The Most Bizarre Dracula Movie Of All Time Is Weaponizing AI In The Most Surprising Ways
Briefly

The Most Bizarre Dracula Movie Of All Time Is Weaponizing AI In The Most Surprising Ways
"The new movie by the arthouse cinema world's resident provocateur, whose 2021 film Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn was banned in several countries and is mostly only available in censored form, Dracula opens with a barrage of AI renderings of Dracula engaging in ludicrous and increasingly pornographic activities. Then a filmmaker (Adonis Tanța) appears onscreen, seated at his desk with an iPad housing the latest in generative AI technology."
""When ChatGPT appeared, I had this idea of structuring the movie around that. I tried a few scenarios with ChatGPT, I tried to get it to make a Dracula porn film set in Auschwitz, and it rejected it," Jude . So Jude decided to do his best impersonation of AI. And the result is a strange, obscene anthology film that runs nearly three hours long, and skewers both the stupidity of the new technology and the idiocy of humans who depend on it."
"Divided into 14 chapters, some of which tell complete stories and others mostly act as brief interludes, the film explores vampirism in all its forms: literal, metaphorical, psychosexual, and everything in between. There's one segment where a washed-up actor playing Dracula in a pornographic stage play is hunted down by a mob of tourists. Another segment where penises grow in a wheat fi"
The film opens with escalating AI-generated images of Dracula in ludicrous and pornographic scenarios before introducing a filmmaker working with generative AI on an iPad. The filmmaker is tasked with making a Dracula movie and chooses to deliberately produce a uniquely terrible Dracula film created in the style of generative AI. The director imitates AI after ChatGPT refused an offensive prompt, producing an obscene, surreal anthology that runs nearly three hours. The work consists of 14 chapters exploring vampirism in literal, metaphorical, and psychosexual forms, using shock, satire, and provocative imagery to critique both technology and human dependence on it.
Read at Inverse
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]