“It was very surreal.”
Margot Robbiewill never let go of herTitanicfixation even if the movie’s stars are in her eyeline.
“And so that’s what I do on set if I need to cry in a scene.”

Leonardo DiCaprio and Margot Robbie in ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’.Appian Way/Paramount/Kobal/Shutterstock
Appian Way/Paramount/Kobal/Shutterstock
Robbie’s ritual had an unexpected interruption when she made her first movie withLeonardo DiCaprio.
And Kate Winslet came to visit set, to visit Leo that day," the actress remembered.
And then I sawKate Winsletand Leo walk past.

Margot Robbie in ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’; Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio in ‘Titanic’.Bauer-Griffin/ Getty, 20th Century-Fox via Getty
It was very surreal."
“That is the biggest controversy, I think, in modern cinema history.
Did you mention it at the time?
Were you like, Should we make the door smaller?'”
James Horner’s score forTitanichas had varying emotional effects on other notable listeners.
“He played it once through and I was crying.
Then he played Roses theme and I was crying again.
They were so bittersweet and emotionally resonant.”
Winslet went on to explain that she has zero affection for Dion’s song due to overexposure.
“I wish I could say, ‘Oh listen, everybody!
It’s the Celine Dion song!’
But I don’t.
“It’s thrilling for people to ‘surprise’ me with the Celine Dion song.
It was like, ‘No!
I’m not going to do that.’
They’re like, ‘Oh no, come on, it will be funny.’
No, it won’t be funny.
And I’m not going to.”
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