The Four-Minute Trailer That Saved 'Titanic' From Disaster and Launched a Blockbuster!

Oscar-winning producer Jon Landau, renowned for his work on cinematic giants like “Titanic” and the “Avatar” franchise, penned a revealing behind-the-scenes memoir titled “The Bigger Picture.” This book, which delves into his pivotal role in creating some of Hollywood’s most successful blockbusters, is set to be published posthumously on November 4th. Landau tragically passed away from cancer in 2024 at the age of 63, leaving behind a legacy of film production excellence.
An excerpt from his memoir offers a candid look back at the tumultuous rollout of 1997’s “Titanic.” At the time, this $200 million epic was widely perceived within the entertainment industry as a potential disaster, one that many believed could single-handedly sink director James Cameron’s career. The stakes were incredibly high, and the perception of failure loomed large over the entire production team.
Landau emphasizes the paramount importance of a film's first trailer. He highlights that it represents the best opportunity to captivate an audience, serving as a crucial two-and-a-half-minute (150-second) window to convey the movie’s narrative and emotional essence. For “Titanic,” this critical stage became the battleground for a significant internal conflict, much like many other aspects of the film’s development.
Translating a monumental three-hour-and-fourteen-minute film (or, as Landau playfully puts it, “two-hour-and-seventy-four-minute”) into a standard 90-second preview was no simple feat. The production team, working with both Fox and Paramount, meticulously crafted a four-minute-and-two-second trailer and submitted it. However, the response from Paramount was far from enthusiastic. Executive producer Rae Sanchini received a call from Rob Friedman, Paramount’s head of distribution and marketing, who famously expressed his strong disapproval by stating he was “throwing up all over my shoes.”
Paramount had independently produced its own shorter trailer from the same footage, which the production team dubbed the “John Woo trailer.” This version, characterized by flash cuts, pounding music, gunshots, and screams, presented “Titanic” as an action film, completely misrepresenting its true nature. Landau and his team fiercely resisted, engaging in arguments that escalated from reasoning to outright screaming with Paramount executives. Ultimately, they appealed to Sherry Lansing, Paramount’s chairperson and CEO, who made the crucial decision to veto her own distribution department and allow the production team to test their preferred trailer at ShoWest, the influential conference of the National Association of Theatre Owners in Las Vegas.
The theatre owners attending ShoWest were considered vital arbiters, playing a key role in deciding which movies to book and how many screens to allocate. The anticipation and tension surrounding the screening were palpable. Having invested five years and $200 million, the team felt the immense pressure, especially with widespread media negativity, exemplified by a Time magazine cover story on “Titanic” emblazoned with the ominous line, “Glub, Glub, Glub . . .”
At the Paramount table during the ShoWest banquet, Landau and Sanchini sat nervously alongside top executives and celebrities like Kurt Russell, who was there promoting his upcoming film “Breakdown.” As their extended trailer concluded, Kurt Russell’s enthusiastic declaration, “I’d pay ten dollars just to see that trailer again,” resonated powerfully. This pivotal moment led to a special dispensation from the Motion Picture Association, which typically capped trailers at 150 seconds, allowing “Titanic” to release its four-minute-and-two-second trailer globally. From that day forward, the narrative surrounding the film began to shift; even negative articles started to conclude with the sentiment that “the movie might actually be good,” marking a significant turning point in the film’s journey to becoming a cultural phenomenon.
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