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AI Movies Software Entertainment Technology

Warner Bros. Signs Deal For AI-Driven Film Management System (hollywoodreporter.com) 39

Warner Bros. is has made a pact with Cinelytic to use its AI-driven project management system that was launched last year. From The Hollywood Reporter: Under the new deal, Warners will leverage the system's comprehensive data and predictive analytics to guide decision-making at the greenlight stage. The integrated online platform can assess the value of a star in any territory and how much a film is expected to make in theaters and on other ancillary streams. Founded four years ago by Tobias Queisser, Cinelytic has been building and beta testing the platform for three years. In 2018, the company raised $2.25 million from T&B Media Global and signed deals with Ingenious Media (Wind River) and Productivity Media (The Little Hours). STX, which endured a number of flops in 2019, including Playmobil and Uglydolls, became a Cinelytic client in September.

While the platform won't necessarily predict what will be the next $1 billion surprise, like Warners' hit Joker, it will reduce the amount of time executives spend on low-value, repetitive tasks and instead give them better dollar-figure parameters for packaging, marketing and distribution decisions, including release dates. The platform is particularly helpful in the festival setting, where studios get caught in bidding wars and plunk down massive sums after only hours of assessment.
"The system can calculate in seconds what used to take days to assess by a human when it comes to general film package evaluation or a star's worth," says Queisser. "Artificial intelligence sounds scary. But right now, an AI cannot make any creative decisions. What it is good at is crunching numbers and breaking down huge data sets and showing patterns that would not be visible to humans. But for creative decision-making, you still need experience and gut instinct."
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Warner Bros. Signs Deal For AI-Driven Film Management System

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  • by thesjaakspoiler ( 4782965 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @02:21AM (#59601930)

    It can't be much if it doesn't have a blockchain.

  • Sequel generator? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Petersko ( 564140 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @02:29AM (#59601944)

    Thought they had a fully functioning one of those.

    • Thought they had a fully functioning one of those.

      No mod points yet but spot on! Just wonder when they will do a sequel to Dr Strangelove it seems to be a good time for someone to take a crack at that little gem. Or perhaps in a greener state of grace a sequel to "A River Runs Through it" only entitled "Our River in Requiem"

      I know that the statement I just made is a downer, but AI determining the choices made for film material might just surprise the hell out of the studio execs. But to be more realistic we will start seeing even more "First Blood" like r

    • I wonder if they will bother to feed it information about past blockbusters, directors, and actors to see if it would recommend them again.

      Apparently the original Star Wars was given very little chance of success by studio executives.

    • Thought they had a fully functioning one of those.

      I'm pretty sure they do. It seems to be lacking the "intelligence" half, although "artificial" is going strong.

  • by lokedhs ( 672255 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @02:35AM (#59601956)

    "But for creative decision-making, you still need experience and gut instinct"

    That is true, but what are the odds that the movie studios are going to use said experience and gut-instinct when greenlighting new projects? It's not like they do it even today, without any AI tools, and instead prefers to go with sequels and superhero movies.

  • by Dracos ( 107777 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @02:44AM (#59601974)

    Not micromanage their film directors from the C suite.

  • by Geodesy99 ( 1002847 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @02:45AM (#59601976)
    ... will be won by an AI.
  • by bazmail ( 764941 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @03:54AM (#59602054)
    This is the hollywood equivalent of moneyball. Think Hollywood movies are bland "lowest common denominator" garbage now? You ain't seen nothin yet.
    • “The network execu-bots are coming!”
    • I indeed aint seen nothin yet. In fact I do not pay to watch any of the Hollywood garbage made for current release and have not for two decades. But this of course is because I am a wierdo. I am one of those liberal elites that Trump fans love to hate. Lowest common denominator entertainment always has been dodgy and always will be dodgy. Given that we live in the age of the internet there is a suprising lack of a long tail in the entertainment business. The crowd is not always right so the problem must lie

    • It feels like Netflix and Amazon are doing this already.

      So many of there original programs appear like they have done some kind of algorithmic min-max on the film's basic qualities (script, location, props/sets, casting) yet the actual content is garbage and it's almost hard to figure out why.

      The last season of Goliath is a great example -- the cast had Billy Bob Thornton, Dennis Quaid, Amy Brenneman, Beau Bridges, William Hurt, and more, yet the entire season seemed to take place on about 3 sets when they

  • by asackett ( 161377 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @04:36AM (#59602102) Homepage

    I, for one, look forward to Ow! My Balls! The Sequel!

  • No more surprises (Score:2, Interesting)

    Until recently, movie making has been an art. Then that book came out, Save The Cat I think it was called, that explained exactly how to write a hit movie. It told you what to do, down to the minute things should happen, and in what order. It is now a textbook in Hollywood.

    At least we'll still have classic cinema. But new movies will just get worse and worse. And we thought they were formulaic now. This is going to absolutely McDonalds-ize Hollywood. Oh well, I suppose it's good that we stop watching

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Sad thing is, once you know the "beats", you can't not see them.
      Knowing that changed the way I see movies, and not for the better.
      [ANON: Mod Points]
  • "The system can calculate in seconds what used to take days to assess by a human when it comes to general film package evaluation or a star's worth,"

    It can predict the past.

  • by AndyMM ( 2036890 )
    Perhaps the AI will be intelligent enough to stop Hollywood giving Will Ferrell roles. Long overdue. :-)
    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      Perhaps the AI will be intelligent enough to stop Hollywood giving Will Ferrell roles. Long overdue. :-)

      Please no. I'm still hoping for Will Ferrell to put on 30lbs and star in the biopic of Ben Roethlisberger.

    • Thought I was the only one who thought he was the least funny person on the planet.

  • "Artificial intelligence sounds scary. But right now, an AI cannot make any creative decisions. What it is good at is crunching numbers ..."

    Nobody in Hollywood has made "creative" decisive in decades. I can't imagine it takes much RAM to make the non-decisions resulting in the shit that flows from the major studios.

  • I'll bet it's nothing more than linear regression.

    See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • ...is an Opposition team composed of humans. Compare the two reports, flip a coin or we may miss out on something that captures the zeitgeist and becomes a great thing.

  • Who needs a piano player, when you have a player piano?

  • It's been a really long time since I've had to write any code (I have written scripts in the not too distant past though), but I think I might be up to the task to do this one.

    1) Is it a remake of an older movie? If yes, approve. If no, don't approve.
    2) Is it a sequel of a previous film? If yes, approve. If no, don't approve.
    3) Is it new but Tom Cruise is in it? If yes, approve. If no, don't approve unless maybe another big star is in it.
  • Right, and the reason that Hollywood puts out such crap is that they make decisions on how to spend $100M or more on the basis of 25 words or less in an elevator?

    I mean, the only way to train an AI like this is using people who do this now for a living... meaning managers.

    You *really* like your manager? Really?

    I once worked for the Scummy Mortgage Co. in Austin. Collections rolled out a new interface. The people who worked there used paper and pencil to collect all information, and only used the terminal (t

  • and start over from scratch.
  • There are an increasing number of movies being made starring synthetic thespians, so it was only a matter of time before film executives were similarly replaced by digital technology. And based on the last 15 years or so of Hollywood product, it’s not like the computers can do any worse than their predecessors, I mean human counterparts
  • Bastante interesante esta movida de Warner, no es de extrañarse, pues la cantidad de competencia que tiene no es normla, netflix, hbo, disney y pare de contar, incluso los servicios de películas gratuitas como pelispedia, 123movies free [www.123movies.legal] o repelis. En fin, es bastante trabajo el que se debe poner a hacer Warner para recuperar el terreno perdido.

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