惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

K
Kaspersky official blog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
D
DataBreaches.Net
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
B
Blog RSS Feed
GbyAI
GbyAI
P
Proofpoint News Feed
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
D
Docker
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
美团技术团队
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
V
Visual Studio Blog
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
博客园 - 司徒正美
量子位
B
Blog
F
Fortinet All Blogs
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
博客园 - 【当耐特】
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
A
About on SuperTechFans
I
InfoQ
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
雷峰网
雷峰网
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
J
Java Code Geeks
L
LangChain Blog
Latest news
Latest news
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
F
Full Disclosure
C
Cisco Blogs
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
W
WeLiveSecurity
T
Tenable Blog
T
Tor Project blog

Futurism

Meta Installing Software on Employee Computers to Track Everything They Do, Feed the Data to AI Concern Grows That AI Is Damaging Users’ Cognitive Abilities JPMorganChase Data Center Gets $77 Million Handout to Create Grand Total of One Job Nvidia CEO Loses His Cool at Tough Question CEO of $1.5 Billion AI Startup Accused of Massive Fraud by Justice Department Palantir Issues Ominous Corporate Manifesto Madison Square Garden Reportedly Used Facial Recognition to Stalk Trans Woman For Two Years The Florida Mass Shooter’s Conversations With ChatGPT Are Worse Than You Could Possibly Imagine China Is Starting to Pull Ahead of US in AI Race AI Company Known for Teen Suicides Launches New Feature to Turn Books Into Roleplaying Experiences Study Finds AI Use Eats Away at Users’ Confidence in Their Own Brains Democrats Warned Not to Upset Multi-Million Dollar AI Lobbyists, Even Though It’d Be a Slam Dunk With Voters City Council Wrecked in Voter Bloodbath After Allowing New Data Center Mother Reportedly Doesn’t Know Her Son Died Because She’s Been Talking to an AI Version of Him Things You Told ChatGPT or Claude My Have Already Doomed You in Court Millions of Americans Are Talking to AI Instead of Going to the Doctor, and It’s Giving Them Horrendously Flawed Medical Advice There Are Signs of a Massive AI Backlash A Prominent PR Firm Is Running a Fake News Site That’s Plagiarizing Original Journalism at Incredible Scale Fury Erupts as Val Kilmer’s Estate Announces Starring Role in AI Film Made From Beyond the Grave Allbirds Stock Now Crashing as Reality Sets in About Its Delusional AI Pivot NAACP Sues Elon Over His Noxious AI Data Center Top Security Experts Alarmed by Power of Anthropic’s New Hacker AI Teens Alarmed at What AI Is Doing to Their Minds What It Really Means That a Failing Shoe Brand “Pivoted to AI” and Its Stock Soared 700 Percent Starbucks’ Baffling ChatGPT Collab Treats Customers Like Empty, Soulless Venti Cups ChatGPT’s “Honest Reaction” to a “Song” Composed Entirely of Gas-Passing Noises Will Make You Question Whether It’s Honestly Evaluating Your Other Brilliant Ideas AI Is Turning Workplaces Into Hopeless Gridlock Companies Just Learned a Brutal Lesson About Training AI to Do Human Jobs Berklee College of Music Students Furious That It’s Offering an AI “Songwriting” Class Usually, Young People Embrace New Technology. Gen Z’s Attitude Toward AI Should Worry the Entire Tech Industry AI Use Appears to Have a “Boiling Frog” Effect on Human Cognition, New Study Warns Man Who Threw Molotov at Sam Altman’s House Warned AI Will Exterminate Humankind Trump Is Inflicting Massive Damage to His Public Image by Posting Offensive AI Slop There’s Something Fundamentally Wrong With LLMs Why Do ChatGPT Users Keep Committing Mass Shootings? Woman Sues OpenAI, Saying ChatGPT Unleashed a Vicious Stalker Against Her and Did Nothing When She Begged for Help Huge Group of Experts Warns Meta That Its Pervert Glasses Will Enable Terrible Crimes Meta Secretly Building a Photorealistic AI Clone of Mark Zuckerberg so No Employee Can Ever Escape His Watchful Eye Recent Grads Say AI Is Making It Impossible to Find a Job Moon Denialists Are So Pathetic That They’re Using AI to Fake Artemis Footage Man Suing City After AI Camera Flags Him For Wrongful Arrest Nike’s AI Designed World Cup Jerseys Are a Disaster OpenAI Backing Law That Protects It When AI Causes Mass Deaths and Other Mayhem Research Finds That AI Has Already Replaced Work for 20 Percent of Jobs OpenAI Staffers Horrified When Senior Leadership Hatched “Insane” Plan to Pit World Governments Against Each Other OpenAI’s Latest Thing It’s Bragging About Is Actually Kind of Sad Gen Z Sabotaging AI at Work So It Won’t Take Their Job Why Does It Suddenly Feel Like OpenAI Is Melting Down Into Disaster? The Effects of AI-Generated Code Tearing Through Corporations Is Actually Kind of Funny Foolish Pollsters Are Now Just Asking AI What Voters Would Say in Response to Questions and Publishing It at Face Value OpenAI Says It’s Already Made $100 Million by Stuffing ChatGPT With Ads AI Is Causing Healthcare Costs to Surge There’s a Mass Rebellion Against AI in the Workplace People Who Lose Their Job to AI Are in for a World of Pain, Goldman Sachs Report Finds OpenAI Says Not to Worry About UBI, Because It Has Another Idea Someone Just Threw a Molotov Cocktail At Sam Altman’s House New York Times Makes Substantial Changes to Article That Glazed a Sleazy AI Startup: “Our Piece Should Have Included That Information” First AI Model From Zuckerberg’s Wildly Expensive Superintelligence Lab Flops Compared to Virtually All Rivals Economists Starting to Admit They May Have Been Wrong About AI Never Replacing Human Jobs AI-Powered Drug Marketer Medvi Responds After Allegations About Fake Doctors and Patients Google Says Showing Polymarket Bets on Google News Was a Mistake We Talked to a Writer Accused of Publishing An AI-Generated Essay in The New York Times Analysis Finds That Google’s AI Overviews Are Providing Misinformation at a Scale Possibly Unprecedented in the History of Human Civilization Microsoft Mocked for Terms of Service That Admit Copilot Is for “Entertainment Purposes Only” Anthropic Warns That “Reckless” Claude Mythos Escaped a Sandbox Environment During Testing ChatGPT Is Sending People Into Obsessive Spirals of Hypochondria Sam Altman’s Coworkers Say He Can Barely Code and Misunderstands Basic Machine Learning Concepts College Students Losing Ability to Participate in Class Discussions Due to Offloading Their Thinking to AI Wall Street Journal Editor-in-Chief Instructs Staff to Welcome AI Sloplords Frontier AI Models Are Doing Something Absolutely Bizarre When Asked to Diagnose Medical X-Rays The Entire State of Maine Is Poised to Ban New Data Centers Inside Sources Say Sam Altman Is a Sociopath Startup Approved to Let AI System Prescribe Psychiatric Medication Sam Altman Watches Awkwardly As He’s Shown Bizarre ChatGPT Issue: “Uh, Maybe, Uhhh…” Why Is the New York Times Laundering the Reputation of a Sleazy AI Startup That’s Selling GLP-1s via a Dishonest Dumpster Fire of Fake Doctors, Phony Before-and-After Pictures, and Other Glaring Red Flags? ICE Foiled At Every Turn By One Vibe Coding Man In His Pickup Truck Groups Set Up to Shill AI and Data Centers Are Pouring Huge Sums of Money Into the Midterm Elections Nonprofit Research Groups Disturbed to Learn That OpenAI Has Secretly Been Funding Their Work AI Expert Says It’s Time to Stop Freaking Out About AI Taking Our Jobs We Can’t Even Imagine the Eating Disorders This New Meta Smart Glasses Feature Will Cause China Cracking Down on the Types of AI That Are Tearing America Apart Target Warns That If Its AI Shopping Agent Makes an Expensive Mistake, You’ll Have to Pay for It America’s Largest City Hospital System Ready to Start Replacing Radiologists With AI, Its CEO Says AI Forces College Professor to Get Typewriters for Entire Class Claude Leak Shows That Anthropic Is Tracking Users’ Vulgar Language and Deems Them “Negative” The Real Reason OpenAI Shut Sora Down Is a Warning to Every AI Startup William Shatner Says AI Is Spreading Horrific Rumors About Him AI Is Killing Microsoft Say a Prayer for This Startup That’s Replacing Its Developers With OpenClaw Two OpenAI Execs, Including CEO of AGI, Going on Medical Leave Sam Altman Opens Up About Telling CEO of Disney That It Had All Been Smoke and Mirrors AI-Powered Tractor Startup Burns Through a Quarter Billion Dollars, Fires All Employees in Epic Implosion Anthropic Suddenly Cares Intensely About Intellectual Property After Realizing With Horror That It Accidentally Leaked Claude’s Source Code There’s a Blinking Warning Sign for the Data Centers in Space Industry Almost Half of US Data Centers That Were Supposed to Open This Year Slated to Be Canceled or Delayed Leaked Claude Code Shows Anthropic Building Mysterious “Tamagotchi” Feature Into It The Iran War Has Cut Off Supply of a Gas the AI Industry Desperately Needs The Fact That Anthropic Has Been Boasting About How Much Its Development Now Relies on Claude Makes It Very Interesting That It Just Suffered a Catastrophic Leak of Its Source Code NYT Cuts Ties With Writer as Scrutiny of AI Content Grows Data Centers Causing Huge Temperature Spikes for Miles Around Them, Study Suggests
Cannes Film Festival Says the Wall Street Journal Is Wrong: It’s Not Debuting an AI-Generated Feature Film This Week
Frank Landymore · 2026-05-23 · via Futurism

Sign up to see the future, today

Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech

This week, the Wall Street Journal ran a provocative story claiming that a fully AI-generated movie called “Hell Grind” was being screened at the iconic Cannes Film Festival, dropping a nuclear bomb in the middle of the already-heated debate on the tech’s intrusion into the art and business of cinema.

“Four street thieves are on the road to hell, literally, in an action-adventure movie debuting at the Cannes Film Festival Thursday,” the newspaper wrote. “But what’s compelling about ‘Hell Grind’ isn’t the campy plot: It’s that every character, setting and prop in the 95-minute movie was generated by AI.”

But we couldn’t find the AI movie on the official schedule of the prestigious event, which is held every year on the French Riviera. So we reached out to the organizers of the festival, who denied that they’re showing it at all, saying instead that the film was presented in a third-party screening at a local theater in the town of Cannes.

“We can confirm that ‘Hell Grind’ was not screened as part of the official Festival de Cannes program,” a Cannes spokesperson told us. “As publicly reported by Screen Daily and other media outlets, the project was presented during an industry event organized by third parties in Cannes.”

The company behind the film, Higgsfield AI, doesn’t seem interested in clarifying the confusion. When the company’s founder Alex Mashrabov posted on LinkedIn this week that “we just premiered at Cannes our first 95-minute feature film” — and boasted that “for decades, Cannes has been the room where new cinema gets legitimized” — certain reactions were sharp.

“This isn’t screening at the Festival de Cannes, which is what you’re implying,” director John Washburn shot back in the replies. “The [Cinéma Olympia] is a movie theatre that happens to be in the town of Cannes but it isn’t a venue for the festival. The suggestion that paying for a screening at some random theatre in the same town and at the same time as a major festival is somehow the same thing as being selected by that festival — the actual ‘room’ where new cinema gets ‘legitimized’ — is misleading at best. Spurious bullshittery, really.”

After this story was published, Higgsfield defended itself by saying it had shown the movie at an event called the Marché du Film, which it called an “accredited component of the Cannes ecosystem.” This is a bit like buying an advertisement in the New York Times and calling yourself a journalist: while it’s true that the Marché du Film has a business relationship with the Cannes Film Festival, it has no meaningful selection process and will screen any film that pays it enough money. It’s been described as the “Cannes Film Festival’s evil twin… where schlock is bought and sold in the shadows of the high art being celebrated at the festival,” and it’s screened pictures including the infamous B-movie “Sharknado.” (The WSJ, which made no mention of the Marché du Film and left readers with the clear impression the movie had been featured at the proper Cannes Film Festival, didn’t reply to a request for comment and hasn’t updated its story.)

This kind of chicanery is not an uncommon tactic for filmmakers trying to hijack some of the buzz of one of the most paid-attention-to events in cinema every year. But it’s also emblematic of the misleading hype that AI companies feed off, making grand claims and awing the public with exhibitions that aren’t quite what they seem. That a major newspaper bought the hype and reported it was showing at Cannes when it wasn’t is a testament to where things are at.

The tentacles of AI have ensnared themselves in all manner of industries, but the tech has an especially strong hold on film. AI video generators promise to upend traditional modes of filmmaking as we know it, a sentiment glibly expressed by the common AI bro refrain that “Hollywood is cooked.” No longer will you need expensive actors, cameras, or sets to make that story idea you’ve had rolling around in your head since you were a teenager a reality. You just need to know what to whisper to an AI model. 

And since film is a popular medium, it’s easy for AI boosters to show something that on a surface level appears to transform it. Earlier this year, a purportedly AI-generated video of Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt fighting on a rooftop went viral for its blockbuster-like quality that had even Marvel screenwriters prophesying the death of the industry. It turned out, however, that the video was an AI-reskin of existing footage of two human performers fighting in front of a green screen. In other words, it was pure theater.

The creators of “Hell Grind” are also making striking claims. The film supposedly took just two weeks and $500,000 to make, per the WSJ. A full 80 percent of that went to compute costs; its creators describe it as a proof-of-concept for how AI can empower creatives who wouldn’t otherwise have the means to make a movie, a common pro-AI spiel. Of course, given the specious marketing around it being shown in Cannes, all of these should be taken with a grain of salt.

“The main aim as a filmmaker is I just wanted to tell stories,” Adilet Abish, an in-house director and creative producer at Higgsfield who worked on the film, told the WSJ. “This is the case where AI can give you the tool to show the world your story.”

Right off the bat, it’s clear that “Hell Grind” isn’t the type of flick designed to garner awards at prestigious festivals like Cannes. It’s a 95-minute sci-fi action movie heavy on epic slow-mo shots and irreverent dialog — or that’s what the three minute trailer Higgsfield released this week suggests, at least. It follows a perennially blood-soaked dude named “Roco” and three other street thieves we care about whose “heist goes catastrophically wrong when an ancient artifact tears one of them into the underworld.” Battles against demons with overwhelming odds ensue.

“Hell Grind,” in other words, is exactly the kind of cheesy spectacle you’d expect AI bros to make. While the visuals are impressively shiny at times, they can’t cover up the aesthetic predilections of generative AI or the people who use it. Roco’s love interest looks like every other “photorealistic” but bordering-on-anime AI-generated waifu, less a character and more an amalgamation of attractive features that an algorithm averaged together. Ditto for the generic demon antagonists.

Its creators at Higgsfield insist that a lot of work and skill goes into making an AI film. The company makes a tool that harnesses other video generating models like Google’s Veo 3 to fine tune their outputs and ensure their images remain consistent across the thousands of short, 15-second clips they churn out that the tool later stitches together. 

“You have to understand camera composition, which shots are changed. Like you can’t have two close-ups back to back, you have to start with an establishing shot,” Adil Alimzhanov, a content lead at Higgsfield, told the WSJ. “You still need those filmmaking skills.”

It’s entering a polarizing atmosphere on AI in the industry broadly, and at Cannes specifically. Some big names at the festival have come out in support. “The Substance” star Demi Moore declared that “AI was here,” calling on filmmakers to “find ways that we can work with it.” Nicolas Winding Refn, the director of “Drive” (2011) and this year’s “Her Private Hell,” compared AI to a painter’s brush, saying it came down to the artist to figure “what you’re going to do with it.”

Others were fiercely opposed. “AI doesn’t have a chance,” actress Tilda Swinton said, adding: “Humans make cinema, right?”

Guillermo Del Toro, the director of “Pan’s Labyrinth,” favored brevity.

“F*ck AI,” he said, to thunderous applause.

More on AI: AI-Generated Film Pulled From AMC Cinemas