Photo: Paramount Pictures

James Cameronhas been on a decades-long mission to determine how accurately his 1997 filmTitanicdepicted the sinking of the actual RMS Titanic — and he’s foundTitanicwas “wrong on one point or the other.”
“The filmTitanicdepicts what we believed was an accurate portrayal of the ship’s last hours. We showed it sinking bow-first, lifting the stern high in the air, before its massive weight broke the vessel in two,” Cameron said in the special, perEW.
“Over the past 20 years, I’ve been trying to figure out if we got that right,” he added.
1,500 people died when the Titanic sank on its maiden voyage from Southampton, England, to New York City in the early hours of April 15, 1912, after the ship struck an iceberg. Cameron’s 1997 film sets the tragedy against a fictional romance on board between passengers Jack (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Rose DeWitt Bukater (Kate Winslet).
The director noted in the special that his depiction of how the ship actually sank might have differed from real life.
National Geographic/Spencer Stoner

“I have no way of saying that is in fact what happened, but I’d like to be able to rule it in as a possibility ‘cause then I don’t have to remake the freaking film!” Cameron joked, per the outlet. He also said that the film’s “dramatic image” ofTitanic’s stern sinking into the ocean was “as accurate as I could make it at the time.”
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Tests Cameron conducted involved a model version of the ship that did split in the same place as the original Titanic. The director’s team sank the model ship in a water tank with the use of rigging and pyrotechnics devices, as well as the Navy’s computer simulations that determined the ship would have snapped in two after spouting 23 degrees out of the water, perEW.
20th Century Fox/Paramount/Kobal/Shutterstock

“We found out you can have the stern sink vertically and you can have the stern fall back with a big splash, but you can’t have both,” Cameron said in the special. “So the film is wrong on one point or the other — I tend to think it’s wrong on the ‘fall back of the stern’ because of what we see at the bow of the wreck.”
“I think we can ruleinthe possibility of a vertical stern sinking, and I think we can ruleoutthe possibility of it both falling back and then going vertical,” the director added. “We were sort of half right in the movie.”
Cameron’s years-long dedication to studying the Titanic’s sinking does not overlook the fact that “what happened there was a real tragedy,” he said in the special.
“It happened to real people, and it still resonates down through time in this very powerful way,” the director noted.
Titanic: 25 Years Later With James Cameronis now streaming on Hulu.
source: people.com