To end the argument once and for all, the Academy-Award-winning director decided to pump Titanic fanatics with disclosure info before the film’s cinematic re-launch on February 10.
Cameron put together a team, including two stunt performers, to reinvent the scene and attempt four different events to see whether Jack could have survived in any of them.
Scenario 1: We have both Jack and Rose on the door. But their combined weight submerges them in the glacial waters.
Scenario 2: Jack and Rose strategically position themselves such that their upper bodies are out of the water. Chances are they could have survived, but it requires expert knowledge and tenacity to pull that off.
Scenario 3: Rose offers Jack her life jacket, which could have aided in insulating him in the biting ocean. But could have Jack survived? Probably not. Thousands of victims froze to death with lifejackets on. The lifeboats took too long to return for survivors and many had already died from hypothermia.
Scenario 4: Requires Jack and Rose to perform a series of strenuous exercises, presumably to generate body heat. But science has it that when the body hits icy water, it only has 10 minutes of meaningful muscle movement, thereafter, the below-zero temperatures cause a lack of mobility in the arms, hands and legs.