On Friday, a startup called Fable announced an ambitious, if head-scratching, plan to recreate the lost 43 minutes of Orson Wellesโ classic film โThe Magnificent Ambersons.โย
Why is a startup that bills itself as the โNetflix of AI,โ and that recently raised money from Amazonโs Alexa Fund, talking about remaking a movie that was first released in 1942?ย
Well, the company has built a platform that allows users to create their own cartoons with AI prompts โ Fable is starting out with its own intellectual property, but it has ambitions to offer similar capabilities with Hollywood IP. In fact, itโs already been used to create unauthorized โSouth Parkโ episodes.
Now Fable is launching a new AI model that can supposedly generate long, complex narratives. Over the next two years, filmmaker Brian Rose โ who has already spent five years working to digitally reconstruct Wellesโ original vision โ plans to use that model to remake the lost footage from โThe Magnificent Ambersons.โ
Remarkably, Fable has not obtained the rights to the film, making this a prospective tech demo that will probably never be released to the general public.
Why โAmbersonsโ? If youโre not a Welles-loving cinephile, Iโm guessing it sounds like an obscure choice for digital resurrection.
Even among classic movie buffs, Wellesโ second film is overshadowed by its older, more famous sibling. While โCitizen Kaneโ is often called the greatest movie ever made, โAmbersonsโ is remembered as a lost masterpiece that the studio took out of the directorโs hands, dramatically cutting it down and adding an unconvincing happy ending.
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The movieโs reputation โ the sense of loss and what could have been โ is presumably what interested Fable and Rose. But itโs worth emphasizing that the only reason we care about โThe Magnificent Ambersonsโ today is because of Welles โ because of how it derailed his Hollywood career, and how even in its diminished form, it still reveals so much of his filmmaking genius.
That makes it even more astonishing that Fable apparently failed to reach out to Wellesโ estate. David Reeder, who handles the estate for Wellesโ daughter Beatrice, described the project to Variety as an โattempt to generate publicity on the back of Wellesโ creative geniusโ and said that it will amount to nothing more than โa purely mechanical exercise without any of the uniquely innovative thinking [of] a creative force like Welles.โ
Despite Reederโs criticism, he seems less upset by the idea of attempting to recreate โAmbersonsโ and more by the fact that the estate was not โeven given the courtesy of a heads up.โ After all, he noted, โthe estate has embraced AI technology to create a voice model intended to be used for VO work with brands.โ
Iโm not so open-minded. Even if Wellesโ heirs were being consulted and compensated, Iโd have zero interest in this new โAmbersons,โ just as I have zero interest in hearing a digital simulacrum of Wellesโs legendary voice being used to hawk new products.
Now, Welles fans know this isnโt the first time other filmmakers have tried to posthumously fix or finish his movies. But at least those attempts used footage that Welles had shot himself. Fable, meanwhile, describes its planned approach as a hybrid of AI and traditional filmmaking โ apparently some scenes will be reshot with contemporary actors whose faces will be then swapped for digital recreations of the original cast.
Despite the absurdity of announcing a project like this without the film rights or the blessing of Wellesโ daughter, at least Rose seems motivated by a genuine desire to honor Wellesโ vision. For example, in a statement about why he wants to recreate the film, Rose mourned the destruction of โa four-minute-long, unbroken moving camera shot whose loss is a tragedy,โ with only 50 seconds of the shot remaining in the recut film.
I share his sense of loss โ but I also believe this is a tragedy that AI cannot undo.
No matter how convincingly Fable and Rose may be able to stitch together their own version of that tracking shot, it will be their shot, not Wellesโ, filled with Frankensteined replicas of Joseph Cotten and Agnes Moorehead, not the actors themselves. Their final product will not be Wellesโ version of โThe Magnificent Ambersonsโ that RKO destroyed more than 80 years ago. Barring a miraculous rediscovery of lost footage, that version is gone forever.


