Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet inTitanic.Photo: Merie Weismiller Wallace/Paarmount

A quarter-century has passed sinceJames Cameron’sTitanicpremiered in theaters!
25 years later, 1997’sTitanicstill stands tall asone of the highest-grossing movies ever made, and director Cameron, 68, recently toldDeadlinehe “can’t imagine that film” without its two leading stars inLeonardo DiCaprioandKate Winslet.
“I think about that casting Leonardo [DiCaprio] and Kate [Winslet] inTitanic. Leo, the studio didn’t want him; I had to fight for him,” the director told the outlet during an interview about his career and his new movie,Avatar: The Way of Water.
“Kate really liked him,” the director said of DiCaprio,now 48. “And then Leonardo decided he didn’t want to make the movie. So then I had to talk him into it.”
During the interview, Cameron noted thatTitanic"wouldn’t have been that film" if DiCaprio had decided not to take his role as Jack or if anything with the production had come together differently.
“You think at any one of those places, if that had really kind of frayed apart, it would have been somebody else and it wouldn’t have been that film,” he told the outlet. “And I can’t imagine that film without him and without her.”
And… cut! Cameron directing DiCaprio and Winslet in a scene from Titanic. (The blade of Rose’s ax was rubber.).Paramount Pictures and Twentieth Century Fox

“So there’s a fragility to the whole process, there’s a fragility to success,” Cameron added. “You change one element and it doesn’t work.”
In avideo career retrospectiveforGQpublished in November, the director spilled oncasting DiCaprio as JackforTitanic, whichalmost fell apart over the actor’s poor attitudeduring auditions.
“There was a meeting with Leo and then there was a screen test with Leo,” Cameron said, setting the scene. “The meeting was funny because I am sitting in my conference room, waiting to meet an actor. And I look around, and all the women in the entire office are in the meeting. They all wanted to meet Leo. It was hysterical.”
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The filmmaker said the first meeting went well and DiCaprio “charmed everybody” so he was asked back for a read with Winslet, who had already been cast. It did not go as smoothly. At least, not at first.
Alamy Stock Photo

“So he came back a couple of days later, and I had the camera set up to record the video,” Cameron recalled. “He didn’t know he was going to test. He thought it was another meeting to meet Kate. So I said, ‘Okay, we’ll just go in the next room, and we’ll run some lines and I’ll video it.’ And he said, ‘You mean,I’m reading?’ I said, ‘Yeah.’ "
DiCaprio reluctantly agreed to read and was indignant until the camera was rolling, Cameron claimed, but once he gave DiCaprio the go-ahead to read, the actor “turned into Jack.”
“Kate just lit up, and they played the scene,” the director said. “Dark clouds had opened up, and a ray of sun came down and lit up Jack. I’m like, ‘All right. He’s the guy.’ "
Titanicis currently theeighth highest-grossing movie everat the domestic box office.Top Gun: MaverickpassedTitanicin Augustas it shot to the fifth-highest grossing movie of all time.
PEOPLE’s new special edition,Titanic: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet and the Making of an Epic Love Story, is available now wherever magazines are sold.
source: people.com