━ pricing plans

Basic

$
$
5.99
$
0
/ 7 days

Basic Subscription:

  • Access to all news articles in English.
  • Breaking news alerts delivered to your email.
  • Limited access to multimedia content.

Premium

$
$
7.99
$
0
/ 14 days
/ 14 days
placeholder text

Premium Subscription:

  • Full access to all news articles, including in-depth analysis and opinion pieces.
  • Exclusive interviews with experts and influential figures.
  • Enhanced multimedia experience with videos, photo galleries, and interactive graphics.
  • Ad-free browsing for a seamless reading experience.

Global Insights

$
$
9.99
$
0
/ 30 days
/ 30 days
placeholder text

Global Insights Subscription:

  • All features of the Premium Subscription.
  • Exclusive access to monthly webinars or live Q&A sessions with our journalists and correspondents, providing insights into the news-gathering process and global events.
  • Customizable news alerts tailored to your specific interests and regions.
  • Early access to special investigative reports and in-depth features.
17.6 C
Washington

Jackie Chan feels ‘lucky’ to be from post-A.I. era

Date:

Share:



Jackie Chan on having career before technology 

Jackie Chan is reflecting on how different his legendary career might have looked if he had started out in today’s era of artificial intelligence and special effects. 

The 71-year-old action icon, known around the world for doing his own daring stunts, shared that he feels fortunate to have built his name before digital tools began replacing real-life physical performances.

Speaking to Page Six at the Karate Kid: Legends premiere in New York, Chan admitted, “If, today, I was working in this age, I don’t think I would do [stunts] myself. Why? Because of A.I. special effects, [green screens].”

He explained that in modern filmmaking, it’s not just about what the actor wants to do, there’s a lot more caution from the people behind the scenes. 

“You want to do [the stunt work], but the studio, the stunt coordinator, the director, they won’t let you,” he said. “Because if anything [went wrong with a stunt and the star were injured] it could shut down the whole shoot; it could cost a lot of money.”

Looking back on his early days, he credits his hands-on approach to his rise in the industry. “In the old days,” he said, “I had to do it myself and so I became ‘Jackie Chan.’ So I was lucky.”

Still, he acknowledged that actors working today might be lucky in their own way, since technology allows them to avoid the physical toll he endured throughout his career. 

Chan famously racked up a long list of injuries while filming over the years, broken fingers, toes, cheekbones, hips, ribs, ankles, and even a dislocated pelvis, just to deliver the kind of real action scenes that earned him global fame.

His comments come amid ongoing discussions in Hollywood about how far A.I. should go in replacing traditionally human contributions, not just in action scenes, but also in voiceovers, animation, and other areas of filmmaking.

Source link

Subscribe to our magazine

━ more like this

Hundreds of deaths expected this weekend during UK heatwave

Your support helps us to tell the storyFrom reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the...

Eating more fruits and vegetables linked to surprising effect on sleep

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Your daily meal selections could influence the quality of your sleep, new research says.A...

What AI's insatiable appetite for power means for our future

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Every time you ask ChatGPT a question, to generate an image or let artificial...

Are we living inside a black hole? NASA’ James Webb findings stun scientists | – The Times of India

A latest discovery by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has reignited one of the most astonishing theories in modern physics: the possibility...