Cloning of film actors dampens Chinese enthusiasm for AI | EUROtoday

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.

Chinese Netflix has simply obtained its ft moist with AI. During its annual convention, Monday April 20, iQiYi introduced the institution of a platform introduced as a catalog of AI avatars of Chinese actors… to the good displeasure of a majority of Internet customers.

Nearly 100 actors have agreed to collaborate on this initiative, iQiYi proudly introduced. This database of “artificial actors” is a part of a set of AI instruments – known as Nadou Pro – assembled by the most important Chinese streaming service and provided to content material and movie creators.

“iQiYi has gone crazy”

This new step within the adoption of AI “is presented by iQiYi as good news for everyone,” underlines Xiaoning Lu, specialist in Chinese cinema on the School of Oriental and African Studies on the University of London. Aspiring administrators with out the technique of the massive studios, however brimming with concepts, can be extra capable of suggest and create works by counting on these AI assistants and actors.

As for the actors, they “work very hard, and often cannot have a private life. [Avec Nadou Pro]it will be more like a white-collar job, giving them time for themselves,” enthused Gong Yu, CEO of iQiYi in the course of the presentation of those new options.

Not everybody shares this optimism in China. Far from it. “iQiYi has gone crazy,” turned some of the viral phrases on the social community Weibo within the days following the streaming service’s annual convention. “What if we instead replaced the CEO with an AI,” a number of Internet customers mocked on Weibo.

Several actors, introduced as volunteers to supply their digital double to iQiYi’s new AI library, have distanced themselves from this announcement. “We never signed an authorization to this effect,” reacted the agent of Zhang Ruoyun, a tv actor.

Faced with this blowback, iQiYi officers started an operation to “save Nadou Pro” by asserting that it was solely an initiative to “start the discussion” on higher integration of AI. The related actors should give their consent for every use of their avatars, assured the streaming platform.

This “made in China” controversy recollects extra Western precedents such because the case of Tilly Norwood, the primary AI “actress” to have signed a contract with a expertise company, or the well-known struggle scene on a roof between AI variations of Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise.

On every event, these new examples of AI prowess in cinema have sparked vigorous debate and criticism.

Chinese micro-dramas boosted with AI

In China, the adoption of synthetic intelligence by the cinema world appeared to be going with out main hiccups till now. “AI is already much more integrated into this industry in China,” assures Patrick Nicchiarelli, specialist on this nation on the International Team for the Study of Security (ITSS) Verona.

The vice chairman of Chinese media large Tencent, Sun Zhonghuai, predicts that almost a 3rd of movies and cartoons produced in China in 2026 will use AI. “Artificial intelligence is already found at all stages of the production of a film, from the script to editing,” provides Patrick Nicchiarelli.

An extension in your browser seems to be blocking the loading of the video participant. To be capable of watch this content material, it’s essential to disable or uninstall it.

Excerpt from Final Cut by Lisa Russell.
Excerpt from Final Cut by Lisa Russell. © Lisa Russell

Another very Chinese cultural phenomenon has additionally promoted the adoption of AI by the leisure sector: micro-dramas. These collection made from very quick vertical movies (30 seconds to 2 minutes) designed for consumption on smartphones have exploded lately. This trade is anticipated to be price 120 billion yuan (or 15 billion euros) in 2026, “which would make it a more important sector in China than cinema or television”, assures Giulia d’Aquila, specialist in Chinese cinema on the Lau Institute at King’s College London.

Nearly 40% of the 100 hottest micro-dramas in January 2026 have been made utilizing AI in comparison with solely 7% a yr earlier. The parody micro-drama “Saving a Fox on a Snowy Mountain” – completely generated by AI – has been considered greater than 5 billion occasions. This loopy story of a lumberjack who saves an injured fox within the snow by giving him a roast rooster to eat and who’s then haunted by the spirit of the sacrificed fowl has given rise to numerous pastiches.

If on this case AI makes you smile, it above all lets you get monetary savings. “The manufacturing time of these works can be reduced to a few weeks or even a few days,” says Giulia d’Aquila. Help with writing eventualities, creating particular results and even modifying: synthetic intelligence is concerned in any respect levels of creation. Not to say the works already produced 100% by AI.

Nadou Pro and the catalog of AI avatars of the actors are solely the extension of this logic. The iQiYi platform “wants to use techniques similar to those used for micro-dramas in more traditional feature films,” summarizes Giulia d’Aquila.

“It’s the same logic of reducing costs to be able to increase the quantity of content produced,” provides Xiaoning Lu.

The actors relegated to the rank of relics?

Except that this invasion of AI, which doesn’t appear to trouble spectators of micro-dramas, shocks in the case of extra conventional movies. “Perhaps this is due to the fact that we are less emotionally invested in a micro-drama, watched on public transport, on a small screen while scrolling,” says Giulia d’Aquila.

Also learnCannes 2025: AI in cinema, “an impossible wave to stop” regardless of reluctance

The conventional movie broadcast on iQiYi represents extra of a human journey than a micro-drama… and if we take away the human side to save cash, “it comes down to asking what it means to be human today,” believes Xiaoning Lu.

Especially since throughout his presentation, the boss of iQiYi noticed match to affirm that human work in cinema would be a part of “intangible cultural heritage”. It is an expression loaded with that means in Chinese, acknowledge the consultants interviewed. In China, “it’s a way of celebrating relics of the past, like traditional Chinese embroidery for example,” emphasizes Xiaoning Lu.

The use of this expression, along with the institution of this database of AI actors, “made it clear to a part of the population, rather enthusiastic towards AI when it is practical, that it is also ready to replace real human actors today and perhaps them tomorrow”, summarizes Patrick Nicchiarelli. For Giulia d’Aquila, “it is possible that this affair has given rise in China to what we already know in part in the West: a certain fatigue with AI”.

https://www.france24.com/fr/%C3%A9co-tech/20260425-clonage-acteurs-cin%C3%A9ma-douche-enthousiasme-chinois-ia-iqyi