This is not your average vault. Instead of stacks of money or safety deposit boxes, there are cameras, lights and screens fastened together to create two giant orbs.
It’s called the CAAVault and it’s how one of the most powerful talent agencies in the country is seeking to preserve, protect and future-proof in the age of artificial intelligence.
ABC News was given rare access into the world of how Hollywood is already harnessing AI, with the Creative Artists Agency, providing a peek at its white-glove offering to digitally clone some of the biggest names in Hollywood and sports for the client to own and license for future projects.
The CAAVault’s Facial Cloning Rig.
ABC News
“Think of it like a bank,” CAA’s head of strategic development, Alexandra Shannon says. “If somebody now owns their digital likeness assets, anyone who chooses to do anything other than work with that individual, now there’s a stronger case to show that they’re infringing on their rights.”
The CAAVault began in 2023, offering 3D and 4D capture of every client’s movement, range of emotions and vocal inflection in a process that takes about 3 hours.
“Now somebody can show up in a Call of Duty game or in Fortnite or in any of these sorts of platforms,” Shannon said. “You also look at what a company like Masterclass is doing with their on-call product. Sort of a virtual chat bot that is trained on a particular individual.”
Chatbots made with an actor’s likeness can be programmed to speak in multiple languages, increasing reach to a global fanbase, Shannon said. But don’t expect licensing the digital double to come at a discount.
“The value is in that person, in that individual … it doesn’t change the value of what that individual brings,” Shannon says.
Deep Voodoo’s filter technology can make deep fakes appear even more lifelike.
ABC News
While tech companies are at the forefront of AI, respected creatives are finding ways to form their own ventures.
In 2020, “South Park” co-creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker founded Deep Voodoo out of a desire to create a deep fake spoof of President Donald Trump.
“They had developed this technology along with an incredible team of people and felt like it was too special not to share,” Jennifer Howell, Deep Voodoo’s chief creative officer, told ABC News.
In the own hands-on demonstration, ABC News was able to see a real-time preview of how AI can take what would otherwise require elaborate makeup and prosthetics to transform the appearance of an actor, eliminating the need for hours in the makeup chair. Deep Voodoo said this refined, Snapchat-like filter would have been a huge relief for actors in films like “The Grinch” and “The Substance.”
Deep Voodoo also showed off its de-aging technology employed in real-time for the Apple TV series “Before” starring Judith Light and Billy Crystal. With the real-time preview available for actors to see, Deep Voodoo argues it better informs acting choices.
Deep Voodoo says its filter technology can eliminate hours in the makeup chair.
(ABC News)
The company’s CEO Afshin Beyzaee said the difference between this technology and more expensive computer-generated imagery (CGI) is that, “it came off a little bit eerie, a little bit, some people call it uncanny, right? This notion that it looks almost right, but there’s something that’s off about it. And so the AI has been able to bridge the gap … It looks natural, it looks realistic in a way that people can enjoy what they’re watching.”
Taking it a step further, this same technology could be used to make biopics appear more lifelike, merging the face of an actor with the person they’re playing.
More attention to the AI race in Hollywood came recently when an AI avatar named Tilly Norwood made headlines as a potential “actress.”
The union SAG-AFTRA took issue with that designation, arguing acting is a uniquely human skill.
Before and After Billy Joel’s face was de-aged and super imposed onto the face of a body double for his latest music video.
(ABC News)
“We don’t want it to be cheaper to use a synthetic performer. We want it to be the same,” National Executive Director Duncan Crabtree-Ireland said. “And if it is the same, we believe — I believe, certainly — that human performers will win out because they bring something unique and special to those projects that can’t be generated by an algorithm.”
Crabtree-Ireland is already preparing for negotiations with the major studios again next year, with the 2023 strikes still fresh on people’s minds.
When asked about whether studios were taking union concerns seriously on how AI is used, he said, “I think the companies are generally coming at this with a more careful and deliberate approach than I feared might happen.”
ABC News asked Deep Voodoo if using AI would lead to the loss of jobs like makeup artists, stunt doubles, storyboard artists and visual effects artists. The company argued it’s just the opposite.
“What this does is it allows stories and projects to happen that wouldn’t otherwise happen,” Beyzaee said. “Some of the people that we employ, those jobs didn’t exist five years ago. AI artist jobs didn’t exist.”
The AI boom reached new heights with the release of Google’s Veo 3 AI generator app and OpenAI’s Sora competitor. Sora reached No. 1 on the U.S. Apple App Store as users initially flooded social media with fantastical images of copyrighted characters before the company added restrictions.
In a hands-on demonstration at the Google headquarters in New York City, ABC News was shown how with just a few sentences Veo 3 could generate elaborate 8-second pieces of video and sound for much cheaper than what would take an army of graphics designers.
It was that very promise, that drew “Black Swan” director Darren Aronofsky to partner with Google, creating AI production company Primordial Soup and enlisting director Eliza McNitt to helm their first short film titled “Ancestra.”
The film, premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival, tells the story of McNitt’s challenging birth, born with a hole in her heart.
For the film “Ancestra,” Google’s Veo 3 was used to create a computer generated baby.
ABC News
“There are things that I wasn’t able to achieve before, because I have a very big vision of creating the cosmos, and outer space, and having these images that are really difficult to achieve otherwise. And so AI was really integral to the process,” McNitt told ABC News.
Using a special version of Veo 3, McNitt decided she would train the AI on images of her as a child to eliminate the need for a real baby on set.
“I felt it was actually quite unethical to shoot with a newborn baby,” McNitt said. “We wanted to find a new innovative solution to that that felt very realistic. So in the movie, what you’re seeing is actually me as a newborn baby.”
The idea of ethics in AI have become a touchstone for the Asteria Film Company and Moonvalley, an ethical AI company co-created by actress Natasha Lyonne and her filmmaking boyfriend, Bryn Mooser.
Asteria’s Miray model harnesses ethical AI.
ABC News
“There’s somewhat of this old adage that says things that are evil, magic and a tool when a new technology comes out,” Mooser told ABC News. “It’s evil to the people that are being disrupted. It’s magic to those who own it. And in the end, it just becomes a tool. And so that’s the system that we’re seeing right now.”
He says he tells filmmakers they can choose whether or not to use AI, but they must still learn about it. Asteria, housed in a 110-year-old soundstage with a speakeasy in the basement, houses what they’ve called the Miray model, the name for the company’s own generative AI system, which is marketed as an ethical solution.
The “commercially safe” AI model is trained to only use licensed material, so there’s no fear of copyright infringement from what it creates.
“It has all the controls, I think, that filmmakers were asking for and needs and certainly what our filmmakers here desired,” Mooser says.
For now, your favorite actors aren’t passing off their on-screen performances solely to their AI clone, but one strong indicator of eventual mainstream use came when Netflix confirmed the use of AI in its original series “El Eternauta.”
