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Movie Information - Titanic
Building and Sinking of the Ship Set
While Rose DeWitt Bukater and Jack
Dawson were able to outrun the forces threatening to end their
romance within the "unsinkable" steel hull of Titanic ,
not even their committed passion could protect them from the
inevitable. Recreating the ship's terrifying demise would be the
most physically challenging aspect of "Titanic." The
central goal in director Cameron's mind: to film these sequences
as if he had actually been there at the time of the accident.
Cameron recounts, "We had a series of big pre-visualization
sessions for about a month and a half. We built a study model of
the ship and went around it with a video camera. We learned the
geography of Titanic, as well as which angles made look its most
imposing and most beautiful."
As the process continued, the sets required to film the ship and
its destruction became apparent.
"You can't just build one set," Cameron continues,
"you have to build a number of sets at different angles
because the ship was changing angles continuously over a period
of time."
Working within rigid engineering and safety specifications, the
final hours of Titanic were filmed in the enormous exterior and
interior shooting tanks. The elegant First Class Dining Saloon
and the three-story Grand Staircase, both built virtually
life-size, were constructed on a hydraulic platform at the bottom
of the 30-foot-deep interior tank on Stage 2, designed to be
angled and flooded with 5 million gallons of filtered seawater
drawn from the ocean only yards away. This was only one of the
enormous logistical feats accomplished by use of complex
hydraulics and construction.
Production designer Peter Lamont, whose impressive body of work
has earned him three Academy AwardŽ nominations
("Aliens," "The Spy Who Loved Me" and
"Fiddler on the Roof"), took on this enormous
assignment as an irresistible challenge to his distinguished
career. At the onset, he was able to obtain from shipbuilders
Harland & Wolff copies of the original blueprints of Titanic
along with Thomas Andrews' own notebook of remarks on the ship's
design features. This was the first time such material had ever
been made available since Titanic's sinking.
During the course of his research, Lamont discovered that the
manufacturer of the original carpeting for the Dining Saloon and
Reception Room on D Deck was still in business. The company, BMK
Stoddard of England, still had the pattern on file and could
reproduce the dyes. Immediately, production put in an order,
adding another element of reality.
An Englishman given to understatement, Lamont acknowledges that
perhaps his greatest challenge in this vast undertaking was the
coordination of "Titanic's" design elements.
"For nearly a year," Lamont says, "we had sets and
furnishings being built in Mexico City, Los Angeles and London,
with timelines for shipping to a facility that wasn't even built
yet. The quantity of items we authentically reproduced -- deck
chairs, table lamps, leaded windows, White Star crystal and
china, luggage, lifejackets, marine accessories -- amounted to
literally thousands of pieces because part of the goal of the art
direction was to recreate the size of it all -- titanic.
Constructing the 775-foot filming exterior set of Titanic is an
undertaking as complex, in a different way, as building the real
thing, but in just one-tenth the time."
As Lamont also points out, providing an additional challenge was
the fact that, since it was Titanic's first voyage, its interiors
were barely completed and hardly photographed. Through extensive
research and the aid of consultants Don Lynch and Ken Marschall,
his department was able to accurately recreate the opulence of
the ship's famed First Class Dining Saloon, Reception Room, First
Class Smoking Room, Promenade, Palm Court Cafe, Gymnasium and
several deluxe period Staterooms (including Cal and Rose's
Empire-style suite) based on reference photos from Titanic's
sister ship, the Olympic, and the few interior photos of Titanic
that exist.
Great care was also taken in providing a realistic tour of the
more Spartan realms below the first-class decks of Titanic,
including the Third Class Berths and General Room; the Marconi
Wireless Room; the cavernous Boiler and Engine Rooms; and the
huge Cargo Hold, where the spoils of the rich (including a
handsome new maroon and black Renault) were stored. All combined,
the 775-foot ship set was about 10% smaller than the actual
Titanic, eliciting a sense of awe from all involved.
"It took us a long time to really get our minds around how
big Titanic really was," Cameron says. "It was huge,
880-feet long. In weight, it was 48,000 tons in displacement, but
in physical weight of steel, it was closer to 60,000 tons. This
thing was a monster."
In order to promote the illusion of Titanic being at sea, the
ship set and the tank were strategically constructed along the
coastline with an unbroken view of the ocean to create an
infinite horizon during the day or night. Also, the night scenes
would require a tower crane to position lights well above the
already 45-foot high boat deck at the ship set's
"level" position and higher at the stern when in the
"sinking" position.
Given the towering dimensions of the ship, Cameron made great use
of the Akela Crane, an advanced piece of filmmaking hardware. One
of the largest camera cranes in the world, it has a reach of
80-feet. However, in order to fully the majesty of the Titanic at
sea and in peril, Cameron put his background in engineering into
play again.
"We built this big tower crane with almost a 200-foot
reach," Cameron says, "and we put the track along the
side of the ship in the water tank. We could go right over the
top to the funnels and reach a point on the ship from end to end
in a space of five minutes. We could put a camera anywhere over
the whole length of that ship."
Cameron himself would be suspended high above the ship set, using
a gyro-stabilized camera mounted on the crane basket. This would
allow Cameron and director of photography Russell Carpenter
greater flexibility in shooting material for visual effects and
establishing shots of the ship, as well as moving in close for
dramatic moments involving the actors.
"We could stabilize the image enough," the director
continues, "and use it for visual effect shots and for big,
beautiful establishing shots. It evolved into a very important
tool."
As for the ship set itself, the structure was a completely
finished, two-decked platform (A Deck and the boat deck with a
facade of riveted steel hull plating descending to the water
line). Producer Jon Landau estimates that "almost a thousand
effects shots were eliminated because of the ability to shoot on
the full-sized ship set."
Over a three-week Christmas hiatus, the set was repositioned to a
6% angle via a complex "jacking process," involving two
construction companies, to simulate more advanced stages of
sinking. For the final stages of the disaster, the ship would be
separated into two pieces, the front half sinking in 40-feet of
water using powerful hydraulics. One of the more chilling facts
about the actual sinking was that there were only enough
lifeboats to handle barely half the passengers aboard.
Heightening this tragedy was the crew's failure to fill the boats
to capacity, resulting in only a third of the passengers making
it to safety. For the film, the production team was able to apply
a layer of realism to this technically complex and emotionally
powerful sequence. The lifeboat davits, which is the system of
pulleys and mechanisms required to launch the vessels, were
constructed by the same company that built the davits for the
actual Titanic.
"The Wellan Davit Company," Cameron explains,
"built our davits to their old plans. We literally had the
very same piece of machinery that was used on Titanic to lower a
lifeboat."
In the early hours of April 15, 1912, the flooding bow of Titanic
pulled the forward portion of the ship down, lifting the stern
out of the water to a terrifying angle. When the stress on the
hull reached critical mass, with the two portions still attached
at the keel, the descending bow pulled the stern straight up to a
vertical position, where it bobbed for a few minutes before
plunging like an elevator into the dark sea. To recreate this,
the aftmost section of the ship set, or "poop deck,"
was relocated onto a special tilting platform, basically a giant
see-saw built at the edge of the tank.
Throughout the course of the production, the filmmakers were
continually reminded that water is one of the most powerful
forces on earth. "Whenever we tried to deal with water, we
were always frustrated by its weight and power," Cameron
says. "That's one of the interesting things about the
Titanic disaster. They thought they were the lords of the sea.
They thought they had dominated nature. But nature will never be
dominated. We have to ride with it, but we're not going to
steamroll right over the top of it. They thought they could pave
the world and drive their big, metal ships across the ocean with
impunity. They were wrong."
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