The New Zealand Herald

Studio nerves almost sunk Titanic

Director opens up on behind-scenes dramas that had him terrified he would never work in film again

- Bronte Coy — news.com.au

Twenty years after James Cameron scored the biggest hit in movie history (at the time) with Titanic, he has finally opened up about the behindthe-scenes drama that threatened to sink the project.

In an excerpt from Stephen Galloway’s new biography Leading Lady: Sherry Lansing and the Making of A Hollywood Groundbrea­ker, (published in the Hollywood Reporter), the legendary director revealed that the studio totally lost confidence in the blockbuste­r as it neared its 1997 release date.

“The business heads at Paramount acted like they’d been diagnosed with terminal cancer — a lot of grim faces and a triage approach to releasing the movie,” he explained.

“Everyone thought they were going to lose money, and all efforts were simply to make sure the haemorrhag­e was not fatal.”

Plagued by issues with the complex visual effects, and determined to shave the movie’s length down to a more manageable size, the director was forced to push back the release date by a month to August — which was considered “a dumping ground”.

It didn’t help that the movie was being “pummelled relentless­ly in the press” — about everything from epic cost overruns to set safety and delivery dates.

“We were the biggest morons in Hollywood history and the press had the long knives out, sharpening them as we approached our summer release. It would have reached a crescendo of scorn just as we put the film in theatres,” Cameron said.

He pitched the concept that the best way to deal with the press was to take a step back — to “move away from the crescendo of ridicule and let them fall on their face”. And it worked perfectly. “No one more surprised than myself, because nothing like it had ever been tried. But it was a strategy that revealed itself in the heat of battle. Desperate times called for desperate measures.”

Amid all the drama, studio head Sherry Lansing finally provided a turning point for the movie when she saw the uncut version — and loved it. Despite his relief at having the drama-plagued production validated, Cameron admitted he still believed it would end his career.

“Nobody thought we were EVER going to break even.

“And I pretty much assumed at that time that I’d never work again.”

Titanic went on to make US$2.18 billion at the box office, making it one of the highest grossing stories of all time — and cementing Cameron’s position as a Hollywood legend.

 ??  ?? Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in a scene that helped cement Titanic as one of the biggest hits in cinema history.
Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in a scene that helped cement Titanic as one of the biggest hits in cinema history.

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