Sundance Film Festival | Artificial intelligence shares the spotlight with the stars

(Park City) The Sundance independent film festival begins Thursday in the United States, for an edition where the emergence of artificial intelligence, addressed by several filmmakers, will share the spotlight with stars like Kristen Stewart and Pedro Pascal.


Co-founded by actor Robert Redford, this event is being held until January 28 in the mountains of Utah, at an altitude of more than 2,000 meters. It constitutes an essential launch platform for many independent films and documentaries, seeking broadcasters.

Among the 90 productions selected this year, the upheavals linked to AI occupy a special place, just a few months after having largely contributed to the strikes which paralyzed Hollywood, where actors and screenwriters feared being replaced by robots.

The documentary Love Machina for example, follows the efforts of a couple to perpetuate the love that binds them beyond their death, by transferring their consciousness to a humanoid.

Its director Peter Sillen considers himself “lucky” that the outcome of this project, started in 2017, coincides with “public awareness of AI”, propelled to the forefront by the progress of conversational robots like ChatGPT .

Another documentary, Eternal Youimmerses him in the opaque and flourishing world of start-up companies which attack the mourning market, by offering to converse with avatars capable of mimicking a deceased loved one thanks to an AI based on their memories.

Two films with Kristen Stewart

PHOTO ANGELA WEISS, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ARCHIVES

Kristen Stewart

On the fiction side, the former star of Twilight Kristen Stewart is starring in “two of the most talked about films at the festival,” warns programming director Kim Yutani.

In Love Lies Bleeding, the actress plays a weight room manager who falls in love with a bisexual bodybuilder. A love story put to the test by a series of violent events.

She also plays in Love Mea film mysteriously presented as an online romance between “a buoy and a satellite” in a post-human world.

Thursday evening, the festival will open with the screening of Freaky Taleswith actor Pedro Pascal starring in a series of stories set on the same day in 1987. A tale where punk teenagers, skinheads, a rap battle and a basketball star intersect.

Another highly anticipated film, the comedy Thelma features a grandmother embarked on an anthology of action, in a third age version of the series Impossible mission.

“I hope that we will be distributed by someone who will allow us to appear in the cinema first, then in streaming “, confided the main actress June Squibb, 94 years old.

Sundance darlings, directors Steven Soderbergh and Richard Linklater come to defend their latest projects. The first sign Presencea scary thriller with Lucy Liu in a haunted suburban house, while the second offers a portrait of her hometown in the documentary series God Save Texas.

Japan and American democracy

In addition to artificial intelligence, the documentaries once again deal with very diverse themes this year, ranging from the late emergence of the #metoo movement in Japan to the future of American democracy.

War Game thus follows an exercise between senior intelligence officers and American politicians, who submit to a role play to imagine their management of a coup d’état after a contested presidential election.

In the middle of an election year, “it is certainly disturbing to know that the games can be very close to reality,” said the new festival director, Eugene Hernandez.

Another chronicle of American society, Will & Harper follows the coming out of a transgender woman traveling across the country.

Finally, the Japanese journalist Shiori Ito, leading figure in the movement which made it possible to reform the Japanese Penal Code to broaden the definition of rape, proposes Black Box Diaries.

A diary which traces her accusations of rape against a manager of a television channel, and her fight against misogyny to improve the handling of sexual violence by the justice system.

“I don’t know what to expect, but it’s America, so I hope I can meet people who will also share their experiences,” she confided before the broadcast of her documentary, planned SATURDAY.


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