AI Performances And Screenplays Won’t Be Eligible For Oscars






Sorry, Val Kilmer fans, but the late actor’s Oscar ship has officially sailed. On Friday, Reuters reported that AI-generated acting and writing won’t be eligible for Academy Awards. The new rules from the Academy ​of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will take effect beginning with next year’s presentation, scheduled for March 2027.

The Academy’s updated rules state that while filmmakers can use AI tools, “synthetic” performers can’t win any awards. Ditto for AI-written screenplays, which must be “human-authored.” The Academy can request more information from submissions to confirm that they were created by humans.

A “performance” that won’t need further clarification is Kilmer’s fully AI-generated appearance in the upcoming indie film, As Deep as the Grave. The actor was initially cast in the movie but had to back out due to medical concerns. (He died in April 2025.) Although Kilmer never stepped foot on set, he will appear in “a significant part” of the movie, according to Variety.

“His family kept saying how important they thought the movie was and that Val really wanted to be a part of this,” said Coerte Voorhees, the film’s writer and director. “He really thought it was [an] important story that he wanted his name on. It was that support that gave me the confidence to say, okay let’s do this. Despite the fact some people might call it controversial, this is what Val wanted.”

Perhaps even more jarring than the AI-generated likeness of a dead actor is the work of a ByteDance tool that has also raised some alarm in the industry. A two-sentence prompt using Seedance 2.0 was all it took to generate a highly convincing 15-second clip of Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt duking it out on a rooftop. (C’mon, Pitt would totally kick his ass.)

The cinematic clip went viral, Hollywood experienced existential panic, and Washington even weighed in. The latest? ByteDance reportedly paused the tool’s rollout while the entertainment industry braces for a future where typing a few words could be all it takes to churn out a feature film.





Source link

  • Related Posts

    OpenAI Enables Marketing Cookies by Default for Free ChatGPT Users

    OpenAI is ready to target free users of its services with advertisements around the web, based on what it knows about them. On Thursday, OpenAI sent an email to users…

    Ubuntu services hit by outages after DDoS attack

    Hacktivists have claimed responsibility for taking down the public-facing infrastructure of popular Linux operating system distribution Ubuntu, as well as Canonical, the company that develops and maintains the software. The…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Narnia: The Magician’s Nephew Gets Theatrical Release From Netflix

    Narnia: The Magician’s Nephew Gets Theatrical Release From Netflix

    Trump’s Iran war leaves US with sharpest fuel shock in G7

    Chris Selley: Canadian politicians should watch Keir Starmer’s defence of British Jews

    How (and when) to dispute a credit card charge

    How (and when) to dispute a credit card charge

    More Americans are quitting their U.S. jobs to work abroad, study finds

    More Americans are quitting their U.S. jobs to work abroad, study finds

    OpenAI Enables Marketing Cookies by Default for Free ChatGPT Users

    OpenAI Enables Marketing Cookies by Default for Free ChatGPT Users