
Welcome to Rendering, a Deadline column reporting at the intersection of AI and showbiz. Rendering examines how artificial intelligence is disrupting the entertainment industry, taking you inside key battlegrounds and spotlighting change makers wielding the technology for good and ill. Got a story about AI? Rendering wants to hear from you: [email protected].
Hollywood has long held to an unwritten rule about plastic surgery: Everybody knows it happens, very few admit to having it done. Now there’s a new form of cosmetic enhancement in the entertainment business, but keeping it quiet has consequences for all.
Like the celebrities undergoing unspoken procedures, studios are quietly using AI to smooth rough edges, alter dialogue, and polish visual effects. In other words, movies are being tweaked and plumped, but studios are keeping hush about how.
That’s the view of an influential AI technologist, who spoke recently with Deadline’s Rendering column. His technology is widely adopted in Hollywood, but his company is only being credited on a fifth of the projects it completes. That means 80% of its work goes completely under the radar, including its contribution to a 2026 box office smash, on which the director took a personal interest in the post-production AI tools.
There’s a good reason for the silence.
Studios and producers are terrified of audience and industry backlash — even when they are not using generative slop. They worry that the mere mention of AI in the same breath as their films will make cinemagoers squeamish. So, the path of least resistance is secrecy. And unlike the stars who get cosmetic work done, the AI is so sophisticated, so imperceptible, that it is going unnoticed. In short: you get the benefits of a facelift, but dodge the discourse about the procedure.
But there is a problem with this approach.
Overcoming the AI ick will require transparency. If the technology is here to stay, which it is, and is genuinely helping creatives make better movies, then people deserve to be educated. This involves being brave when discussing case studies. It means explaining how the technology is being used to enhance creative work while at the same time observing copyright approvals and honoring the wishes of actors. It involves candidly confronting potential job losses, but also embracing the potential for job creation.
You could call it the James Cameron moment. Back in 2008, when the director anticipated antipathy for the technology used to make Avatar, Cameron got on the front foot and talked openly about how he was deploying cutting-edge tools in service of storytelling.
From deeper union agreements on artificial intelligence, to directors experimenting in new AI frontiers, and A-listers campaigning against gen-AI artistic theft, Hollywood is now regularly communing in full-throated conversations about the disruptive technology.
Further evidence of this was on display earlier this month when the Advanced Imaging Society (AIS) convened in Laguna Beach. Bringing together storytelling technologists from the major studios, the group welcomed the Joseph Gordon-Levitt-founded campaign group Creators Coalition on AI. The coalition wants to promote the responsible adoption of AI, and the first word in its four goals for the industry is: Transparency. It’s a message some AIS members heartily endorse.
Studios performing secret AI surgery on their movies threatens to undermine these efforts. For the good of the industry and audiences, it’s time to talk about those film fillers.
View original source — Deadline ↗


