Fandoms

People love Titanic so much that they want it to draw them like one of its French girls. They promise to never let go. They say that Titanic saved them…in every way a person can be saved.

And we're only exaggerating a teensy bit.

Titanic had enormous popular appeal, so there are a whole slew of fansites devoted to the film and its stars. For just one example, check out this guy, which reports on everything from James Cameron's activities to fan theories/analyses of just why Jack and Rose couldn't both fit on that floating door at the end of the movie (although Mythbusters proved that they totally could have).

Of course, there are also fandoms for the ship itself. There's a reason Cameron could drum up interest in 1997 for a boat that sank back in 1912—people are bananas for the story of Titanic.

In fact, one Titanic superfan, a billionaire in Australia, has commissioned a full-sized seaworthy replica that is set to sail in 2018—but this time, it'll have all appropriate safety provisions (including the right number of lifeboats) firmly in place (source).

If that's not an example of super fandom, we don't know what is.