Technology changes filmmaking, but responsibility remains human.
Los Angeles | July 2026
George Lucas has defended artificial intelligence as an inevitable part of cinema’s future, arguing that resisting the technology is comparable to rejecting automobiles in favor of horse-drawn carriages. The Star Wars creator said AI could make filmmaking easier and expand the tools available to directors and production teams.
Lucas acknowledged that artificial intelligence can be misused, but insisted that responsibility belongs to the people operating it. He also suggested that AI could help identify manipulated material and trace its origin, making the technology part of the solution to problems it may intensify.
His position reflects a career built around technological experimentation. Lucas founded Industrial Light & Magic when existing visual-effects methods could not realize his ideas and later promoted digital editing, computer-generated imagery and digital cinematography despite resistance from parts of Hollywood.
The comments contrast with Christopher Nolan’s defense of practical filmmaking and concern over low-quality AI-generated content. Their disagreement reflects a larger industry debate involving creativity, consent, employment and authorship. Artificial intelligence may become unavoidable in production, but cinema’s future will still depend on who controls it and what human purpose it serves.
La tecnología puede transformar el cine, pero no reemplazar su conciencia. / Technology may transform cinema, but it cannot replace its conscience.