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Chapter 156 - CH : 151 Standing With The Sinking Ship

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******

He leaned closer to the microphones.

"They will be entirely wrong to be disappointed. Because *Titanic* is not a film that opens massively and drops fast. It is a film that builds. It is a slow, unstoppable tidal wave. Once word-of-mouth reaches a critical, cultural threshold—once enough people have sat in a dark theater and actually experienced what the film does to their nervous system in its final hour—the traditional box office trajectory will reverse. It will not drop next weekend. It will climb."

He let that impossible, mathematically absurd statement sit in the quiet air.

"My absolute prediction for the North American domestic total is above six hundred million dollars," Marvin declared.

The assembled, seasoned Hollywood reporters produced a collective, audible sound that was approximately halfway between genuine laughter and profound shock.

"Six hundred million?" someone repeated, incredulous. "That's impossible."

"Above six hundred million," Marvin confirmed softly, unbothered by their disbelief. "Worldwide, the gross will soar above one point six billion dollars. Possibly significantly above."

"Mr. Meyers, the worldwide record is currently *Jurassic Park* at nine hundred million—"

"I am acutely aware of what the worldwide record currently is," Marvin purred mildly, his dimple flashing. "I am simply suggesting to you that it may not remain the record for very much longer."

A pause settled over the terrace, in which several veteran journalists appeared to be recalibrating their understanding of reality. The boy wasn't just predicting a success; he was predicting a fundamental, historical rewriting of the global cinematic economy.

"What about the song?" another reporter suddenly called out, changing the angle. "Your contribution to the score has been universally praised, even by the critics who hated the film."

"James Horner composed a brilliant, sweeping orchestral masterpiece," Marvin said, his tone carrying the genuine, respectful conviction of someone stating an artistic fact, rather than performing false modesty. "The specific theme score that I contributed was built meticulously around the foundation what he had already created. I was merely an instrument in service of his grand vision, not the other way around."

He paused, Marvin is clearly lying to give the old man his shares, a proud gleam entering his eyes as he thought of the music.

"However, the background score that emerged from that intense collaboration is, I believe, the most emotionally devastating, complete piece of music I have ever been part of. As for the vocal track, I wrote the lyrics to 'My Heart Will Go On' and arranged the final composition specifically to rip the heart out of anyone listening to it. I am very grateful to Mr. Horner and to Mr. Cameron for the opportunity to bleed on their canvas."

"Do you honestly think 'My Heart Will Go On' will win the Oscar for Best Original Song?"

A slight pause. The perfect, arrogant, sovereign pause.

"Yes," Marvin smiled, adjusting his blazer. "I do. Have a wonderful afternoon, ladies and gentlemen."

---

The statement traveled through the global media ecosystem at the rapid speed of late 1997. It was considerably faster than the slow print cycles of the previous decade, but vastly slower than the instant, digital viral culture that was coming.

And it traveled with the explosive amplification that naturally attaches to any public statement that is sufficiently absurd, arrogant, and surprising to be newsworthy.

By mid-afternoon on December 21st, Marvin's impossible prediction had been featured on *Entertainment Tonight*, *Access Hollywood*, and two of the three major American network evening news programs.

All of them treated the press conference footage with a potent mixture of patronizing bemusement and outright incredulity. It was, frankly, the appropriate, logical journalistic response to a twelve-year-old boy publicly predicting that a film—which had opened to mixed reviews and a soft $8.6 million Friday—would eventually gross over 1.6 billion dollars worldwide.

The response from the industry press was immediate, loud, and multi-directional.

*The Hollywood Reporter* ran a massive piece the next morning under the headline: **CHILD PRODIGY PLAYS PROPHET — OR FOOL:**

> *"Marvin Meyers, whose debut EP has spent the last four months demonstrating that his musical gifts are genuine and considerable, ventured today into a territory considerably further from his demonstrated competence: high-stakes box office prophecy.

> His public prediction that Titanic—currently sitting on a disastrous opening day gross and a critical consensus that ranges from lukewarm to hostile—will eventually gross over 1.6 billion dollars worldwide places him in rare company. He is either in the company of unparalleled visionaries who see what others cannot, or he is in the tragic company of child stars who have completely mistaken the unearned confidence that comes with great talent for actual competence in unrelated, complex financial areas. History will be the ultimate judge. The industry, currently, is not feeling charitable.

> One senior studio executive, speaking on the condition of anonymity, put it brutally: 'The kid makes beautiful music and writes wonderful scripts and is a great actor. He should stick to what he's good at. Box office tracking isn't it. Nobody who has seen the miserable numbers today thinks this film is going anywhere near six hundred million domestic. That's not a prediction, that's a hallucination.'"*

*Variety* took a similar, skeptical line, though with slightly more cynical, corporate nuance:

> *"Whatever one thinks of Meyers' impossible prediction—and the industry's collective assessment appears to be that it falls somewhere between optimistic and clinically delusional—his very public support for the film represents a fascinating, calculated risk.

> Meyers undeniably has commercial skin in the game: the single release of 'My Heart Will Go On,' which he wrote, arranged, and sang, is scheduled to hit retail shelves in the coming weeks. A strong film performance would clearly benefit the single's commercial prospects. His statement today could therefore easily be read as desperate self-interest dressed up as prophecy.

> Then again, the terrifying confidence with which the twelve-year-old made the prediction—the exact numbers, the specific timeline, the word-of-mouth mechanism he described—possessed the quality of genuine, unshakable conviction rather than calculated PR positioning. Either Marvin Meyers genuinely knows something the rest of the world doesn't, or he has just made a very public, humiliating bet that he will spend the next several years deeply regretting."*

The anonymous, unverified commentary that rapidly accumulated on the emerging early internet forums and entertainment news channel hotlines was a chaotic, beautiful mess of worship and mockery:

*"Marvin, please just do your own thing. You might be a genius in the recording booth, and I myself absolutely loved 'My Heart Will Go On'—I'll give you that, the song is a masterpiece and I've already played the radio rip twelve times—but box office prediction is not in your lane. This is incredibly rash. You are going to look stupid."*

*"Our little Hollywood genius got arrogant after one Platinum EP and a film contribution. Who exactly does he think he is? He makes music and movies. Cameron makes movies. These are entirely different disciplines, and the sooner the kid figures out he isn't God, the better."*

*"Marvin is clearly trying to curry favor with James Cameron in a very unconventional, public way. But perhaps he should try sucking up to someone else. Spielberg, maybe. Cameron is currently underwater in every sense available."*

*"I genuinely do not care what Marvin Meyers says about the box office. What I DO care about is that he sang the most devastatingly beautiful piece of music I've heard in five years. I will be purchasing the single the moment it is available in physical format. The boy is a musical genius. The prophecy stuff is going to age badly, but the song is eternal."*

*"I genuinely cannot decide if this kid is a visionary or a complete idiot. The song though. The song is not the work of an idiot."*

*"Six hundred million North American? One point six billion worldwide? I'm keeping this newspaper cutting so I can find it and laugh when he's wrong. Although—and I honestly can't believe I'm saying this—the arrogance in his voice makes me think he might actually be worth listening to on other things too. Against my better judgment."*

---

James Cameron was standing in the chaotic, dimly lit editing suite of Lightstorm Entertainment when the call came through.

He had been trapped inside, or immediately adjacent to, various editing suites for the better part of the last nine months. This unbroken imprisonment had contributed significantly to the quality of exhaustion that he was currently carrying.

It was not merely the acute, stinging exhaustion of basic sleep deprivation—though he had certainly experienced that in catastrophic, hallucinatory quantities. It was the deeper, cellular exhaustion of a man who has been forcing his biological system to operate at maximum, sustained output for a period that vastly exceeds human design specifications.

He picked up the landline receiver. The call was from Alan Ladd Jr., a senior executive at 20th Century Fox. Ladd had just seen the explosive, breaking press coverage of Marvin Meyers' statement outside the Beverly Hills Hotel, and he was calling with a frantic question that he attempted to frame diplomatically, but that Cameron heard with crystal clarity: "Did you orchestrate this desperate PR stunt?"

"No," Cameron rasped, his voice raw, rubbing his bloodshot eyes. "I have never spoken to Marvin Meyers outside of the scoring sessions on the Fox lot."

"He just stood in front of eighteen cameras and predicted one point six billion dollars," Ladd said, his voice vibrating with a mixture of corporate disbelief and desperate hope. "Worldwide."

"I heard," Cameron said flatly.

"He predicted six hundred million North America, Jim. He said the drop-off isn't coming."

"I heard that too, Alan."

A static-filled pause stretched across the studio line.

"Do you... do you actually think the kid is right?" Ladd asked, his voice dropping into a register of quiet, vulnerable panic.

Cameron looked up at the editing monitor in front of him. It was frozen on a high-definition frame from the film's final, devastating sequence. The massive ship was fully gone, swallowed by the black abyss. The freezing ocean surface was scattered with wreckage and the floating, frozen bodies of the dead. Kate Winslet's pale, desperate face was in the foreground, moving through the dark, icy water toward a silver whistle.

Cameron had spent three years of his life making this film. He had spent every available resource—financial, creative, physical, and emotional—on bringing it into existence. He had fought the studios for every extra dollar. He had willingly surrendered his entire director's fee just to finish the visual effects. He had slept approximately four hours a night for the last eight continuous months.

He also possessed—in the unusual, and arrogant way that visionary directors sometimes do—a profound, unshakeable sense that the thing he had meticulously built was real and magnificent in a way that vastly exceeded its current, cynical reception by the press.

"Yeah," Cameron breathed, staring at the frozen frame of Rose. "I think the kid is right."

Another pause.

"He called it a masterpiece to the press," Ladd said softly.

"It is," Cameron stated. He said it with the simple conviction of an artist who has finished bleeding on the canvas and finally knows exactly what it is, completely without the cheap performance of Hollywood confidence or the pathetic hedge of false modesty. "It's a masterpiece, Alan. The critics are having the entirely wrong argument about it. They're reviewing the script; they aren't reviewing the experience."

"But Jim, the opening day Friday gross—"

"The opening day gross is one single data point," Cameron snapped, suddenly finding a reserve of energy he didn't know he had. "Wait for the Sunday totals. Wait for the second weekend. Wait for the word-of-mouth to actually start circulating in Middle America."

He genuinely believed this when he said it.

However, he had also, in the darker, more terrifying hours of the previous weeks, believed the exact opposite. He had metaphorically held the razor in the dark—he had held the very real possibility that catastrophic failure was imminent. He had agonized over the fact that the financial gap between where the film currently was and where it desperately needed to be was enormous, and the specific mechanisms by which it might actually close the gap were not entirely clear to him.

And then, a twelve-year-old boy had stepped out into the Los Angeles sunlight on a Saturday morning, completely unprompted, and said to the assembled press corps: *This film is extraordinary, and James Cameron is one of the great directors of this generation.*

And James Cameron—who had heard nothing supportive from approximately anyone in the industry for the last three months—felt something shift in his chest that he was not going to examine too closely, because it was far too useful to his sanity to interrogate.

He hung up with Ladd and immediately dialed the Fox music department.

"Did you tell Meyers to come forward?" Cameron demanded the second the executive answered.

"Jim, I swear to God, we have never contacted him about PR. Not once," the panicked executive replied. "We wouldn't dare. His CAA agents would slaughter us."

"He just... did it entirely on his own?"

"Apparently. The kid just walked out of his hotel and dropped a nuke on the press."

Cameron sat with this information for a long moment in the dark suite.

"Huh," he muttered.

He hung up and dialed James Horner's private line.

"James. Did you know the kid was going to do this?" Cameron asked.

Horner, calling from his own home studio, sounded equally bewildered. "No, Jim. I am just as shocked as you are. But honestly? The boy does exactly what he decides to do, when he decides to do it. I learned that very quickly during the scoring sessions. You don't direct Marvin Meyers; you simply lived with it."

"He called the film a masterpiece," Cameron said, still trying to process the magnitude of the endorsement. "Publicly. On camera, in front of *Variety* and *The Hollywood Reporter*."

*****

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