Cameron on the possibility of alternate ending for Titanic
Titanic
James Cameron has conceded that Jack Dawson “might have lived” if he’d made it onto the raft at the end of his 1997 blockbuster, Titanic. To celebrate the film’s 25th anniversary, the filmmaker participated in National Geographic special Titanic: 25 Years Later With James Cameron, in which three scientific tests were conducted by stunt actors to determine if Jack (Leonardo DiCaprio) could fit on a raft alongside Rose DeWitt Bukater (Kate Winslet).
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In one of the stunts, two actors about the same size as Winslet and DiCaprio, performed the “strenuous activities” that the characters went through in the film. Cameron then had the female stunt performer give her life jacket to the male performer, which does not happen in the film. Had this been shown in the movie, Jack would have been “stabilised,” and could have potentially “made it until the lifeboat got there”, Cameron said. But the character wouldn’t have allowed this to happen, Cameron explained, because Jack’s “thought process was, I’m not going to do one thing that jeopardised her”.
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“Jack might’ve lived, but there are a lot of variables,” Cameron reportedly said in the documentary. “Based on what I know today, I would have made the raft smaller.” Moviebuffs have spent years trying to prove that there was enough space on the floating door for both Rose and Jack to survive. Cameron has responded to the theories before, stating that it wasn’t a “question of room, but a question of buoyancy”. He reiterated, “It is clear that there is only enough buoyancy available for one person, so Jack makes the decision to let Rose be that person.”
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