Rise of the Machines: AI Spells Danger for Hollywood Stunt Workers

2nd Unit Director and Stunt Coordinator Freddy Bouciegues explain poses for AFP during a Stunts Master Class students training session at the Tempest Academy, in Chatsworth, California, on August 10, 2023. (AFP)
2nd Unit Director and Stunt Coordinator Freddy Bouciegues explain poses for AFP during a Stunts Master Class students training session at the Tempest Academy, in Chatsworth, California, on August 10, 2023. (AFP)
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Rise of the Machines: AI Spells Danger for Hollywood Stunt Workers

2nd Unit Director and Stunt Coordinator Freddy Bouciegues explain poses for AFP during a Stunts Master Class students training session at the Tempest Academy, in Chatsworth, California, on August 10, 2023. (AFP)
2nd Unit Director and Stunt Coordinator Freddy Bouciegues explain poses for AFP during a Stunts Master Class students training session at the Tempest Academy, in Chatsworth, California, on August 10, 2023. (AFP)

Hollywood's striking actors fear that artificial intelligence is coming for their jobs -- but for many stunt performers, that dystopian danger is already a reality.

From "Game of Thrones" to the latest Marvel superhero movies, cost-slashing studios have long used computer-generated background figures to reduce the number of actors needed for battle scenes.

Now, the rise of AI means cheaper and more powerful techniques are being explored to create highly elaborate action sequences such as car chases and shootouts -- without those pesky (and expensive) humans.

Stunt work, a time-honored Hollywood tradition that has spanned from silent epics through to Tom Cruise's latest "Mission Impossible," is at risk of rapidly shrinking.

"The technology is exponentially getting faster and better," said Freddy Bouciegues, stunt coordinator for movies like "Free Guy" and "Terminator: Dark Fate."

"It's really a scary time right now."

Studios are already requiring stunt and background performers to take part in high-tech 3D "body scans" on set, often without explaining how or when the images will be used.

Advancements in AI mean these likenesses could be used to create detailed, eerily realistic "digital replicas," which can perform any action or speak any dialogue its creators wish.

Bouciegues fears producers could use these virtual avatars to replace "nondescript" stunt performers -- such as those playing pedestrians leaping out of the way of a car chase.

"There could be a world where they said, 'No, we don't want to bring these 10 guys in... we'll just add them in later via effects and AI. Now those guys are out of the job."

But according to director Neill Blomkamp, whose new film "Gran Turismo" hits theaters August 25, even that scenario only scratches the surface.

The role AI will soon play in generating images from scratch is "hard to compute," he told AFP.

"Gran Turismo" primarily uses stunt performers driving real cars on actual racetracks, with some computer-generated effects added on top for one particularly complex and dangerous scene.

But Blomkamp predicts that, in as soon as six or 12 months, AI will reach a point where it can generate photo-realistic footage like high-speed crashes based on a director's instructions alone.

At that point, "you take all of your CG (computer graphics) and VFX (visual effects) computers and throw them out the window, and you get rid of stunts, and you get rid of cameras, and you don't go to the racetrack," he told AFP.

"It's that different."

The human element

The lack of guarantees over the future use of AI is one of the major factors at stake in the ongoing strike by the Screen Actors Guild (SAG-AFTRA) and Hollywood's writers, who have been on the picket lines 100 days.

SAG-AFTRA last month warned that studios intend to create realistic digital replicas of performers, to use "for the rest of eternity, in any project they want" -- all for the payment of one day's work.

The studios dispute this, and say they have offered rules including informed consent and compensation.

But as well as the potential implications for thousands of lost jobs, Bouciegues warns that no matter how good the technology has become, "the audience can still tell" when the wool is being pulled over their eyes by computer-generated VFX.

Even if AI can perfectly replicate a battle, explosion or crash, it cannot supplant the human element that is vital to any successful action film, he said, pointing to Cruise's recent "Top Gun" and "Mission Impossible" sequels.

"He uses real stunt people, and he does real stunts, and you can see it on the screen. For me, I feel like it subconsciously affects the viewer," said Bouciegues.

Current AI technology still gives "slightly unpredictable results," agreed Blomkamp, who began his career in VFX, and directed Oscar-nominated "District 9."

"But it's coming... It's going to fundamentally change society, let alone Hollywood. The world is going to be different."

For stunt workers like Bouciegues, the best outcome now is to blend the use of human performers with VFX and AI to pull off sequences that would be too dangerous with old-fashioned techniques alone.

"I don't think this job will ever just cease to be," said Bouciegues, of stunt work. "It just definitely is going to get smaller and more precise."

But even that is a sobering reality for stunt performers who are currently standing on picket lines outside Hollywood studios.

"Every stunt guy is the alpha male type, and everybody wants to say, 'Oh, we're good,'" said Bouciegues.

"But I personally have spoken to a lot of people that are freaked out and nervous."



Taylor Swift Fans Turn Out Early for Book Launch at Target

Taylor Swift attends an in conversation with Taylor Swift event at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 9, 2022. (AP)
Taylor Swift attends an in conversation with Taylor Swift event at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 9, 2022. (AP)
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Taylor Swift Fans Turn Out Early for Book Launch at Target

Taylor Swift attends an in conversation with Taylor Swift event at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 9, 2022. (AP)
Taylor Swift attends an in conversation with Taylor Swift event at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 9, 2022. (AP)

Taylor Swift fans and their parents lined up outside some of Target's nearly 2,000 US stores early on Black Friday to buy copies of her new Eras Tour book.

Hoping to buck a long stretch of slowing sales at Target stores - with penny-pinched shoppers making purchases at rival retailers - the big-box chain teamed up with Swift to build on the fan momentum she experienced following her Eras Tour concerts.

Several customers queued up outside Target stores as early as 5 a.m. ET in freezing temperatures, with most of them there to snap up Swift merchandise, Reuters reported.

"Yeah, it's really cold but we're here to get Taylor Swift's tour book and her latest vinyl drop," Carlos Miracle, a 31-year old Swift fan, said while waiting outside a Chicago store.

Parents of teenage daughters and youngsters in their late 20's were up and about to buy Swift's Eras Tour book priced at $39.99 at Target. The retailer is also making available a vinyl album and CD version of "The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology" for the first time containing 35 tracks including four acoustic bonus songs.

The vinyl version is being sold at $59.99 and CDs for $17.99, according to Target's website.

Swift, 34, has been setting music industry milestones and boosting local economies with The Eras Tour, with the last leg of the concert happening in Canada currently, a phenomenon that some economists have termed " Swiftflation."

Swift had released her latest Tortured Poets album in May during Target's first quarter, boosting its sales in its entertainment category by a high-single-digit percentage.

On Friday, Julia Corrin, a 39-year old from Pittsburgh bought the Era Tour book. The tour was a "really special moment ... and it'll be great to have something to remember it by," she said.

In New Jersey, 28-year old Amy Webb was in line to get her hands on the new Eras Tour book. "I usually don't buy anything during the holiday season, but wanted to get my hands on this before it sells out," she said.

On X, formerly known as Twitter, users shared images of long queues to grab Swift's merchandise while some noted that a few Target stores saw nearly empty shelves for the Eras Tour book and were out of Tortured Poets vinyl as of 9:30 a.m.

"The vinyl went quick, I don’t know exactly how many my store got, but I was in line at 5. By the time it was my turn the employee told me there were only 8 left," said an X-user Rachel.

There were no fans in line as of 8:30 a.m. at one Target store in New Jersey that had opened two and a half hours earlier. Its rack holding copies of the Eras Tour book was half empty.

To boost sales during the holiday season, which is shorter than in previous years with only 26 days between Thanksgiving and Christmas, Target will begin to offer the Eras Tour book and vinyl and CD version of her Tortured Poets album on its app and website beginning Saturday.

"That's the only reason I am here, we don't want to go online and see that it is sold (out)," said a 35-year old Marriott Hotel employee Adrian Antuna, who was waiting to get his hands on the Eras Tour book and a couple of the Tortured Poets Department vinyl albums.