A Sci-Fi Script Written by an Algorithm Goes Horribly Wrong -- Here's What Happened
Perhaps the fear of artificial intelligence taking control of everything is overstated. A.I. might be able to drive cars and beat people at chess, but they can't write a compelling screenplay -- or even get close to one. That's what happened when filmmaker Oscar Sharp and A.I. researcher Ross Goodwin worked together to create Benjamin, a neural network they programmed to become a budding science fiction screenwriter, with pretty terrible results. They fed Benjamin a bevy of sci-fi scripts from the '80s and '90s -- though oddly, the likes of Silver Linings Playbook and Scary Movie 2 were also thrown in, among others -- and with the help of tech website Ars Technica and Silicon Valley's Thomas Middleditch, set out on a 48-hour mission to turn Benjamin's short film, Sunspring, into a reality. Middleditch and the other actors in Sunspring had their work cut out for them, with choppy dialogue that makes little to no sense (take Middleditch's first line, "In a future with mass unemployment, young people are forced to sell blood. It's something I can do").
Jun-11-2016, 13:40:32 GMT
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