The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has adjusted the eligibility criteria for films vying for Oscars from 2027 onward.
Films featuring actors generated by artificial intelligence (AI) are now ineligible, as are scripts that aren’t demonstrably human-authored.
Crucially, the rules do not ban AI – generative or otherwise – altogether. The Academy explicitly acknowledged the widespread adoption of generative AI, and has left it to voters to determine whether a film’s creative direction is substantively driven by humans.
Academy president Lynette Howell Taylor framed it simply: “humans have to be at the centre of the creative process”.
The rules were imposed following specific controversies: the 2025 awards season surfaced AI voice modification in The Brutalist, AI voice cloning in Emilia Pérez, and varying degrees of AI use in A Complete Unknown and Dune: Part Two.
The resulting public debate has focused almost entirely on what audiences can see: generated faces, synthetic voices and digital resurrections. But this focus ignores the main areas of film production in which AI actually plays a key role.
Cinema’s automation history
Automation tools have been embedded in cinema for longer than most people realise.
When non-linear editing software Avid Media Composer launched in 1989, it replaced the physical cut-and-splice flatbed editing process that had defined post-production for decades. This all but eliminated traditional linear editing suites, and the skilled labour that went with them, within a few years.
Computer-generated imagery (CGI) entered mainstream production with Tron (1982) and Jurassic Park (1993). And by the mid-2010s, deepfake and neural rendering technology (distinct from generative AI) made it possible to manipulate human likenesses directly – such as de-aging Jeff Bridges in the Tron sequel, Tron: Legacy (2010), and Michael Douglas and Kurt Russell in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Generative AI aids and improves these existing processes. Director Robert Zemeckis used AI company Metaphysic to de-age Tom Hanks and Robin Wright in real time, on camera while shooting Here (2024).
And the forthcoming film As Deep as the Grave will feature an AI-generated likeness of Val Kilmer, who died in 2025. This is the most prominent case yet of AI being used to “generate” a performer who couldn’t physically be present.
These examples sit on an ethical spectrum, from de-aging a living actor to synthesising a performance based on a deceased star. The Academy’s new rules attempt to draw a line somewhere on that spectrum. Where exactly that line should go is an ongoing question.



