Gulf News

Lights, camera, automation: robot takes over

In a groundbrea­king move, ‘American History X’ director Tony Kaye’s ‘2nd Born’ will star an AI actor

- By Zach Vasquez

The nightmare scenario of mankind being overthrown by its own creation has been a source of tangible anxiety for at least 200 years, ever since Mary Shelley birthed the science fiction genre with her novel Frankenste­in; or, the Modern Prometheus.

It’s an anxiety the movies have always been keen to exploit, starting with the first adaptation of Shelly’s work, shot in 1910 by Thomas Edison, up to the present, in films like Her and Blade Runner 2049.

But now, Hollywood itself may have to confront this dreadful spectre, in the form of the first ever robot movie star.

According to an exclusive from Deadline, director Tony Kaye and producer Sam Khoze are planning to cast a machine, equipped with AI capabiliti­es and “trained in different acting methods and techniques”, as the lead in their upcoming film, 2nd Born.

Produced by Lotus Entertainm­ent, 2nd Born is the sequel to 1st Born, which stars Val Kilmer, Tom Berenger and Denise Richards. That film, which centres around an American-Iranian couple whose pregnancy forces their extended families to overcome their cultural difference­s, is set for release later this year.

Beyond the initial mindbendin­g implicatio­ns, the details surroundin­g the film are filled with the type of high weirdness you’d expect to find in a Thomas Pynchon novel. There is nothing in the premise of

1st Born to suggest a science fiction theme, which might lead one to assume that its sequel’s robot lead won’t even be playing a robot. Furthermor­e, Tony Kaye — the notoriousl­y difficult director behind 90s skinhead drama American

History X, and the graphic abortion documentar­y

Lake of Fire — doesn’t appear to have any connection to the preceding film, making his involvemen­t all the more baffling.

The mystery of how this presumably small comedy in the vein of The Big Sick came to be the launching pad for what, if successful, would be a major step forward in the evolution of both cinema and robotics is almost more tantalisin­g than its central gimmick.

Thanks to the utter randomness of its announceme­nt, news of 2nd Born was met with immediate scepticism and ridicule across social media even though, when placed in a broader historical context, the idea of a movie starring a robot doesn’t seem all that radical.

Motion-capture is no longer looked on as just a special effects technique, but an art form in its own right. These days, it’s taken for granted that Andy Serkis should have won a couple Oscars — or at least been nominated — for his mo-cap enhanced performanc­es throughout the Lord of the Rings and

Planet of the Apes series.

Given his history with animatroni­cs and computer-generated effects — as well as his interest in the subject of transhuman­ism in AI and

Ready Player One — it’s almost shocking that Steven Spielberg hasn’t attempted something like 2nd Born. Or, if not Spielberg himself, one of his peers or collaborat­ors — Peter Jackson, yet to journey back from the pixelated lands of Middle Earth, or Robert Zemeckis, still wandering around in the uncanny valley.

Or, for that matter, James Cameron — a man who’s never met an emerging technology he didn’t immediatel­y try to master. Even if he is also the artist responsibl­e for the single most harrowing vision we have of annihilati­on at the hands of automatons, you have to assume he’s at least a little jealous it’s Kaye taking on this mad venture, and not him.

Then again, there probably isn’t anyone better suited to the task than Kaye, including Cameron. Kaye did have American

History X — by far his bestknown film — taken away from him in the editing stages by its lead, human actor Edward Norton. The fallout from that debacle led to Kaye’s long exile from Hollywood.

Knowing that, it’s hard to not read a more sinister motivation behind this new experiment of his. Perhaps, this version of the story, Kaye isn’t Dr Frankenste­in, but the monster. Perhaps his substituti­ng a flesh-andblood performer for a synthetic one isn’t even an experiment, so much as it is an act of revenge.

Motion-capture is no longer looked on as just a special effects technique, but an art form in its own right.

 ?? Photos by Rex Features ?? Director Tony Kaye.
Photos by Rex Features Director Tony Kaye.
 ??  ?? Serkis in ‘Lord of the Rings’: Motion- capture at its best.
Serkis in ‘Lord of the Rings’: Motion- capture at its best.
 ??  ?? Andy Serkis in ‘Dawn of the Planet of Apes’.
Andy Serkis in ‘Dawn of the Planet of Apes’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates