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AI video tools undermine the specialness of Hollywood as production costs tumble 95%
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Hollywood is confronting an existential shift as AI-powered video generation tools like Luma’s Dream Machine and Moonvalley enable anyone to create cinema-quality content from simple text prompts. Companies like Luma AI are developing technology that can transform a person into a monkey with a few taps, while startups are building AI-native studios that slash production costs by up to 95%, fundamentally challenging Hollywood’s role as the gatekeeper of professional filmmaking.

The big picture: Silicon Valley is pulling the film industry into its orbit as generative AI threatens to flood the market with personalized, on-demand content that could make traditional Hollywood productions seem obsolete.

  • Luma AI co-founder Amit Jain envisions “two hours of video can be generated for every human every day,” shifting from mass-market blockbusters to hyper-personalized entertainment.
  • More than 65 AI-native studios have launched since 2022, most with teams of five or fewer people who can now do the work of entire traditional crews.
  • The average movie shot is only eight seconds, while current AI tools can generate clips up to 10 seconds long, suggesting near-term viability for full-length productions.

What’s happening now: Major studios are quietly adopting AI tools while startups build from the ground up for the AI era.

  • Netflix used AI to complete complex visual effects sequences for “El Eternauta” in a fraction of the usual time, with co-CEO Ted Sarandos calling AI “an incredible opportunity to help creators make films and series better, not just cheaper.”
  • Lionsgate, the studio behind “John Wick” and “Hunger Games,” struck a deal with Runway to train a custom AI model on its film library, while Paramount’s incoming CEO David Ellison is pitching a “studio in the cloud” transformation.
  • Disney and Universal filed a sweeping copyright lawsuit against Midjourney, a popular AI image generator, in June, marking Hollywood’s most aggressive legal challenge against AI platforms trained on their intellectual property.

The resistance: Hollywood’s creative community remains deeply skeptical of AI’s encroachment on storytelling.

  • The 2023 writers’ and actors’ strikes featured picket signs declaring “AI is not art” and “Human writers only.”
  • A protest dubbed “Kill the Machine” is being organized against IMAX’s upcoming screening of AI-generated shorts from Runway’s AI Film Festival.
  • The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences issued guidance stating AI use will “neither help nor harm” Oscar chances, but members should consider “the degree to which a human was at the heart of the creative authorship.”

Key technical developments: AI video generation is rapidly approaching professional quality while costs plummet.

  • Luma’s Dream Machine can transform existing footage in real-time, turning a hoodie into a superhero cape or a person into a medieval knight without green screens or visual effects teams.
  • Moonvalley built its video model Marey on fully licensed material, working with intellectual property lawyers to ensure “every single pixel has had a direct sign-off from the owner.”
  • Freepik’s AI tools were used in Robert Zemeckis’ “Here” starring Tom Hanks, while the Danny Boyle-mentored anthology “Beyond the Loop” showcased AI-generated visuals.

New storytelling formats: Startups are experimenting with interactive, real-time content that blurs the line between creator and audience.

  • Pickford AI’s dating show demo lets viewers vote on story directions while AI writes and renders scenes in real-time, bringing “the vibe of the crowd back into the show.”
  • Amazon-backed Showrunner lets users generate TV-style episodes using prompts and AI voices, with plans to bring Disney franchises to the platform.
  • Invisible Universe, led by former MGM executive Tricia Biggio, develops intellectual property directly with audiences across social platforms, bypassing traditional gatekeepers entirely.

The cultural challenge: AI threatens Hollywood’s role as America’s cultural center as attention fragments across platforms.

  • This year’s Oscars drew 19.7 million viewers, fewer than watched a typical “Murder, She Wrote” episode in the 1990s.
  • Best picture winner “Anora” earned just $20 million domestically, while Hollywood produces 15,000 hours annually compared to 300 million hours uploaded to YouTube.
  • Critics worry about “AI slop” — cheap, algorithmically generated content that could trap audiences in recommendation loops rather than exposing them to new perspectives.

What industry leaders are saying: Opinions range from cautious optimism to existential concern about AI’s impact.

  • “The solution will come out of the marriage of technology and art together,” says Luma’s Amit Jain. “I think both sides will adapt.”
  • USC’s Ken Williams warns of “the kind of wholesale dehumanization of the creative process that people, in their darkest moments, fear.”
  • “The Creator” director Gareth Edwards remains hopeful: “There’s a possibility that if this amazing tool turns up and everyone can make any film that they imagine, it’s going to lead to a new wave of cinema.”

Why this matters: The convergence of AI technology and Hollywood represents more than just new tools — it’s a fundamental question about who gets to tell stories, who owns them, and whether narrative itself retains meaning in an age of infinite, personalized content.

AI is rewriting the rules of storytelling. Will Hollywood adapt or be left behind?

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