I'm incensed, absolutely livid, about the continued whining over Rose's actions on the door in Titanic. It's been decades, and yet, the armchair experts and self-proclaimed geniuses continue to spew forth their misinformed, idiotic opinions.
Their nitpicking and second-guessing are a slap in the face to the survivors of the Titanic and an insult to the memory of those who perished. The movie isn't about the door; it's about the tragic love story, the class divisions, and the catastrophic consequences of hubris and greed.
But no, the door debate rages on, fueled by ignorance, arrogance, and a complete lack of empathy. The door was a piece of debris, a makeshift liferaft in the freezing waters of the North Atlantic. It wasn't a luxury cruise ship's life raft, designed to accommodate multiple people.
Rose was a survivor, not a superhero. She'd already endured unimaginable trauma, and yet, she's expected to defy the laws of physics and buoyancy to save Jack. The blame and vitriol directed at her are staggering.
Let's put this debate to rest once and for all. The door wasn't the issue; it was a symbol of the tragedy, the desperation, and the sacrifice. It's time to focus on the real story, the real tragedy, and the real heroes.