Jesse Eisenberg on Why It Would Be ‘Silly’ to Leave U.S. Because of Trump, Says ‘The Debut’ Is ‘The Opposite of AI’ Following A24 DeepMind Partnership
Actor and director Jesse Eisenberg addressed questions about his future in America whilst receiving the President's Award at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival, rejecting the idea of leaving despite recently acquiring Polish citizenship. He reframed the question as a matter of privilege, explaining that departing over political disagreement would be inappropriate given his fortunate circumstances; instead, he expressed a felt responsibility to remain in New York and support those facing hardship during the current political period.
Eisenberg's upcoming directorial project, the musical comedy "The Debut" starring Julianne Moore and Paul Giamatti, provides a contrasting counterpoint to industry concerns about artificial intelligence. The film was deliberately produced as an analog work, shot on physical film stock with a 1990s setting reflecting the director's formative era of independent cinema. Eisenberg emphasised that A24 granted all his creative requests, and he characterised the studio's recently announced AI research partnership with Google DeepMind as entirely separate from his production, stating that "our movie is the opposite of AI."
- Jesse Eisenberg, despite recent Polish citizenship, says he won't leave the US, citing privilege and responsibility to help struggling New Yorkers during 'a tougher period in American history'
- His new A24 film 'The Debut' is deliberately analog—shot on film in a 1990s setting—and entirely unaffected by A24's new Google DeepMind AI partnership, which disappointed online film fans
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