Arafat Barbakh/Reuters Hollywood shouldnât worry too much about generative AI that can build images, videos, and songs from a single text prompt. While film executives may not like to say it out loud, AI is already being used to bring down costs and increase the speed of adding visual effects to movies. That means AI can help more artists make more movies, rather than replace artists or their art. In the classic computer-generated movies weâre used to, like the ones in the Marvel cinematic universe, a massive amount of labor and processing power is spent on each scene and asset. Human actors perform in front of screens. The images and physics of the imagined world around them are added in later. With generative AI, the heavy lifting is done during the pre-training process. Once the model is built, it can be used to take a scene constructed by artists and tweak it, making the physics look realistic â not by modeling the physics, but by guessing at them based on absorbing an incredibly large dataset of real-world footage. This process is âbreaking down silos between the actor, the director, the producer, and then on the soundstage, they also have solution architects and data scientists that are working with them in real time,â Samira Bakhtiar, Amazon Web Servicesâ general manager of media and entertainment, said in an interview. If a film uses these âreal-time hybridâ techniques to bring down costs, thatâs more like a faster, better generation of the CGI viewers know and love. Based on my conversations at Cannes Lions, the best creatives in the business will end up using this transformer architecture in some way. And, with a crisis of ballooning budgets in the film industry, this change couldnât come at a better time. |