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Luca Guadagnino’s Sam Altman Biopic Is Still Looking for a Home

Luca Guadagnino's Sam Altman Biopic Is Still Looking for a Home

Director Luca Guadagnino’s biographical drama Artificial lost its distribution deal after Amazon MGM Studios abruptly dropped the nearly finished film from its upcoming release slate

The $40 million USD production stars Andrew Garfield as OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and dramatizes his chaotic 2023 boardroom ouster but major studios continue to pass on the project

Industry insiders suggest the reluctance to acquire the movie stems from Hollywood’s growing financial ties to Big Tech conglomerates including Amazon’s massive investment into the artificial intelligence sector

Amazon MGM Studios unexpectedly abandoned the upcoming biographical drama Artificial. The highly anticipated project from director Luca Guadagnino features Andrew Garfield as OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman. Executives originally planned a limited theatrical run around Christmas for Oscar qualification before a wide release in early 2027. Decision makers reversed course following Amazon’s massive $50 billion USD strategic investment in the AI firm earlier this year. Company representatives stated the film would be better served by a different studio while denying the subject matter drove their exit. The $40 million USD production remains in the final stages of post-production and needs a new distributor.

Written by Simon Rich, the comedic drama acts as a modern spiritual successor to The Social Network. The plot centers on the chaotic November 2023 weekend where board members ousted and subsequently reinstated Altman. Early reports indicate the script paints an unflattering portrait of the polarizing tech mogul. The narrative reportedly portrays Altman as a pathological liar while framing co-founder Ilya Sutskever as the idealistic hero of the saga. Yura Borisov takes on the role of Sutskever alongside a star studded ensemble. Ike Barinholtz plays Elon Musk while Cooper Hoffman portrays Greg Brockman. The supporting cast also includes heavyweights like Jason Schwartzman, Mark Rylance and Monica Barbaro as former CTO Mira Murati.

Finding a new home for the controversial project is proving difficult. Major players including Netflix, Focus Features and A24 have all stepped away from acquiring the movie. The industry wide hesitation highlights a broader shift toward deep integration between film studios and Silicon Valley developers. A24 is backed by Josh Kushner’s Thrive Capital which holds a board seat and ranks among the largest financial supporters of OpenAI. Maintaining lucrative relationships with the tech sector appears to supersede releasing provocative independent art. Critics argue this dependency creates a chilling effect where Hollywood avoids critical depictions of the exact technology powering modern corporate productivity.

CAA Media Finance continues to host screenings to secure a fresh distribution deal. Independent platforms like Mubi and Neon are currently circling the project. Mubi already maintains a strong working relationship with Guadagnino after distributing his William S. Burroughs adaptation Queer across multiple international territories. The company previously stepped in to rescue Coralie Fargeat’s The Substance when Universal dropped it ahead of the Cannes Film Festival. If a specialized distributor acquires the rights soon, Artificial could easily pivot to a prestigious world premiere at the Venice Film Festival.


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