Gore Verbinski Just Gave AI-Written Scripts a BIG Fat ‘F’!
- Gore Verbinski’s thoughts on AI in cinema.
- Why he thinks AI scripts are a no-go.
- What a “rating system” for AI could look like.
- Our take on keeping human creativity alive!
We just saw something big drop from the Taormina Film Festival. Gore Verbinski, the genius director behind those wild pirate adventures and the visually stunning ‘Rango’, is there. He’s got a new sci-fi flick out, “Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die.” Sounds intriguing, right? Sam Rockwell plays a time-traveling madman!
Cool. But Verbinski isn’t just talking about his movie. He’s talking about AI. Big time. He’s got some strong feelings about it. Like, really strong.
He thinks we need a ‘rating system’ for AI in films. Seriously! He’s worried about how fast this tech is growing. But here’s the kicker. His biggest statement? If you use AI to write a script? You get an F. A big, fat, failing grade. No compromise there.
It makes you think about the whole *vibe* of a film. The raw human emotion. The unexpected twists that only a person could dream up. Could AI really capture that unique aesthetic we love? It’s like comparing a carefully painted canvas to a computer-generated image. Both can be impressive. But one has that undeniable touch of human struggle, joy, and sweat. That secret sauce.
Remember how Imtiaz Ali revealed the magic behind ‘Kun Faya Kun’? That’s human brilliance right there. Or how Bharathiraja’s movies truly changed Hindi cinema? Pure artistic vision. That’s the stuff we live for.
Imagine trying to mimic the energy Jackie Shroff brings to a set with Ahmed Khan, just with algorithms. It just wouldn’t be the same. Verbinski is basically saying: hands off the screenplay, bots! Let humans tell the stories. Let them craft the emotions. We get it. A script is the heart of a film. It’s where the story lives. And maybe, just maybe, that heart needs to be purely human.
Our Take
We get what Gore Verbinski is saying. Completely. There’s a certain magic in human creativity. That spark. It’s what makes movies feel alive. We cheer. We cry. We feel something deep down. Can a machine truly replicate that artistic soul? Probably not. Not really. Maybe AI can help with smaller tasks. But the core story? The vision? That needs a human touch. An ‘F’ for an AI script? We see his point. Let’s keep the real storytellers telling their tales.
