Study commissioned: Cameron wants to end dispute over "Titanic" door

Since "Titanic" first hit theaters in 1997, fans around the world have been debating one question: Could the main character Rose have saved her loved one if she had let him at "her" door in the sea? Director James Cameron wants to finally put an end to this debate through science.

Study commissioned: Cameron wants to end dispute over "Titanic" door

Since "Titanic" first hit theaters in 1997, fans around the world have been debating one question: Could the main character Rose have saved her loved one if she had let him at "her" door in the sea? Director James Cameron wants to finally put an end to this debate through science.

With the help of scientists, "Titanic" director James Cameron would like to end the discussion about whether his classic film could not have had a happy ending after all. "We did a scientific study to put an end to this whole thing once and for all and put a stake in her heart," the 68-year-old told the Toronto Sun.

The question is still hotly debated around 25 years after the box office hit: Wouldn't the main character Jack Dawson, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, also fit on the door on which his lover Rose was floating in the sea after the ship sank?

Cameron would now like to end the debate: The raft was rebuilt for his experiment. Two stunt people with the same body mass as the main characters, equipped with sensors, were placed in ice water to determine their chances of survival using various methods. Summing up the result, Cameron said, "There was no way they could both have survived. Only one could survive." The experiment will be featured in a National Geographic special in February. "Maybe in 25 years I won't have to deal with it anymore."

In the interview, Cameron underlined that he had no regrets about the ending: "He had to die. It's like Romeo and Juliet. It's a film about love and sacrifice and mortality. Love is measured by the sacrifice it makes."

It's not Cameron's first admission to the door controversy. In 2017, he told Vanity Fair magazine, "Had he lived, the end of the movie would have been meaningless." Winslet said shortly thereafter on Stephen Colbert's Late Show, "He just should have tried harder to get to the door." Winslet and Colbert re-enacted the scene and showed: There would have been enough space!

Celine Dion, who sang the Titanic song "My Heart Will Go On," suspected in 2019 that Jack was so frozen from the cold ocean water that he no longer had the strength to jump on the door. DiCaprio was also asked about it in a 2019 interview by the broadcaster "MTV" by his fellow actors Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie. Unlike Cameron, Winslet, and Dion, DiCaprio just said, "No comment."