We already have computer generated faces of people who don't exist that I couldn't tell were fake: https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/28/tech/ai-fake-faces/index.html . I honestly think full fledged movies without actors (not saying it's a good idea, but the tech for it will eventually be here) will come at some point.That would never work, not to a degree that audiences would find satisfying. It takes human talent to create an effective performance. Even the most advanced "computer animation" is animated by humans using computers as their medium. And of course voice work is always done by real actors. Only the most arrogant director would think they were sufficiently skilled in every aspect of filmmaking that they could do it all themselves without collaborating with experts specializing in all the different aspects of film production. Of course, there are directors that arrogant, but their output without collaborators probably wouldn't be very good (as seen by comparing the Star Wars prequels, where George Lucas assumed he could write and direct them nearly all by himself, with the original trilogy, where he had the better sense to trust his collaborators more than his ego).
Such a thing would likely be commonplace by the time of Star Trek. We already had Vic Fontaine on DS9 who was completely hologenerated.
That's Nick Fury Sr., Nick Fury's fatherJust wait until he stumbles onto an old Nick Fury comic.![]()
. Future generations will look at Nick Fury Sr. in the Marvel Universe the way we look at Jay Garrick and Alan Scott in the DC universe.
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