Chiranjeevi Hanuman director Rajesh Mapuskar on making India’s first AI-generated theatre film: AI is not taking any job


National-award winning director Rajesh Mapuskar is directing India’s first fully AI-generated theatrical release Chiranjeevi Hanuman- The Eternal, which will hit theatres this year on Hanuman JayantiTalking about this pioneering step, he says, “This is an opportunity which has come my way. I feel I’m chosen to do this so I want to see what I can do with it. I like the challenges of diving into the unknown.”

Rajesh Mapuskar on Chiranjeevi Hanuman
Rajesh Mapuskar on Chiranjeevi Hanuman

Ask him to point out the difference between animation and AI, and Rajesh Mapuskar says, “When you make animation, you have complete control over even a little muscle movement of your character. While AI is an interactive tool, it’s like another brain parallelly working with you. Sometimes it may not behave exactly as you want. But it might surprise you with something you never thought of. It’s like a breathing person working with you and along with you.”

With many people in the industry seeing AI as a threat to human jobs, Rajesh has another opinion. “No, I don’t think so it is a threat. With whatever my little experience is, AI is not going to replace human beings or reduce job opportunities. What AI is going to do is it’s going to fasten the process. It’s about how you approach AI, whether you are letting AI control you or you are controlling it. AI can help enhance conventional filmmaking. Even right now, my generative crew is not less than 200. I still need human power and collective efforts of people. AI is not going to be taking up any jobs,” he says.

Recently, an AI web series Mahabharat: Ek Dharmayudh was released, and Rajesh admits to learning from it and the response it got. “When some project like this involves such an evolving technology, you have to be sensitive to the audience’s feedback because who are you making this content for? So I read all the feedback for the show and also for my teaser which came out. Those comments might give me some opening, some insight into how people saw what I have tried to create. I learn from what Mahabharat has done and how I could improve from where they were falling short. And now I’m crafting my own vision for Chiranjeevi Hanuman,” he shares.

Asserting that AI is the future of filmmaking, Rajesh gives advice to the film industry: “We have to welcome AI and shake hands with it and not get threatened by it. We have to see how we can make it our ally to tell stories. Chiranjeevi Hanuman is my take on Hanumanji’s internal journey, AI comes later. People have asked me whether they will be looking at the best film of the first film, and for me, it will always be the latter,” he ends.


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