The actors haven't given in, with Amazon, etc, deciding not to cave in on their Dystopion vision of AI totally subsuming Hollywood in "grey goo" fake people and projections...
I'm 100% with the actors. Keep it up.
The actors haven't given in, with Amazon, etc, deciding not to cave in on their Dystopion vision of AI totally subsuming Hollywood in "grey goo" fake people and projections...
People are saying the AI "we own your likeness forever" thing the studios are pushing for would mean the end of acting and all the support professions like lighting, makeup, wardrobe, etc., but it wouldn't really, would it? Despite the hype, what we call "AI" isn't actually intelligent at all and still needs a lot of human mediation. If you wanted to create a "performance" from a virtual double of a dead actor, you'd probably still need a real actor's performance to base it on, and you'd need animators to adjust and polish the results.
Then again, the executives have probably bought into the hype and believe AI could do it all with the push of a button, so they may be hoping for a world where they can eliminate actors, writers, and production staffs and the need to pay them all. But if they tried it, they'd quickly find that it wouldn't actually work that way, that they'd still need to hire people to create and refine the digital performances. But the people creating the performance wouldn't be on camera anymore, so they'd probably get paid a lot less and not be given recognition for their hard work. So it would still be a very bad deal for actors etc.
This is how far AI has come in 2 years. We may well be a decade or so away from telling a computer to make a movie where X, Y and Z happens and it does the rest.
This is how far AI has come in 2 years. We may well be a decade or so away from telling a computer to make a movie where X, Y and Z happens and it does the rest.
No actors on camera? No make-up or costuming people, either. Possibly no or far fewer sets, with all the jobs tied up in that, and far fewer camera crews as way more of the movie is being created digitally. In terms of the number of jobs involved, some of this might be made up by more jobs in the cgi companies, but it also still means way fewer people on set at the same time which will heavily damage the bottom line of the craft services departments, too.
https://variety.com/2023/biz/news/sag-aftra-tentative-deal-historic-strike-1235771894/Actors' strike ends midnight tonight, meaning active production (including for Trek) should start back up over the next 1-2 months.
I'm still betting we never see that set used on screen ever again. I mean..... where could they even use it?Finally.
Now they can finally make one last TNG Movie (and the D. After all, they didn't put the sets in storage for no reason.) and a feature film with Captian Worf and the Enterprise-E..
Oh, well.
All good things must come to an end.
Yes, but not because of any future production. Dave Blass said a few parties were interested in it., they didn't put the sets in storage for no reason.
But Legacy isn't a thingLet the hype train for Section 31, Starfleet Academy and Star Trek Legacy start rolling again!![]()
Not an official thing that's been announced.But Legacy isn't a thing
Not an official thing that's been announced.
However, straight of out Alex Kurtzman's mouth on October 14th, 2023:
Alex Kurtzman Gives ‘Section 31’ And ‘Academy’ Updates, Teases “Exciting” New Star Trek Projects – TrekMovie.com
“I have to say, our friends at Paramount Plus have been unbelievable, truly unbelievable. They have supported all of these shows in the most extraordinary ways. I will tease that I did meet with everybody at the top this week. And there’s a bunch of new things now in the works, which is really, really exciting. So there’s no shortage of support from Paramount Plus for the Star Trek universe.”
Also what he said earlier on April 24th, 2023:
"Fans Heard Loud And Clear" About Star Trek: Legacy, Says Executive Producer (screenrant.com)
At the Television Academy screening of Star Trek: Picard's season 3 finale in Los Angeles, Alex Kurtzman was interviewed by Fox LA's Elex Michaelson, who brought up the growing fan outcry for Star Trek: Legacy. Read what Kurtzman said in response:
"Anything is possible. We’ve heard the fans loud and clear. There’s obviously more story to tell. So, we’ll see."
I didn't say it was evidence, I just think it doesn't mean there's nothing going on behind-the-scenes which they're not prepared to talk about yet.So? He's just making vague, empty pronouncements that people can project their own assumptions onto. They're not evidence of anything.
This is what's wrong with journalism today. People have forgotten the difference between actual news and empty chatter. The 24-hour news cycle demands constant updates, so we get inundated with meaningless "stories" that contain no actual news, that are just people trying to give noncommittal answers to the leading questions reporters ask in the hopes of manufacturing stories where none exist.
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