Berliner Boersenzeitung - AI video becomes more convincing, rattling creative industry

EUR -
AED 4.325374
AFN 77.774982
ALL 96.501407
AMD 447.747624
ANG 2.108689
AOA 1080.018256
ARS 1709.796137
AUD 1.766333
AWG 2.122936
AZN 2.005004
BAM 1.956445
BBD 2.363969
BDT 143.427289
BGN 1.956446
BHD 0.444011
BIF 3467.81391
BMD 1.177773
BND 1.514486
BOB 8.12768
BRL 6.586345
BSD 1.173682
BTN 105.228694
BWP 15.481038
BYN 3.413811
BYR 23084.357014
BZD 2.360568
CAD 1.617742
CDF 2661.767396
CHF 0.92984
CLF 0.027316
CLP 1071.596651
CNY 8.292643
CNH 8.270807
COP 4479.024814
CRC 585.090423
CUC 1.177773
CUP 31.210993
CVE 110.301367
CZK 24.323727
DJF 209.008024
DKK 7.470147
DOP 73.453906
DZD 152.822001
EGP 55.850833
ERN 17.6666
ETB 181.911705
FJD 2.68232
FKP 0.883465
GBP 0.873219
GEL 3.162307
GGP 0.883465
GHS 13.410421
GIP 0.883465
GMD 86.568852
GNF 10260.295748
GTQ 8.993965
GYD 245.560963
HKD 9.159573
HNL 30.938069
HRK 7.534338
HTG 153.679364
HUF 388.631052
IDR 19757.795168
ILS 3.769115
IMP 0.883465
INR 105.527959
IQD 1537.606956
IRR 49584.257144
ISK 148.011378
JEP 0.883465
JMD 187.340972
JOD 0.835078
JPY 184.065357
KES 151.284363
KGS 102.995904
KHR 4708.512439
KMF 493.487386
KPW 1059.995949
KRW 1748.180893
KWD 0.361836
KYD 0.978118
KZT 605.23698
LAK 25423.274236
LBP 105107.708259
LKR 363.388268
LRD 207.748496
LSL 19.604681
LTL 3.477658
LVL 0.712424
LYD 6.369073
MAD 10.744743
MDL 19.871467
MGA 5287.720937
MKD 61.543677
MMK 2473.691735
MNT 4182.536059
MOP 9.405701
MRU 46.784226
MUR 54.378147
MVR 18.20882
MWK 2035.262395
MXN 21.164056
MYR 4.791201
MZN 75.250153
NAD 19.604681
NGN 1714.967369
NIO 43.193874
NOK 11.892472
NPR 168.364796
NZD 2.025075
OMR 0.452795
PAB 1.173787
PEN 3.952603
PGK 4.993604
PHP 69.106435
PKR 328.791708
PLN 4.216252
PYG 7930.58108
QAR 4.290215
RON 5.087395
RSD 117.442895
RUB 92.809355
RWF 1709.556391
SAR 4.416662
SBD 9.595024
SCR 17.763732
SDG 708.425736
SEK 10.861125
SGD 1.515341
SHP 0.883635
SLE 28.324979
SLL 24697.321887
SOS 669.617933
SRD 45.234153
STD 24377.529748
STN 24.507872
SVC 10.270386
SYP 13024.266602
SZL 19.599379
THB 36.634049
TJS 10.79836
TMT 4.122207
TND 3.433232
TOP 2.835796
TRY 50.441203
TTD 7.979597
TWD 37.10869
TZS 2927.92215
UAH 49.404079
UGX 4229.39445
USD 1.177773
UYU 46.004973
UZS 14080.64245
VES 332.320107
VND 31023.726944
VUV 142.043441
WST 3.283415
XAF 656.170557
XAG 0.016899
XAU 0.000262
XCD 3.182991
XCG 2.115397
XDR 0.816066
XOF 656.170557
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.899733
ZAR 19.674233
ZMK 10601.374137
ZMW 26.526633
ZWL 379.242528
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.3000

    76.41

    +0.39%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.12

    -0.22%

  • BP

    0.2000

    34.14

    +0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    22.73

    -0.48%

  • GSK

    -0.0200

    48.59

    -0.04%

  • BCC

    -0.5400

    74.23

    -0.73%

  • AZN

    0.1900

    91.55

    +0.21%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.2

    -0.22%

  • BTI

    0.3200

    56.77

    +0.56%

  • RIO

    1.7800

    80.1

    +2.22%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    15.36

    -2.08%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.37

    -0.07%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.88

    +0.31%

  • RELX

    0.2500

    40.98

    +0.61%

AI video becomes more convincing, rattling creative industry
AI video becomes more convincing, rattling creative industry / Photo: Tommaso Boddi - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

AI video becomes more convincing, rattling creative industry

Gone are the days of six-fingered hands or distorted faces -- AI-generated video is becoming increasingly convincing, attracting Hollywood, artists, and advertisers, while shaking the foundations of the creative industry.

Text size:

To measure the progress of AI video, you need only look at Will Smith eating spaghetti.

Since 2023, this unlikely sequence -- entirely fabricated -- has become a technological benchmark for the industry.

Two years ago, the actor appeared blurry, his eyes too far apart, his forehead exaggeratedly protruding, his movements jerky, and the spaghetti didn't even reach his mouth.

The version published a few weeks ago by a user of Google's Veo 3 platform showed no apparent flaws whatsoever.

"Every week, sometimes every day, a different one comes out that's even more stunning than the next," said Elizabeth Strickler, a professor at Georgia State University.

Between Luma Labs' Dream Machine launched in June 2024, OpenAI's Sora in December, Runway AI's Gen-4 in March 2025, and Veo 3 in May, the sector has crossed several milestones in just a few months.

Runway has signed deals with Lionsgate studio and AMC Networks television group.

Lionsgate vice president Michael Burns told New York Magazine about the possibility of using artificial intelligence to generate animated, family-friendly versions from films like the "John Wick" or "Hunger Games" franchises, rather than creating entirely new projects.

"Some use it for storyboarding or previsualization" -- steps that come before filming -- "others for visual effects or inserts," said Jamie Umpherson, Runway's creative director.

Burns gave the example of a script for which Lionsgate has to decide whether to shoot a scene or not.

To help make that decision, they can now create a 10-second clip "with 10,000 soldiers in a snowstorm."

That kind of pre-visualization would have cost millions before.

In October, the first AI feature film was released -- "Where the Robots Grow" -- an animated film without anything resembling live action footage.

For Alejandro Matamala Ortiz, Runway's co-founder, an AI-generated feature film is not the end goal, but a way of demonstrating to a production team that "this is possible."

- 'Resistance everywhere' -

Still, some see an opportunity.

In March, startup Staircase Studio made waves by announcing plans to produce seven to eight films per year using AI for less than $500,000 each, while ensuring it would rely on unionized professionals wherever possible.

"The market is there," said Andrew White, co-founder of small production house Indie Studios.

People "don't want to talk about how it's made," White pointed out. "That's inside baseball. People want to enjoy the movie because of the movie."

But White himself refuses to adopt the technology, considering that using AI would compromise his creative process.

Jamie Umpherson argues that AI allows creators to stick closer to their artistic vision than ever before, since it enables unlimited revisions, unlike the traditional system constrained by costs.

"I see resistance everywhere" to this movement, observed Georgia State's Strickler.

This is particularly true among her students, who are concerned about AI's massive energy and water consumption as well as the use of original works to train models, not to mention the social impact.

But refusing to accept the shift is "kind of like having a business without having the internet," she said. "You can try for a little while."

In 2023, the American actors' union SAG-AFTRA secured concessions on the use of their image through AI.

Strickler sees AI diminishing Hollywood's role as the arbiter of creation and taste, instead allowing more artists and creators to reach a significant audience.

Runway's founders, who are as much trained artists as they are computer scientists, have gained an edge over their AI video rivals in film, television, and advertising.

But they're already looking further ahead, considering expansion into augmented reality and virtual reality -- for example creating a metaverse where films could be shot.

"The most exciting applications aren't necessarily the ones that we have in mind," said Umpherson. "The ultimate goal is to see what artists do with technology."

(T.Renner--BBZ)