Close Menu
Alpha Leaders
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
What's On
Build A Successful Enterprise AI Foundation With An Engineering Mindset

Build A Successful Enterprise AI Foundation With An Engineering Mindset

1 June 2026
Ex-GE CEO Jeff Immelt reflects on his new Substack newsletter and why he’s getting candid now

Ex-GE CEO Jeff Immelt reflects on his new Substack newsletter and why he’s getting candid now

1 June 2026
Hollywood Studios Are Spending On AI To Control The Future Of Film

Hollywood Studios Are Spending On AI To Control The Future Of Film

1 June 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Alpha Leaders
newsletter
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Alpha Leaders
Home » Hollywood Studios Are Spending On AI To Control The Future Of Film
Innovation

Hollywood Studios Are Spending On AI To Control The Future Of Film

Press RoomBy Press Room1 June 20265 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp
Hollywood Studios Are Spending On AI To Control The Future Of Film

When Amazon MGM Studios took the stage at the AI on the Lot conference in Culver City on May 27, the news was not a chip or a model. It was a slate of cartoons.

Prime Video ordered three animated series under Amazon’s new GenAI Creators’ Fund: Cupcake & Friends from BuzzFeed Studios, Love, Diana Music Hunters from Albie Hecht, chief content officer of pocket.watch, and Punky Duck from animator Jorge R. Gutierrez, of The Book of Life and Maya and the Three. Built with AWS, the fund gives selected creators AI production tools and financing to make projects for Prime Video.

The framing was deliberate. Amazon is not selling AI as a replacement for animators. It is selling AI as a way for a small team to do work that used to take a full studio floor.

That distinction is the story. After two years of strikes, protests and splashy deals, the industry’s AI question has changed. It is no longer whether studios will work with AI companies. It is whether they can build AI they own, govern and defend.

Amazon’s Project Nara Shows Studios Want To Control AI Production

At the center sits Project Nara, an AWS-built production platform reserved for Amazon MGM and its fund creators. Amazon says it runs across animation and live action and plugs into the tools artists already use—Maya, Blender, Nuke, Unreal Engine, Adobe—mixing outside video models with proprietary ones trained on the studio’s own library.

It also tracks provenance for every asset: proof of where an image came from. That is not a footnote. It is how a studio convinces artists, unions and rights holders that AI work can be traced rather than laundered.

“Creative breakthroughs happen when visionary storytellers are given access to transformative tools,” said Albert Cheng, head of AI Studios at Amazon MGM. The line studios keep repeating: humans lead, AI supports.

Disney’s OpenAI Deal Shows The Risk Of Renting AI

The caution comes from the messy first wave of studio-AI deals. Disney’s landmark agreement with OpenAI, announced in December, was the boldest—Sora would spin up fan-made shorts using more than 200 Disney, Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars characters under a three-year license.

The catch came in the fine print: the deal was subject to definitive agreements, board approvals and customary closing conditions. Even the splashiest AI partnership still depends on an outside platform—and on terms that have to survive approvals, product shifts and closing conditions. The lesson was not that Hollywood was done with AI. It was that betting your IP on someone else’s app is dangerous when their priorities shift overnight.

Lionsgate, Runway And ‘Critterz’ Show Studios Are Spending On AI

The people actually making these films say the mood has turned. Nik Kleverov, directing the AI-assisted animated feature Critterz, told me that studios and partners are finally moving from talk to action. “They’re starting to put their money where their mouth is,” he said—not a wholesale embrace, but a real opening.

Lionsgate shows the steadier version. In 2024 it signed a first-of-its-kind deal with Runway to train a custom model on its 20,000-title library. Nothing has been publicly credited to that deal yet, but the ambition is real—and the studio keeps building AI in-house.

By its fiscal third- and fourth-quarter 2026 earnings calls, Lionsgate had named its first chief AI officer, Kathleen Grace, and pushed its AI work well beyond Runway. CEO Jon Feltheimer said the studio had “deployed it over 80% of our workforce”—Copilot, ChatGPT Enterprise, Snowflake—called AI “a total net positive,” and teased a coming fan-and-creator site with “digital toolkits” built “with the authority and approvals of our talent.”

That is the tell. AI is no longer a demo. It is becoming a permanent studio job, sitting alongside production finance and distribution.

The tool makers are courting creators directly, too. Runway’s Hundred Film Fund bankrolls AI-assisted films. Adobe stood up a Film & TV Fund; Google is funding Sundance Institute AI training and fellowships. And Netflix bought in, acquiring Ben Affleck’s AI filmmaking startup InterPositive to speed production and post while keeping artists in charge.

Cannes And SAG-AFTRA Show Hollywood’s AI Guardrails Taking Shape

The mood shift was unmistakable at Cannes. Demi Moore, on the festival jury, put it bluntly: “AI is here, and so to fight it is to fight something that is a battle that we will lose. So to find ways in which we can work with it, I think, is a more valuable path.” Down at the market, films arrived not just admitting they used AI but selling it as a feature—a long way from the shame and manifestos of a year earlier.

The labor fight is not settled. Performers, writers and crew still worry about consent, pay, credit and lost jobs. After a near-yearlong strike, SAG-AFTRA ratified a 2025 Interactive Media Agreement requiring consent and disclosure for AI digital replicas—and letting performers suspend that consent during a strike, in effect sending their digital doubles to the picket line. The emerging bargain: use AI, but the rights travel with it.

Plenty of artists still are not sold. The Human Artistry Campaign, a broad coalition of creators’ organizations, warns that AI must not erode human creativity, consent or compensation. But the studios that own the characters, libraries and pipelines are not waiting. They want AI’s speed and savings without handing an outside platform the IP, the talent or the credit.

That is why Amazon’s cartoons are less important as shows than as a signal. The fight over whether AI belongs in film is basically over. The next one is sharper: who builds the systems, who gets paid when they run, and whose name ends up on the screen.

AI Ai filmmaking Amazon Amazon MGM Studios Hollywood AI Hollywood Studios Jorge R. Gutierrez Lionsgate AI MGM Studios Project Nara
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link

Related Articles

Build A Successful Enterprise AI Foundation With An Engineering Mindset

Build A Successful Enterprise AI Foundation With An Engineering Mindset

1 June 2026
Top Nissan Exec Reveals U.S. Production Boost, New Xterra Details

Top Nissan Exec Reveals U.S. Production Boost, New Xterra Details

1 June 2026
These Crucial AI Unknowns Are Obstructing The Building And Fielding Of AI For Mental Health

These Crucial AI Unknowns Are Obstructing The Building And Fielding Of AI For Mental Health

1 June 2026
Why Doing Things Faster Could Cost Companies The Future

Why Doing Things Faster Could Cost Companies The Future

1 June 2026
Cadence And Nvidia Team To Develop First Fully Autonomous EDA Agent

Cadence And Nvidia Team To Develop First Fully Autonomous EDA Agent

1 June 2026
The 5 T’s Of Professional AI Success

The 5 T’s Of Professional AI Success

1 June 2026
Don't Miss
Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

By Press Room27 December 2024

Every year, millions of people unwrap Christmas gifts that they do not love, need, or…

Exclusive: DeFi platform Azura launches after raising .9 million from Initialized

Exclusive: DeFi platform Azura launches after raising $6.9 million from Initialized

22 October 2024
Sam Altman’s World Wants To Scan Your Eyes To Prove You’re Human

Sam Altman’s World Wants To Scan Your Eyes To Prove You’re Human

22 October 2024
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Latest Articles
These Crucial AI Unknowns Are Obstructing The Building And Fielding Of AI For Mental Health

These Crucial AI Unknowns Are Obstructing The Building And Fielding Of AI For Mental Health

1 June 20263 Views
How Kelly Ortberg is rebuilding Boeing from the inside out

How Kelly Ortberg is rebuilding Boeing from the inside out

1 June 20262 Views
Why Doing Things Faster Could Cost Companies The Future

Why Doing Things Faster Could Cost Companies The Future

1 June 20261 Views
Billionaires already couldn’t talk to their grandkids. Now they’re on opposite ends of the AI divide

Billionaires already couldn’t talk to their grandkids. Now they’re on opposite ends of the AI divide

1 June 20262 Views

Recent Posts

  • Build A Successful Enterprise AI Foundation With An Engineering Mindset
  • Ex-GE CEO Jeff Immelt reflects on his new Substack newsletter and why he’s getting candid now
  • Hollywood Studios Are Spending On AI To Control The Future Of Film
  • Top Nissan Exec Reveals U.S. Production Boost, New Xterra Details
  • These Crucial AI Unknowns Are Obstructing The Building And Fielding Of AI For Mental Health

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
About Us
About Us

Alpha Leaders is your one-stop website for the latest Entrepreneurs and Leaders news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks
Build A Successful Enterprise AI Foundation With An Engineering Mindset

Build A Successful Enterprise AI Foundation With An Engineering Mindset

1 June 2026
Ex-GE CEO Jeff Immelt reflects on his new Substack newsletter and why he’s getting candid now

Ex-GE CEO Jeff Immelt reflects on his new Substack newsletter and why he’s getting candid now

1 June 2026
Hollywood Studios Are Spending On AI To Control The Future Of Film

Hollywood Studios Are Spending On AI To Control The Future Of Film

1 June 2026
Most Popular
Top Nissan Exec Reveals U.S. Production Boost, New Xterra Details

Top Nissan Exec Reveals U.S. Production Boost, New Xterra Details

1 June 20261 Views
These Crucial AI Unknowns Are Obstructing The Building And Fielding Of AI For Mental Health

These Crucial AI Unknowns Are Obstructing The Building And Fielding Of AI For Mental Health

1 June 20263 Views
How Kelly Ortberg is rebuilding Boeing from the inside out

How Kelly Ortberg is rebuilding Boeing from the inside out

1 June 20262 Views

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • March 2022
  • January 2021
  • March 2020
  • January 2020

Categories

  • Blog
  • Business
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Global
  • Innovation
  • Leadership
  • Living
  • Money & Finance
  • News
  • Press Release
© 2026 Alpha Leaders. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.