Paul Schrader (C)Franck_Ferville Share on Facebook Share on X Share to Flipboard Send an Email Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Print the Article Post a Comment Paul Schrader is defending the use of AI in creating movies and predicts we're only a couple years away from the first film made entirely with the technology. The 79-year-old writer-director tells Vanity Fair that he's been working on a script that would be ideal for the first all-AI project. "I think we're only two years away from the first AI feature," the Taxi Driver screenwriter declared. "I was just on the phone with someone today about a script I had, and I said, "You know, this would be a perfect script to do all AI ... It's just a tool. When you're an author, you have to describe someone's reaction. You use a code - you use a code of words, a certain number of letters and so forth, and you [describe] their facial reaction. An actor has their own code. Well, [with AI] you're a pixelator, and you can create the face, and you can create the emotion on the face, and you can sculpt it the same way an author sculpts the reaction in a novel or a story." Related Stories Business Is Netflix a Friend or Foe to AI? TV Amy Poehler Slams AI Actress Tilly Norwood on 'Saturday Night Live': "You'll Never Be Able to Write a Joke, You Stupid Robot!" Schrader has recently made waves by candidly reviewing some films on Facebook. Regarding One Battle After Another, he wrote, "Filmmaking at level A+, but try as a might I couldn't muster up an ounce of empathy for [stars] Leo D'Caprio or Sean Penn. I kept waitng for them to die. (Penn's performance , however, is a masterclass in peacock acting.) What held me in my seat for the better part of two hours was [director] PT Anderson's Joy of Filmmaking." Yet Schrader noted that AI might make for superior film criticism given the technology lacks a human bias. Asked if he would read a review written by AI, he replied, "AI is taking over film coverage, as you must know. AI does better coverage than the average coverage. And AI doesn't have to favor anybody. Often, when you're doing coverage, you get a hint that the person who's paying you wants you to like this. You can't give that information to AI." It's a bit unclear if Schrader was referring to everyday film critics or to studios and agencies using AI for script coverage. But the comments follow up on a Facebook post by Schrader a couple months ago, when he wrote: "It should be fairly simple to program chatgpt to review a new film in the manner of, say, [Pauline] Kael, [Andrew] Sarris or [Manny] Farber. Chatgpt would need simply watch the film, read every review written by the designated critic, see every film the designated critic reviewed, see every previous film made by every talent (directors to actors to prod designers) in the new film, watch every film in the new film's genre, read every review written about those films and read all other reviews of the new film. That should take chatgpt about 30 seconds." One wonders, naturally, what the likes of the late New Yorker critic Kael - or, say, Roger Ebert, for that matter - would think of the idea of a robotic technology attempting to replicate their voice while reviewing movies. It's a rather ghoulish, Black Mirror-esque concept, to be sure. Also, the idea of AI giving a movie a perfectly balanced review, generated to have no biases ... it raises a question: Is that actually ideal? Rotten Tomatoes already generates an aggregate of reviews to give a generic meta-impression of a film that's arguably made more accurate by using a blend of hundreds of reviews and the result is rather dull: A number and a single-paragraph description. But isn't part of the appeal of reading film reviews that the critic is a single human voice, both smart and flawed, giving their specific take, bringing their own history of experience and feelings, that one can either wholeheartedly embrace, or vehemently reject? When it comes to critiquing art, biases are arguably a feature, not a bug. THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day Subscribe Sign Up Heat Vision Austin Butler in Talks to Star in 'Miami Vice' With Michael B. Jordan Michael B. Jordan American Cinematheque to Honor Its Award Recipient Michael B. Jordan With Career Retrospective (Exclusive) Netflix How the 100-Plus Person Ensemble for 'House of Dynamite' Came Together Cameron Crowe Cameron Crowe: Still Uncool After All These Years Sony Pictures Classics Sony Pictures Classics Takes Kirk Jones' 'I Swear' Following TIFF Premiere Heat Vision 'The Goonies,' Beloved 1980s Adventure Movie, Gets the Lego Treatment Heat Vision Austin Butler in Talks to Star in 'Miami Vice' With Michael B. Jordan Michael B. Jordan American Cinematheque to Honor Its Award Recipient Michael B. Jordan With Career Retrospective (Exclusive) Netflix How the 100-Plus Person Ensemble for 'House of Dynamite'
The Hollywood Reporter
Moderate Paul Schrader Has a "Perfect Script" for First Movie Made Only With AI: "We're Two Years Away"
October 24, 2025
1 months ago
6 celebrities mentioned
Original Source:
Read on The Hollywood Reporter
Health Analysis Summary
Our AI analysis has identified this article as health-related content with a severity level of 5/10.
This analysis is based on keywords, context, and content patterns related to medical news, health updates, and wellness information.
Celebrities Mentioned
Share this article: