Poster Horner's best-known score is for "Titanic."
Horner's best-known score is for "Titanic."
20th Century Fox

Flicks in Five: The musical love story of 'Titanic'

Flicks in Five: 'Titanic'

The Academy Awards started in 1929 as an intimate, formal-dinner gathering of friends in the industry at Hollywood's Roosevelt Hotel.

The awards dinner gained momentum after World War II and became so popular, it started being broadcast on television starting in 1953, where it was known as The Academy Awards until 2013, when it was rebranded as The Oscars. That's the nickname of the statue; some say that nickname came from Bette Davis, who named it after one of her husbands, and some say the Academy's secretary thought the statue looked like her Uncle Oscar. Either way, the name stuck.

In all of that 86-year history, there are three films that have tied for winning the most statuettes of Uncle Oscar: Ben Hur, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, and the 1997 release, Titanic.

It was at the '98 Oscars at which Titanic won 11 awards, including Best Director for James Cameron and Best Picture. It also walked away with both music awards, for Best Original Score (composed by James Horner) and for Best Original Song, "My Heart Will Go On," which became a big hit and the signature tune of the woman who sang it in the soundtrack, Celine Dion.

On this week's Flicks in Five, we'll listen to "Take Her to Sea, Mr. Murdoch" from the Titanic soundtrack, composed by James Horner.

Saturday Cinema

Tune in to Saturday Cinema at 10 a.m. central Saturday, June 2, as we survey big-budget epics, including "Cleopatra," "Pirates of the Caribbean" and "The Hobbit."

Just click on the Listen button below to hear the live stream.

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