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Contrary to fears of replacement, using AI for film backgrounds can enhance human creativity. By shooting on a stripped-down gray screen set, actors are freed from external distractions, allowing them to concentrate entirely on their performance.
The fear that AI will replace top artists is misplaced. The correct framing is what happens when top talent gets AI tools. A director like Steven Spielberg could potentially increase their output 20-fold for a fraction of the cost, leading to a massive increase in high-quality creative work.
Don't view generative AI video as just a way to make traditional films more efficiently. Ben Horowitz sees it as a fundamentally new creative medium, much like movies were to theater. It enables entirely new forms of storytelling by making visuals that once required massive budgets accessible to anyone.
High costs and red tape have pushed film production out of Los Angeles. Ben Affleck suggests AI tools, like generating realistic backdrops, could reverse this trend. By enabling crews to shoot a North Pole scene in a local studio, AI reduces logistical expenses, potentially making Hollywood the central, cost-effective hub for talent and production again.
AI will empower creators by allowing them to translate ideas directly into finished products, bypassing traditional technical skill requirements like musical rhythm or film production. This shift will place a premium on raw creativity and vision over trained execution.
While generative video gets the hype, producer Tim McLear finds AI's most practical use is automating tedious post-production tasks like data management and metadata logging. This frees up researchers and editors to focus on higher-value creative work, like finding more archival material, rather than being bogged down by manual data entry.
AI is enabling films to be shot entirely on gray-screen soundstages with AI-generated backgrounds and lighting. This can slash a blockbuster's budget from over $200M to $70M, making it financially viable to produce more movies and take bigger creative risks.
Hollywood has been losing film productions to cheaper locations. AI-powered visual effects could slash costs by eliminating the need for on-location filming. This could make shooting in Los Angeles economically viable again, sparking a resurgence for the city as a production hub.
Like AI coding assistants for engineers, tools like Hera will not eliminate motion designers. Instead, they automate tedious 'pixel-by-pixel' execution. This frees designers to focus on high-level creativity, strategy, and overall vision, shifting their role from pure execution to creative direction.
Netflix's acquisition of Interpositive, an AI startup, focuses on automating post-production tasks like lighting and reframing, not generating new scenes. This massive deal proves the most valuable and accepted use of AI in entertainment is as a high-end efficiency and cost-cutting tool that keeps creative control with humans.
Public concern over AI in film often overlooks its long-standing use as a production tool. For years, machine learning pipelines have been used to enhance CGI character performances, like Thanos in 'Avengers'. This suggests audiences accept AI when it's an 'invisible' tool for enhancing quality, rather than a replacement for creative direction.