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regular-article-logo Sunday, 05 May 2024

James Cameron conducts scientific study to prove Jack had to die in Titanic

Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet headlined the 1997 blockbuster

PTI Toronto Published 17.12.22, 12:38 PM
James Cameron  with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet on the sets of Titanic.

James Cameron with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet on the sets of Titanic. Twitter

James Cameron recently conducted a scientific study to prove that there was no way both Jack Dawson and Rose DeWitt Bukater could have survived on the floating door at the end of his 1997 blockbuster Titanic.

Fans have long argued that Rose, played by Kate Winslet, should have made room for Leonardo DiCaprio’s Jack on the floating piece of lumber after Titanic’s sinking in the epic disaster film. Rose, who lay atop the door, survived in the end, while Jack, who held on to the edge, froze to his death in the icy Atlantic waters.

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Cameron, who in 2019 had called Jack’s death an ‘artistic choice’ that had nothing to do with the physics of two people fitting on the door, has now revealed the team did a thorough forensic analysis to justify the climax of the movie.

“We have done a scientific study to put this whole thing to rest and drive a stake through its heart once and for all. We have since done a thorough forensic analysis with a hypothermia expert who reproduced the raft from the movie, and we’re going to do a little special on it that comes out in February,” the director recently told The Toronto Sun.

The special’s February release coincides with a 4K restoration of Titanic, scheduled to hit the screens on Valentine’s Day weekend of 2023.

According to Cameron, they took two stunt people who were the same body mass as Winslet and DiCaprio to help with the study.

“We put sensors all over them and inside them and we put them in ice water and we tested to see whether they could have survived through a variety of methods and the answer was, there was no way they both could have survived. Only one could survive,” he added.

Jack ‘needed’ to die in the 1997 film, argued the filmmaker, whose latest release Avatar: The Way of Water hit the theatres on Friday.

“It’s like Romeo and Juliet. It’s a movie about love and sacrifice and mortality. Love is measured by sacrifice... Maybe after 25 years, I won’t have to deal with this anymore,” the 68-year-old director continued.

While DiCaprio has maintained a no-comment stance on the debate, Winslet previously teased audiences by saying Jack ‘could have’ fitted on that door at popular TV host Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night show.

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