crisis.

[edit] Release details

  • 1976, United States, The Viking Press 0-670-58933-0, October 26, 1976, hardcover.
  • 1990, United States, Pocket Books 0-671-72519-X, April 1, 1990, Mass market paperback.
  • 2004, United States, Berkeley reissue edition 0-425-19452-3, February 3, 2004, paperback.

[edit] The Film

Raise the Titanic
Directed by Jerry Jameson
Produced by William Fry
Lew Grade
Martin Starger
Written by Adam Kennedy
Starring Jason Robards
Richard Jordan
David Selby
Anne Archer
Alec Guinness
Music by John Barry
Cinematography Matthew F. Leonetti
Editing by Robert F. Shugrue
J. Terry Williams
Distributed by Associated Film Distribution
Release date(s) August 1, 1980
Running time 115 min.
Language English
Budget $36,000,000
IMDb profile

The book was the basis for a motion picture also titled Raise the Titanic, in 1980 by Lew Grade's ITC Entertainment, directed by Jerry Jameson. The film's tagline is "Once they said God Himself couldn't sink her. Then they said no man on earth could reach her. Now–you will be there when we... RAISE THE TITANIC"

The novel was a bestseller. However, the film was poorly received by the critics and proved to be a giant box office bomb, losing most of its estimated $40m budget. Lew Grade, one of its major backers, is said to have remarked that it would have been cheaper to lower the Atlantic. The film, along with other contemporary failures, is credited with ending Grade's involvement with cinema.

For his part, Clive Cussler was reportedly so disgusted by the film that for years he refused to allow a Hollywood adaptation of one of his works, until the 2005 film of his novel Sahara.

[edit] Main cast

[edit] Awards and nominations

  • Golden Raspberry Awards
Nominated: Worst Picture
Nominated: Worst Screenplay
Nominated: Worst Supporting Actor (David Selby)

[edit] Differences between film and book

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The plot of the film generally followed that of the book, but changed a number of key features. In both, the relationship between Dirk Pitt and Dr. Gene Seagram is colored by Pitt's previous relationship with Seagram's wife, but whilst in the book this leads to an affair between Pitt and Dana Archibald, and eventually to Seagram's near suicide, the film has Pitt and Seagram finally reaching a grudging friendship.

The ending of the film also differs markedly from that of the book. In both, Byzanium is not on board the Titanic, a fact only discovered once the vessel has been safely docked in New York. Instead, it is hidden in a false grave in Southby. In the book, the Byzanium is discovered thanks to Dirk Pitt and is used to power the defense system, completely changing the balance of power. In the film, although it is found by Pitt and Seagram. Pitt is than asked by the head gravedigger if they want them to dig it up. Pitt than tells Seagram that it is his decision. Seagram than decides to leave it there, fearing it will otherwise be used to build a "Byzanium Bomb" like Sandecker had told him in the previous scene on board the Titanic.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Trivia

  • The title sequence of the 2005 film Sahara (based on another of Clive Cussler's Dirk Pitt books) features a momentary appearance of a newspaper cutting which appears to report the raising of the Titanic.
  • Both book and film pre-date (by nine and five years respectively) the finding of the wreck of the Titanic by Robert Ballard. Whilst it was thought at the time of the sinking that the ship went down intact, Ballard discovered that it had in fact broken in two as it sank. This discovery rendered the plot of Raise the Titanic! moot.
  • The film score by John Barry, of the James Bond series, was widely praised as one of the film's only worthwhile elements. The score was never released on record, and the master tapes were lost. A re-recording by the City of Prague Philharmonic was however released on compact disc in 1999.

[edit] External Links

Un-Official Site

Dirk Pitt Novels The Mediterranean Caper | Iceberg | Raise the Titanic! | Vixen 03 | Night Probe! | Pacific Vortex! | Deep Six | Cyclops | Treasure | Dragon | Sahara | Inca Gold | Shock Wave | Flood Tide | Atlantis Found | Valhalla Rising | Trojan Odyssey | Black Wind | Treasure of Khan
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