Amazon drops OpenAI movie 'Artificial' after $50 billion investment creates conflict of interest

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Amazon MGM Studios has abandoned its nearly-complete film about Sam Altman and OpenAI after investing $50 billion in the AI company. The studio spent $40 million on the project before deciding the film would be better served elsewhere, citing what appears to be a clear conflict of interest stemming from their massive corporate partnership.

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Amazon Abandons Film About OpenAI After Massive Investment

Amazon MGM Studios has pulled the plug on "Artificial," a nearly-complete film chronicling Sam Altman and the tumultuous events at OpenAI, just months after Amazon announced a $50 billion investment in the artificial intelligence company

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. The decision shocked filmmakers who had already spent $40 million on the project and conducted test screenings in four markets while working toward a 2027 release date

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The streaming giant stated Friday that the Artificial film would "be better served if it were released by a different studio," adding that the company was "working closely with the filmmaking team to find the film a new home"

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. Mike Hopkins, head of Prime Video and Amazon MGM Studios, made the final call on Tuesday, according to sources familiar with the process

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Conflict of Interest Emerges From Corporate Partnerships

The decision highlights the reputational risks companies face when business interests collide with creative projects. In February, Amazon Web Services and OpenAI announced a strategic partnership to "build generative AI applications and agents at production scale" and "develop customized models available to power Amazon's customer-facing applications"

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. The deal included Amazon's $50 billion investment on top of a $100 billion eight-year contract between the companies

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As part of the arrangement, OpenAI agreed to use chips designed by Amazon and the company's cloud computing services

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. With over $100 billion in corporate partnerships at stake, Amazon was reportedly reluctant to support a film that paints Altman in a negative and unlikeable light

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High-Profile Creative Team Seeks New Distributor

Directed by Luca Guadagnino, the acclaimed filmmaker behind "Call Me by Your Name," the OpenAI movie was written by "Saturday Night Live" alum Simon Rich and stars Andrew Garfield as Altman and Ike Barinholtz as Elon Musk

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. The film focuses on Altman's dramatic firing and rehiring at OpenAI, one of the world's largest AI industry players

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Guadagnino's agents at Creative Artists Agency screened the movie Wednesday and Thursday for potential distributors, including indie film companies like Neon, A24, and Focus, along with Netflix and Warner Bros.' new specialty division Clockwork

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. No new distributor has acquired the project yet

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. The film team had intended for it to premiere at the SXSW Film & TV Festival, where other award season contenders like "Everything Everywhere All at Once" debuted

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One movie news site reporting from an earlier test screening described the film as "'The Social Network,' but for the A.I. era"

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. The comparison suggests the film takes a critical look at the personalities and power struggles shaping the generative AI revolution, much like David Fincher's film examined Facebook's founding. For the AI industry and tech observers, this situation raises questions about how corporate partnerships might influence which stories get told about the companies reshaping our technological landscape.

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