artificial intelligence Film festival hosted by Runway AI It was filled with creepy images such as mud men and oversized old ladies. And while the festival gave him a glimpse into the future of AI filmmaking, it looks like humans have the upper hand.
Exploring technology report Nearly 3,000 short films were submitted to the festival, but only 10 were selected to be featured at the festival. The report said the filmmakers’ “vivid imagination” was on display, presenting “a story set in an aesthetically stunning world.”
“There is a recognition that AI-driven filmmaking and creation has a very specific style,” said Runway co-founder and chief technology officer Anastasis Germanidis.
”[S]Each movie was just a series of tangentially related scenes strung together by narration and soundtrack. ”
But Germanidis said all 10 films selected looked “quite different from the others.”
Tech Explore points out that when watching the latest AI short films, many breathtaking films came to mind, including Christopher Nolan’s Inception and the Wachowski brothers’ The Matrix. did. But not everyone was captivated by the spectacle of AI-generated content.
tech crunch report He said there was a significant amount of “incoherence” in the films shown at the festival. Additionally, he said, “Some of the movies were just tangentially related scenes strung together by narration and soundtrack.”
The report focuses on one film in particular by Carlo De Toni and Elena Sparacino, noting how boring the format is, with slideshow-like transitions that make it a better interactive storybook than a movie. “We have demonstrated that there is.”
Tech Crunch reported:
Leo Cannone’s Where Does Grandma Go When She Gets Lost similarly falls into the vignette category, but is nevertheless a heartfelt script (a story about a child’s story about what happens after his grandmother dies). ) and the child star’s exceptionally strong performances. The rest of the audience seemed to agree. The film received the loudest applause of the night.
The report notes that while it is likely that AI will one day have the ability to recreate smooth scenes that provide a cinematic experience, the technology is not there yet.
However, not everyone is convinced that AI will take over the realm of art.
Author Walter Kahn previously told Blaze News:[AI] Regarding the process of creating works: “You don’t have to decide what to give power to.”
He added that a novelist might take “a year of their life, or five or 10 years, because the subject matter is important to them,” but these small decisions don’t affect the generative AI.
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