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The night the 'Titanic' crew was drugged with angel dust in their soup

2024-04-18T09:44:45.448Z

Highlights: In 1996, James Cameron and more than 80 film workers ended up doing the conga line in a Canadian hospital after eating broth laced with drugs. The culprits were never found, but now the publication of the police reports from that time may solve one of the mysteries of cinema. James Cameron said the soup was mussel soup, but Bill Paxton, for his part, claimed it was made from clams. Whatever it was, on the night of August 8, 1996, the crew was in Halifax (Nova Scotia, Canada) on their last day of filming in the city. That day they were going to conclude the scenes set in the present ("84 years have passed...", etc.) and, immediately, they would move to Baja California, in Mexico, where a monumental replica of the cursed ship awaited them in a huge studio outside. They filmed at dusk, and around midnight, the film crew took a break for some dinner. "That soup was delicious. People came back for more," artist Marilyn McAvoy, in charge of recreating the renowned works of art that appear in the film, revealed. The case was closed due to lack of evidence in 1999, but now it could be close to resolution, according to a new ruling by the information and privacy commissioner.


In 1996, director James Cameron and more than 80 film workers ended up doing the conga line in a Canadian hospital after eating broth laced with drugs. The culprits were never found, but now the publication of the police reports from that time may solve one of the mysteries of cinema


James Cameron said the soup was mussel soup. Bill Paxton, for his part, claimed it was made from clams. Whatever it was, on the night of August 8, 1996, the

Titanic

crew was in Halifax (Nova Scotia, Canada) on their last day of filming in the city. That day they were going to conclude the scenes set in the present ("84 years have passed...", etc.) and, immediately, they would move to Baja California, in Mexico, where a monumental replica of the cursed ship awaited them in a huge studio. outdoor. They filmed at dusk, and around midnight, the crew took a break for some dinner. Among other options that the local

catering

company served them was seafood soup. “That soup was delicious. “People came back for more,” artist Marilyn McAvoy, in charge of recreating the renowned works of art that appear in the film, revealed to

Vice magazine in 2017

;

“And I think that was part of the problem: People ate a lot more than usual because it was delicious.”

What happened next will surprise you.

At that time it was published that around 60 people were drugged. Today, the number has increased to more than 80. The director of the successful film revealed in an interview in

Vanity Fair

that he noticed the effects almost immediately, because he had to leave the

set

to vomit, although at first he thought he was It was about shellfish poisoning: “When I returned to filming, there was no one there. There were the monitors, the cameras... but the place was empty. “It was like being in

The Twilight Zone,”

he said. Actor Bill Paxton, who played treasure hunter Brock Lovett, with whom the film begins, told

Entertainment Weekly

magazine

that he began to notice the effects 15 minutes after eating the soup: “The whole team was out there wandering around.” . Some laughed, some cried, some vomited.” Believing, like Cameron, that he might be suffering from food poisoning, Paxton got into a van with other filming companions and went to Dartmouth General Hospital: “For a moment I felt good, and then after a while, I felt so anxious. that I had to breathe in a paper bag. “Cameron felt the same way.”

Little by little, the hospital waiting room filled with other members of the team. Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet were spared, since they were not on

set

those days . “We arrived en masse at the hospital around one in the morning. At the hospital they didn't know what to do with us. Everything was very chaotic. “I had never tried drugs,” said painter Marilyn McAvoy, “but others said it was like the beginning of an acid trip.” James Cameron claimed that at one point he was stabbed with a pen by another member of the team: “I was there, bleeding and laughing at the same time, watching everything fall apart,” he said. Several of those present stated on various occasions that, at one point, a festive conga line formed in the hospital. “In the end, they put us all in those curtained cubicles in the hospitals, but no one wanted to stay in their cubicle,” the painter explained: “Everyone was in the hallways and jumping into other people's cubicles. The people had a lot of energy. Some raced their wheelchairs down the halls. I mean…everyone was high!”

“These people were blind,” said Dr. Rob Roy, who treated several of the victims that night: “They had no idea what was happening.” At one point, Dartmouth General Hospital called Halifax police. That was uncontrollable. And it looked strange. A toxicology analysis was performed at the medical center and, on August 28, Halifax police issued a statement confirming what many already suspected: they had indeed been drugged. Someone had spiked the seafood soup with phencyclidine, popularly known as PCP or angel dust. According to the Ministry of Health, it is “a white, crystalline powder that dissolves easily in water or alcohol” that “was used in the 1950s as an intravenous anesthetic, but was discontinued due to the side effects it produced in the patients.” Angel dust is a member of the family of dissociative anesthetics, which includes ketamine. The effects of PCP range from euphoria to panic. At high doses, they say its effects resemble symptoms associated with schizophrenia, including delusions and paranoia. A good trip.

The evidence was irrefutable, but there was one question in the air: Who had sabotaged the punch? To this day, almost three decades later, it remains a mystery: the Halifax Police Department investigated the incident for more than two years, during which a search warrant was executed and a list of all the people who had been found was obtained. worked on

set.

But the case was closed due to lack of evidence in 1999. Now, it could be close to resolution. As reported by several media outlets just a few days ago, a new ruling by Nova Scotia's information and privacy commissioner has ordered Halifax police to release more details of the 10-page incident report they made that night, as well as to delete the censorship of some of the witness testimonies. If police meet their deadline, the records should be released by mid-May, and could offer new details about an incident that was never solved.

Yes, there were, from the beginning, certain theories about it. “We have a strong suspicion of who it could have been, but it could never be proven,” said James Cameron himself in an interview on the

podcast

Q With Tom Power , “we believe it was because someone on the team had a problem with the

catering

suppliers.

, because we fired the

catering

people . And, you know… we had some suspicions with all that.” In 1996, some articles were published that pointed to the same theory: one of the two companies that handled production had contaminated the soup. To silence these rumors, the director of the

catering

service flatly denied that any of his workers could have done something like that, and insisted that “it was those people from Hollywood who surely brought that psychedelic shit. I don't think it was done with bad intentions. Surely it was a party that got out of hand.” In that same

podcast

, the filmmaker also faced another of the theories, one that did not exactly leave him in a good place: “And, of course, another of the theories was that I was such a psychopath that the perpetrator of that was trying to attack me to me... but I discard that theory for obvious reasons." It is hard to believe that 28 years after that night the matter will be resolved. Does not matter.

Titanic

Soup Night

has already become part of the history of modern cinema.

Source: elparis

All news articles on 2024-04-18

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