At some point, Hollywood decided that the world of technology was a lot of good for the drama, but it can probably simply throw away the last material in which it happened rather than serving it all of us. Second The Hollywood journalistWe will have a film based on the five -day period in which Sam Altman was expelled and in the end restored as head of Openii.
The film, which according to what “artificial” will be entitled, already has a leaf of stars rather stars, even if everything is still in the voices period.
Luca Guadagnino, Director of Call me with your name AND Challengers, According to reports, it is in negotiations to direct the image. Andrew Garfield is currently the favorite to interpret Altman, who is a lot in his helmsman after his performance as a co-founder of Facebook Eduardo Saverin in The social network. Monica Barbaro, who played Joan Baez A complete unknownAccording to reports, it is in negotiations to interpret the former Openai Cto Mira Murati e Aor Breakout star Yura Borisov is about to be co-founder and antagonist of Altman Laya Sutskever. The writer of the comedy Simon Rich, who wrote for “Saturday Night Live” and created “Miracle World”, according to what reports is responsible for the script.
One of the problems for Hollywood that repeatedly chase these great technological dramas in real life is that industries are now so intertwined. This open film, for example, is managed by Amazon MGM Studios. Amazon is about $ 8 billion in depth in investments In anthropic Openai Rival. So, how do they have the motivation to wipe out Openi in this thing? (The external pressure is not necessary to do it, but anyway.)
And of course, Openi’s drama is compelling. It is not too often that the founder of one of the most popular companies in circulation is driven out of the Council to trust him more than him, just for him that he is restored five days later. And, like stories like the Accounting of events by the Wall Street Journal Highlight, there is no shortage of intrigues and backstabing along the road that will probably play well on the big screen.
But Ugh is the list of these dramas of Silicon Valley who become long and does not really seem to achieve much more than pumping the ego of the subjects. The social network It probably remains the best work that the genre has produced (except for the “Silicon Valley” of the HBO, which has not aged one day since it ended), and this too has not been able to really capture how avid and non -ethical they would have gone. (However, by Aaron Skin this, he was probably in advance of the curve to call Zuckerberg’s br-education which is now on display when he presents himself on Joe Rogan’s podcast.)
The rest of the offers has their charm, of course. “The Dropout”, “Wecrashed” and “Super Pumped” everyone manages to bring out some excellent performances and are built around compelling stories. But none of them are really enough to greed, corruption and frankly, to contempt for everyone, from regulators to real and normal people who hurt themselves while these people accumulate their fortunes. Perhaps it is because the stories generally follow the central figures-the Altmans and Zuckerbergs and Holmeses of the world-and the seats in the CC-sete, and are so rarely compared with reality there.