The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

AI is a time-honored movie trope. Now it can write its own script.

- Ann Hornaday

In Hollywood, the first weeks of every year are dedicated to parallel and overlappin­g rituals, including Golden Globes prep, pre-Oscar nomination parties and packing up for the Sundance Film Festival. This year, though, the usual awards season chatter was spiked with more anxiety than usual.

On Jan. 12, the day before the part-glitzy, part-gemütlich AFI Awards luncheon, the Hollywood Reporter (THR) published a story about ChatGPT, the artificial intelligen­ce program that for months had been captivatin­g - and kind of scaring - American culture with its ability to spit out surprising­ly convincing essays, poems and news articles based on a few prompts.

Amid worries that students are using ChatGPT to fake school essays and that bad actors will use it for disinforma­tion and worse, in the movie business, at least, the technology has been received with a combinatio­n of alarm and wary optimism. Although ChatGPT had “set off alarm bells” throughout the industry, Katie Kilkenny and Winston Cho wrote in THR, “top film and TV writers are skeptical that the technology in its current state imperils their livelihood­s in any way, even as they remain cautious about future advancemen­ts.”

“In its current state” is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence - a sentence that, for all its diplomatic restraint, might have been fashioned by ChatGPT itself. If any major industry has been upended by technology’s Darwinian iterative march it’s been in the world of visual storytelli­ng, wherein everything from computer graphics and previsuali­zation programs to de-aging software have revolution­ized fictional world-building and, by extension, our perception of the actual world.

In just two decades, we’ve traveled from the Uncanny Valley to movie stars morphing into their past selves as seamlessly as Deepfake Tom Cruise can palm a coin. “I don’t know how they do it,” Harrison Ford recently told Stephen Colbert, describing how tech invented by George Lucas’s Industrial Light & Magic hoovered up past footage to create his younger persona in the upcoming “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.” “But that’s my face.”

There’s even chatter that Jonah Hill and Lauren London had so little chemistry on set that they needed AI to finish their Big Kiss in the Netflix rom-com “You People.”

These astonishin­g advances are part of what we’ve come to crave from a medium based on constantly upping the ante on spectacle. But when it comes to actually writing the movies dreaming up a story, hammering out the plot, elaboratin­g characters, dialogue and overriding themes - it feels like a new and disquietin­g Rubicon is about to be crossed.

So far, no one has suggested that ChatGPT could credibly write an entire script. Were a producer to use the technology, it would more likely be to create a treatment - a narrative that outlines the broad parameters of the story - or a synopsis. Writers who have experiment­ed with AI have speculated that it could be helpful, if not in coming up with original ideas, maybe at least in sparking a few, and doing away with the drudgery of coming up with “loglines” and “beat sheets,” Hollywood-ese for scut work.

Still, it’s not just possible but utterly probable that ChatGPT will eventually be able to deliver a credible first draft of a script, with human writers being hired to provide punch-ups and polishes. (Apparently, the technology has yet to master comedy, especially zingy one-liners; even for

ChatGPT, it seems, dying is easy, comedy’s hard.)

The idea that AI has finally come for the writers’ room has created an odd mix of apprehensi­on, curiosity and defensive crouch in Hollywood.

The Writers Guild of America declined my request for an interview, sending the same statement that they gave to THR: “We’re monitoring the developmen­t of ChatGPT and similar technologi­es in the event they require additional protection­s for writers.” (It has not gone unnoticed that talk of “replacing” human screenwrit­ers with a bot presents studios and streamers with a convenient threat when their current contract expires on May 1.) Writers contacted to contribute to this article politely demurred, if they responded at all.

The hesitation, if not outright angst, is understand­able: It’s as if Stanley Kubrick’s HAL (sorry, Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke’s HAL) were coming back to haunt the profession that for decades has turned AI into a reliably dystopian trope. But it also elides an inconvenie­nt truth about mainstream filmmaking that most screenwrit­ers would prefer go un-emphasized, which is that their craft has always been a bastardize­d art form.

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