Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Fox’s Bret Baier Dismisses Rumors About Move to CBS (For Now)

    October 28, 2025

    Radu Jude's 'Dracula' Puts a Colorful, Profane Stake into the Heart of Generative AI

    October 28, 2025

    ‘Oh, God, My Job.’ The Big Bang Theory’s Jim Parsons Recalls The Show Going On Hiatus Early In Season 1

    October 28, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    8881199.XYZ
    • Home
    • Holly
    • Bolly
    • TV Shows
    • Music
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    8881199.XYZ
    Home»Hollywood»Radu Jude's 'Dracula' Puts a Colorful, Profane Stake into the Heart of Generative AI
    Hollywood

    Radu Jude's 'Dracula' Puts a Colorful, Profane Stake into the Heart of Generative AI

    David GroveBy David GroveOctober 28, 20255 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Radu Jude's 'Dracula' Puts a Colorful, Profane Stake into the Heart of Generative AI
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    There are about 17 different movies that make up director Radu Jude’s Dracula, and miraculously, they nearly all work. Never one for subtlety nor in want of profane ambition, the Romanian director’s latest is a clever crossbreed of one of Romania’s oldest stories with a pointedly relevant issue: the proliferation of generative AI in the creative sphere.

    Jude’s deployment of the technology underscores not only the director’s own disdain for these “tools,” but points towards his admiration for the unpredictability and imperfection of human creativity. No matter the seemingly boundless potential of AI to create, its efforts are vapid and hollow in comparison to the truly unlimited artistry of the human mind. With Dracula, Jude suggests that a holistic embrace of humanity’s most debased and colorful tendencies can be the wooden stake that’s plunged into the soulless heart of work made using generative AI.


    01845815_poster_w780.jpg


    Release Date

    October 31, 2025

    Runtime

    170 minutes

    Director

    Radu Jude

    Writers

    Radu Jude

    Producers

    Rodrigo Teixeira


    • Cast Placeholder Image

    • Cast Placeholder Image


    What makes Dracula feel so vivacious is how human its scatterbrained premise is. It embodies that live-wire energy of when you’re in conversation with someone and they go on multiple tangents (and then go on tangents of those tangents). As overwhelming as it can be to be in Jude’s head, it’s a riot to be on his train of thought. The core plot revolves around a lazy and talentless director (Adonis Tanța), who relies on AI technologies (with lore-honoring names such as DR. AI JUDDEX) to create a version of Dracula that will be palatable for Hollywood audiences. Tanța masterfully embodies the worst of the people who act as proponents for these tools: those who claim to love art but refuse to put in the work to make anything meaningful, and see generative AI as a way to circumvent the necessary ardor of making anything truly great.

    Dracula starts innocuously enough. The main story of Tanța’s character’s film revolves around a late-night interactive show where actors, played by Gabriel Spahiu and Oana Maria Zaharia) reenact the main story of Dracula; this culminates with participants being able to chase them through the town with hammers, wooden spikes and all manner of blunt instruments. In a manner that’s both annoying and hilarious, Tanța’s director character, finding himself bored with these developments, tells his generative AI to craft any number of subplots that somehow involve the titular vampire.

    He sprinkles these narrative detours into the main plot of the film, each punctuated by a title card. This gives the film its irreverent, hypnotic pace, and with these vignettes, Jude has crafted a film perfectly suited for, and also critical of, a generation that’s used to constant simulation (i.e., those who are tempted to pull out the little screen to scroll through TikTok if there’s a dull moment in the movie they’re watching). The joy of the film is seeing how awful the AI is at doing its job, a reminder that not only is the technology not the impeccable content maker its sycophants make it out to be, but a that it comes riddled with the problematic biases of its makers. In one humorous moment, Tanța’s director character asks the program to make a lesbian version of the story, to which the AI replies that, because it was created by Europeans, it cannot tell a diverse version of this narrative. Another moment involves a prompt for a “silent” film version of the story, but only half of the film is silent; the rest is vociferous to a comical degree.

    DRACULA_01 (1) 1-2 Special

    These multiple sketches all tell a larger tale about how the proliferation of Dracula stories has rendered the tale moot. Once you become a character who gets memed and has merchandise made with all the cultural cache of a Labubu, does this ruin the relevancy of your story? Is that the end goal of having a narrative mythologized? Is it possible for stories to survive without being corrupted by the market forces of late-stage capitalism, which conditions people to crave familiar IP without giving them the space to ask why? Jude’s film never explicitly hints at all of these, but seeing Dracula remixed (imperfectly and crudely) in all of these different genres provides the foundations for Jude’s musings around legacy, image and stewardship.

    Jude’s Dracula, in many ways, is a film that celebrates the glory of human imperfection; it sees the errors in art-making as integral to the process, rather than flaws to be jettisoned. In the moments of the film where Jude uses AI, he often overlays these garish images on top of each other at rapid speed, as if we’re watching a Kineograph. It’s dizzying and nauseating to see such vulgarity. The horror of AI is how sanded down, glossy, and “perfect” it tries to be; ironically, in trying to create something pristine with its images, it only manages to craft something soul-sucking and ghastly.

    It’s the cloddish elements of life, the deeply human elements of filmmaking — the iPhone lens that’s just slightly out of focus, the muffled audio in a fight scene — that are worth celebrating. The iconography and story of Dracula is too tantalizing to leave in the coffin for long, and Jude’s adaptation reminds us why this story remains worth telling over and over again.

    From 1-2 Special, Dracula opens in limited theaters on October 29.



    Source link

    See also  The Ratatouille Ride Is Getting Rid Of Its 3D, And We Can't Agree On Whether It's A Good Thing
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    ‘Oh, God, My Job.’ The Big Bang Theory’s Jim Parsons Recalls The Show Going On Hiatus Early In Season 1

    Want to Attend the 2026 Cannes Film Festival? Win a Full Scholarship for the American Pavilion’s Student Program by Entering This Contest

    10 TV Shows That Have Come and Gone Since 'Stranger Things' Began

    How Will Smith Reached Out To Wanda Sykes After He ‘Overshadowed’ Her Oscars Hosting Gig By Slapping Chris Rock

    Don't Miss
    Hollywood March 23, 2025

    Right here Is Each Film Releasing in Theaters in April 2025

    Though streaming platforms have made our lives simpler by bringing in a plethora of movies…

    Russo Brothers Tackle How 'Secret Wars' Has to Stack Up Towards 'Avengers: Endgame'

    March 17, 2025

    Who’s Abhirami? Meet Thug Life actress whose kissing scene with Kamal Haasan has sparked on-line debate

    May 18, 2025

    Orson Welles Meets AI in a Restoration of ‘The Magnificent Ambersons’ — and Its Misplaced Ending

    September 5, 2025

    Hear Me Out, Final Of Us: You may By no means Make Me Hate Joel

    April 22, 2025

    Put up Malone presents bartender with $20,000 tip on Christmas Eve

    January 6, 2025

    Publish Malone to headline Coachella in 2025

    November 19, 2024

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    8881199.XYZ is your source for the latest Hollywood news, movie reviews, TV show updates, celebrity gossip, and music industry insights. Get daily updates on trending movies, popular series, and exclusive stories straight from the entertainment world. Whether you’re a film fan, TV show follower, or music lover, we deliver fresh, engaging content to keep you in the loop on all things Hollywood. Supported by third-party ads, 8881199.XYZ offers free, high-quality entertainment news without intrusive experiences. Explore Hollywood’s best with us for your daily dose of celebrity and industry buzz!

    Our Picks

    ‘Terrifier’ Star Lands Dream Position as Legendary Batman Villain…however Not in James Gunn’s DCU

    January 30, 2025

    An Iconic Horror Franchise Lastly Returns in New Picture From Upcoming TV Prequel

    May 28, 2025

    For ‘Bonjour Tristesse’ Star Lily McInerny, the Desires (Like Working with Chloë Sevigny) Simply Maintain Coming True

    May 5, 2025
    Exclusive

    Elvira on Her Cookbook from Hell, Goth Weddings, and Making Music with Jack White: Podcast

    September 29, 2025

    Billy Joel: And So It Goes: The 12 Greatest Revelations from HBO's New Documentary

    July 18, 2025

    Mike Myers debuts Elon Musk impersonation in SNL chilly open

    March 2, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • DMCA Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact
    © 2025 8881199.XYZ / Designed by MAXBIT.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.