AI Creates "Titanic 2" Script Where Rose Brings Jack Back Using Future Technology

The main characters fall in love again and again.

We asked AI to imagine what the plot of a sequel to the cult classic would look like if it took place decades after the first film's finale. Here's what came out of it.

Years have passed. Rose DeWitt Bukater has long since become a legend. But in a future world — where artificial intelligence reconstructs memories from DNA and time machines are no longer science fiction — one corporation decides to bring history back to life.

At the heart of the project called "Heart of the Ocean" lies Rose's digitized consciousness. Scientists extract memory fragments from its depths, reconstructing passengers, the liner's atmosphere, and the "Titanic" itself down to the smallest details.
Actor Leonardo DiCaprio in a tuxedo and actress Kate Winslet in a black dress standing against a brown background
Frames from the film "Titanic"
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The goal? To study emotions and attempt to change the tragedy's outcome. But something goes wrong: Rose's projection recreates not just the setting, but Jack himself. With him comes love. The project spirals out of control: the longer Rose stays in the simulation, the more real this world becomes for her, and the weaker her connection to the outside grows.

Scientists continue monitoring, but Rose increasingly retreats into the past, distancing herself from the team and spending time with Jack.

Meanwhile, the "Titanic" races toward the iceberg once again. Attempts to intervene prove useless — Rose's consciousness refuses to comply. That's when researchers decide to shut down the simulation. But unexpectedly, Jack — merely a digital projection — seems to become self-aware. He takes Rose's hand and suggests they stay together. They jump overboard before the ship collides with the iceberg.

The system crashes. The projection goes dark. Scientists restart everything — reboot, new digitization. Rose opens her eyes on deck again. Everything repeats. Earlier on zoomboola.com, we explained why James Cameron cut an important scene with Jack from "Titanic".