The Futurist: The Life and Films of James Cameron
By REBECCA KEEGAN
Excerpt
Chapter 1: A Boy and His Brain
The Beginning of the End
The end of the world was coming. And he was eight. That's when James Cameron found a pamphlet with instructions for building a civilian fallout shelter on the coffee table in his family's living room in
The pensive eight-year-old boy would grow up to tell vivid stories about worlds ending, from a machine-led war in 2029 to an unsinkable ship's descent into the deep in 1912. Each James Cameron movie is a warning against his darkest childhood fears and a kind of how-to guide for living through catastrophe with humanity and spirit intact. His own story begins with a long line of troublemakers.
Philip and Shirley
Cameron's great-great-great-grandfather, a schoolteacher, migrated from
In high school Philip met Shirley Lowe, a slim, blonde-haired, blue-eyed dynamo who drove stock cars in the Orangeville powder-puff derby and won a countywide award for her war bond painting of a city in flames. "Do you want this to happen?" it asked ominously in red paint. While a mother with three kids under age eight, Shirley would join the Canadian Women's Army Corps, happily trooping off on weekends in fatigues and combat boots to assemble a rifle while blindfolded and march through fields in the pouring rain. She kept up her painting, in oils and watercolors, and one night a week she attended an adult education course in a subject of interest, such as geology or astronomy. "I did those things for me and nobody else," says Shirley, who professes bewilderment that she might be the inspiration for the gutsy maternal heroines in movies like The Terminator and Aliens. "I don't know why Jim thinks I'm so self-reliant," Shirley adds with a shrug, her blue eyes sparkling. Philip looks up from the dining table in their Calabasas,
When their first child was born, the Camerons were living in an apartment in Kapuskasing, a cold, remote company town in northern
Chippawa
When Cameron was five, Philip's job took the family to
The Cameron boys' handiness with tools was not always constructive. When some neighborhood kids stole their toys, Jim and Mike visited the lead suspects' tree house and sawed through the limbs. When the juvenile criminals climbed up to their woody retreat, it toppled to the ground. "That one they got in trouble for," says Shirley, nodding. "You don't do things where people can get hurt." Philip was the stern disciplinarian in the family, usually able to get his point across in few words. "My dad used to warn me, 'If you mess up I'll take you to the woodshed,'" remembers John David. "I was pretty confident I knew the house, and I didn't think we even had a woodshed. The threat was worse than any actual act."
Early on, Cameron demonstrated a knack for assembling large groups in service of his own goals. When her oldest son was about ten, Shirley noticed his younger siblings and several neighborhood children streaming into her side yard carrying scraps of wood and metal. "I said, 'What are you gonna do with all this junk?'" Shirley recalls. "Jim said, 'We're gonna build something.'" When Shirley checked on the project a couple of hours later, the kids had constructed an airplane. "Guess who was sitting in it being pulled?" Cameron was very good at telling people what to do. He took it upon himself to keep his younger siblings in line when the family went out to dinner. The oldest boy would fold his hands on the table and start twiddling his thumbs, a cue to the little ones to follow and not to grab the salt and pepper shakers.
Shirley encouraged her son's artistic side. At his request, some Saturdays they traveled eighty miles to the
The Cameron kids are an intense bunch, biochemically turbo-charged. Close in age and temperament, Jim and Mike were sometimes coconspirators, sometimes rivals, often both at once. Mike would grow up to be an engineer like his father, building the sophisticated filmmaking and diving technologies used on The Abyss, Titanic, and his older brother's documentaries. Both bright and convinced of their own opinions, the two oldest Cameron boys are a technically potent and often explosive duo. They could turn a theoretical conversation on space travel into a rowdy brawl. "When they'd mix, there would be fireworks, good and bad," says their youngest brother, John David, who likens the Cameron family dynamic to "
Dinner was served at 6:00 p.m. at the Cameron house every night and timed with military precision. "I make good carbon," Shirley says of her culinary efforts. "I burn things." Her sons talk glowingly of her chili and pot roast but say that it was best when Shirley didn't bring her adventuresome spirit into the kitchen. At a certain point, dinner with the Camerons would become a contact sport. "The more of the family that gets together, the more chaotic and loud and bright and crescendoed it gets, from who gets the goddamned dish," John David says. "There will always be a moment when somebody says something that shouldn't have been said. It's priceless. But it's participatory. If you sit idly by, you'll get chewed on."
Continues...
Excerpted from The Futurist by Rebecca Keegan Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/17/books/excerpt-the-futurist.html?ref=review
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