The Brutalist director Brady Corbet clarified how AI tools were used on the film during postproduction after social media outrage about the practice spread widely over the weekend. In a statement provided to Gold Derby,
The use of AI in 'The Brutalist' sparked controversy, but the reality is that CG and digital effects have long been changing actors' performances.
Brady Corbet, director of critically acclaimed film "The Brutalist," is responding to criticism of his Golden Globe winning film after it was revealed artificial intelligence was used in the production to "perfect" the actors' accents.
The Brutalist” director Brady Corbet addresses the backlash caused by the revelation that AI was used in parts of the film's creation.
That dialogue, it turns out, may have been supplemented by an AI speech tool.  Jancsó is a native Hungarian speaker; he knows how difficult the language is to replicate. That’s true even for Brody, whose mother is in fact a Hungarian refugee.
The Brutalist director Brady Corbet speaks out after claims AI controversy will hurt film’s Oscar chances - ‘The aim was to preserve the authenticity of Adrien and Felicity’s performances in another language,
But with the 97th Academy Awards just months away, recent revelations about the use of AI in one of the ceremony’s biggest contenders has film industry folks and film fans alike unsure how — if at all — these developments will (or should) affect its consideration.
The technology can deceive so easily that public confidence in generative AI is only possible with full disclosure.
The director of the possible Oscar frontrunner addresses the film's use of AI in response to growing backlash.
The A24 film is under fire after editor Dávid Jancsó revealed an AI tool was used to perfect the actors' Hungarian dialect.
The AI tools in question come from the Ukranian company Respeecher. Corbet told The Hollywood Reporter that they only used the tools in post-production to enhance