Chicago Tribune

Nina Metz: AI is coming for Hollywood

Artificial intelligence is primed to take over Hollywood with all the subtlety of the Kool-Aid Man busting through a wall. Proponents of AI are making bold promises. That potentially means human creativity will be replaced by the theft — sorry, data scraping — of preexisting words, sounds, images and ideas. Jobs will be lost as human actors and crew are eliminated from the process. Clean water ...
A photo taken on Nov. 23, 2023, shows the logo of the ChatGPT application developed by U.S. artificial intelligence research organization OpenAI on a smartphone screen.

Artificial intelligence is primed to take over Hollywood with all the subtlety of the Kool-Aid Man busting through a wall.

Proponents of AI are making bold promises. That potentially means human creativity will be replaced by the theft — sorry, data scraping — of preexisting words, sounds, images and ideas. Jobs will be lost as human actors and crew are eliminated from the process. Clean water will be wasted, with billions of gallons needed to cool data centers. What will be left is anyone’s guess.

Despite these concerns, AI has found (bought?) a berth at film festivals, which purportedly exist to celebrate the art of cinema. At Cannes this year, a producer was hawking AI translations of international films. Actors who used to make a living dubbing such films? Soon to be obsolete apparently.

Earlier this month, a Korean film festival in the city of Bucheon its first competition dedicated to AI filmmaking. And closer to home, the Tribeca Film Festival in a program of short films made with generative AI.

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