The Market Signal: Hollywood Is "A Little Wart" on AI's Ambitions
Avatar director James Cameron suggests future fragmentation within blockbuster models as budgets shrink
The Medium identifies essential signals on how technology is shaping the business of culture, and how the marketplace is evolving in response.
The Market Signal
Yesterday, a must-watch podcast interview debuted between film-maker James Cameron by Meta CTO and Head of Reality Labs Andrew “Boz” Bosworth.
Media coverage—particularly from the Hollywood trades—focused on Cameron’s response about why he joined the board of Stability AI, a UK-based artificial intelligence company best known for its text-to-image model Stable Diffusion.
Cameron responded for blockbusters like “Dune”, “Dune: Part Two”, or “big effects-heavy, [computer graphics (“CG”)]-heavy films” to continue to succeed in Hollywood, there is a need to figure out how to cut the cost” of those budgets “in half”.
He added:
That’s not about laying off half the staff and at the effects company. That’s about doubling their speed to completion on a given shot so your cadence is faster and your throughput cycle is faster, and artists get to move on and do other cool things and then other cool things…”
This was actually the least interesting comment in the interview.
Why It Matters
Read alone, Cameron's comment suggests he views AI in Hollywood merely as a cost-effective replacement for expensive visual effects (VFX). Shortly afterward, however, he and Bosworth debated how AI is an entirely new medium.
Their arguments support the business case made by Fable Simulation founder Edward Saatchi that I outlined in Monday’s “The Market Signal: Runway Raises At $3 Billion Valuation”.
🎙️ New Audio Series
Voices in ChAInge is a series of 12 short audio interviews (1.5 to 5 minutes long) that offer a wide variety of answers to this simple question: “What is a recent market signal or development in AI that forced you to rethink a key business assumption?”
For my fourth interview I spoke with Dave DiCamillo, CTO of Code and Theory, a strategically driven, digital-first agency that lives at the intersection of creativity and technology. The fifth interview—with Natalie Monbiot, Founder of Virtual Human Economy—will go live tomorrow. You can listen to all four interviews on The Medium or on Spotify.
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