HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentChatGPT and dreams of electric sheep: A brief history of AI in film

ChatGPT and dreams of electric sheep: A brief history of AI in film

Gareth Edwards's The Creator is the latest in a long line of films that explore humans versus AI tensions.

October 06, 2023 / 18:42 IST
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From Fritz Lang’s Metropolis (1927, cinematography: Karl Freund & Günther Rittau) to Spike Jonze’s Her, science fiction has been preoccupied with artificial intelligence for nearly a century. (Image via X/@LostInFilm)

In March 2023, as OpenAI released ChatGPT 4, the anxiety around AI spiked yet again. An open letter drafted by the Future of Life Institute, and signed by some of the most prominent names in technology, including Tesla CEO Elon Musk, Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak and academics and policy makers, went viral. Calling for a pause in research and development of advanced AI systems, the letter crystallized a concern that has been around for a century. Ominously, the letter asked: "Should we develop non-human minds that might eventually outnumber, outsmart, obsolete [sic] and replace us?”

Being replaced by non-human minds is not a particularly novel idea. In fact, it is in many ways the central question of a lot of science fiction, in literature and film. Science fiction is really the crucible of artificial intelligence; indeed, where the idea of sentient machines first evolved. And for as long as sentient machines have been part of the popular imagination, so has the anxiety around what that could mean for humanity. Nowhere is this more pronounced than in this line from Fritz Lang’s silent German film Metropolis: “Between the head and hands there must always be a mediator, and that should be the heart.

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Released in 1927, Metropolis is set in a futuristic city and features a robot named Maria—created by an inventor on the behest of the city’s “master”, but their motives are not one—who is supposed to serve the wealthy ruling class but ends up inciting a rebellion among the city's working-class population.

Apart from its innovative visual effects and visual design (Lang was influenced by German Expressionism as well as the architecture of the time, Art Deco and Modernist), Metropolis continues to resonate for its themes of class conflict and industrialization; but indirectly, also the potential dangers of advanced technology.