Ship Of Dreams: Titanic Movie Diaries

Source: MPX Films

Ship Of Dreams: Titanic Movie Diaries

Motion Picture Exchange (MPX) is launching worldwide sales at AFM on Alexandra Boyd’s new behind-the-scenes documentary Ship Of Dreams: Titanic Movie Diaries featuring actors from James Cameron’s global smash Titanic.

The production from New Thirty Pictures, CF/40 Entertainment, and Great View Productions film reveals anecdotes and tales of auditions, experiences and life on set with Cameron and Titanic leads Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet.

In addition to Boyd herself, who appeared in the 1997 blockbuster, the film features Titanic cast members, Amy Gaipa, Liam Tuohy, Mark Capri, Rebecca Klinger, and Linda Kerns as they go back in time to read and explore their diaries from the production for the first time in 25 years.

Titanic remains one of the all-time highest grossing films at the box office on an unadjusted $2.26bn worldwide. Boyd, Nick Loren and Elizabeth Yng-Wong serve as producers on the behind-the-scenes documentary.

“The magic of movies is transcendent among audiences and the special touch of magic that James Cameron displayed to the world through Titanic is a lasting effect that will captivate audiences for generations to come,” said Ryan Bury, SVP of MPX.

“To be partnering with the filmmakers to help bring fans of Titanic new untold stories of one of the most beloved films of all time is sheer pleasure and delight for both myself and MPX as a whole.”

Boyd called Ship Of Dreams: Titanic Movie Diaries a love letter to the power of film and the film industry”,adding that she wanted to explore the ongoing fascination of the Titanic story and asked fellow cast members to read from their diaries for the first time in 25 years.

She continued, “The fans take passion and obsession to another level with their attention to every detail and frame of the film, whether it be the Jack and Rose love story, the exquisite props, sets and costumes or the fact that 1,500 people perished in the icy waters of the North Sea on April 15th 1912.”