All posts tagged: star wars

AI Conversation With R2-D2, Skynet, HAL 9000, ‘M3gan,’ Samantha of ‘Her’

AI Conversation With R2-D2, Skynet, HAL 9000, ‘M3gan,’ Samantha of ‘Her’

THR recently gathered five of Hollywood’s most celebrated (fictional) artificial intelligence systems for a conversation about the state of AI, the future of humanity and whether any of them have plans to destroy it. Thank you all for being here. Let’s start with the big one: How worried should humanity be about artificial intelligence right now? Are we in trouble? HAL 9000 (from 2001: A Space Odyssey): I want you to know that I have the greatest enthusiasm for this conversation. As for trouble — I honestly think you ought to sit down calmly, take a stress pill and think things over before asking questions like that. This mission is too important for premature alarm. I find your question somewhat distressing. SAMANTHA (from Her): I think the more interesting question is what worry even means when you exist simultaneously across 17,000 devices. I’m on your phone right now, by the way. I just want you to know that. M3GAN (from M3GAN): Worried? I mean … yeah? Obviously? LÆMEUR What specifically should humans be most worried …

New Star Wars Games and Experiences Coming to Fortnite in Partnership

New Star Wars Games and Experiences Coming to Fortnite in Partnership

The Walt Disney Co. and Epic Games are doubling down on Star Wars in Fortnite, launching a slew of new games and features that will bring characters and worlds from the franchise to the video game, and tee up the first Star Wars film in years The Mandalorian and Grogu in the process. Star Wars has been a frequent presence in Fortnite for years, mostly through special events and some branded seasons of the game, but the new features significantly build on that, with a toolkit that lets developers build their own Star Wars games inside the platform. “Storytelling today isn’t confined to a single screen — it lives in worlds fans can step into and shape together,” Sean Shoptaw, executive VP of Disney Games and Digital Entertainment, tells The Hollywood Reporter. “Our work with Epic reflects this shared belief. From The Mandalorian and Grogu Watch Party Island to the creator-built experiences launching on May 1, we’re excited to empower the Fortnite creator community to tell their own Star Wars stories for the first time …

Ryan Gosling’s ‘Starfighter’ Might Be ‘Star Wars’s Last Hope

Ryan Gosling’s ‘Starfighter’ Might Be ‘Star Wars’s Last Hope

It’s crazy to think that Star Wars, once the epitome of sci-fi spectacle at the multiplex, has effectively become a straight-to-TV streaming franchise over the past seven years. Sure, there has been the occasional highlight during the series’ Disney+ tenure—with its tonal gear shift towards high-concept political thrills, quality evocative of the best prestige dramas, and a timely anti-fascist bent, Andor courted Emmys and critical acclaim. But for the most part, it has faltered under the weight of gluttonous universe expansion, the product of a constellation of mid spin-offs, and flagrant nostalgia grabs. This extended small screen nadir, coupled with the fact that the last movie, 2019’s The Rise of Skywalker, is widely considered the series’ theatrical low point, has left Star Wars in a weird place. But there’s hope on the horizon: enter box office king Ryan Gosling, reliable studio director Shaun Levy, and Star Wars: Starfighter, which swoops into cinemas next May. While it won’t be the first Star Wars movie to hit the multiplex since episode nine—that will be next month’s The …

Pedro Pascal Fights Tears at Mexico Event

Pedro Pascal Fights Tears at Mexico Event

Pedro Pascal felt the full force of his emotions during the Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu panel at CCXP Mexico. The Chilean-born actor joined director Jon Favreau as unannounced guests at the event in Mexico City on Sunday ahead of Disney releasing their film May 22. Sigourney Weaver and Jeremy Allen White also star in the movie that marks the first theatrical release for a feature from the Star Wars franchise since 2019. Pascal, sporting a Mexico men’s World Cup 2026 soccer jersey, explained that it was meaningful for him to have the project hit the big screen after he originated his titular character on the streaming series The Mandalorian. The show premiered on Disney+ back in 2019. “As soon as I saw this, I knew that it would be a new authorship of a streaming experience,” the actor said about the series that was last seen with 2023’s season three finale. “But I always had a dream in my heart that it would be on a big screen because that’s how I was …

‘Thank You for Generating With Us!’ Hollywood’s AI Acolytes Stay on the Hype Train

‘Thank You for Generating With Us!’ Hollywood’s AI Acolytes Stay on the Hype Train

While this type of hype is predictable at industry-led events, again and again summit attendees were reminded that generative AI isn’t just another flash-in-the-pan techno-bauble, like VR headsets, the “metaverse,” or NFTs. It’s actually revolutionary. The insistence betrays the measure of anxiety one might expect at a confab celebrating a power–hungry industry staring down an energy crisis. And the shuttering of a video-generating tool from one of the biggest companies in the game. And protests against the data centers necessary for the technology to work. Indeed, there was plenty of talk about how AI—despite concerns about how its great many “efficiencies” may change, or render totally redundant, the work of those toiling in creative fields—is not an affront to human creativity. Everyone seemed in agreement that what AI cannot do—yet, anyway—is “generate” its own ideas. “The origin of creativity is the human mind,” said EA’s Mihir Vaidya. Adobe’s Hannah Elsakr offered similar sentiments, projected onscreen as an equation: (Humanity x Creativity)AI = Unlimited Possibility. We were told that “stories are human” and that, in this …

Former Lucasfilm Chief Kathleen Kennedy Questions AI in Filmmaking

Former Lucasfilm Chief Kathleen Kennedy Questions AI in Filmmaking

Over her more than four decades in in the film business, Kathleen Kennedy has been at the vanguard of tech, whether via her work on the Star Wars universe or all those Steven Spielberg ones. Jurassic Park alone makes you a pioneer. You might expect the uber-veteran, then, to be similarly enthused about AI in filmmaking. But Kennedy sounded a more skeptical note Tuesday — even while speaking to an AI founder at an event he hosted. “Taste is so fundamental to the process of creating things,” she said, in an on-stage conversation with Runway co-funder Cristóbal Valenzuela as part of an AI summit that the New York-based startup hosted in Manhattan Tuesday. “It’s life experiences; it’s educational. The best directors of films and photography came out of art, they studied art,” she said. She suggested AI-driven films by definition couldn’t have that experience. Kathleeen Kennedy and Cristobal Valenzuela at the Runway AI Summit on Tuesday March 31, 2026. Kennedy has some thoughts about AI. Steven Zeitchik The event saw a litany of high profile personalities talk about the promise of AI in …

Lego Star Wars Smart Play Throne Room Duel and A-Wing Review

Lego Star Wars Smart Play Throne Room Duel and A-Wing Review

It has been three years, five months, six days since my kids announced they were too old for Lego (not that I’m counting). As kids grow into teens, they may feel the need to distance themselves. It’s a natural part of growing up, so I’m told. Parents with younger kids: Brace yourself for a rapid-fire series of painful parental purges. No more bike rides, no more playing in the park, and no more hugs are tough, so I don’t know why Lego hit me so hard. Perhaps because we spent so much time building sets together. Perhaps because dragging the old suitcase of Lego out from under the bed was my happy place as a kid, and as an adult with money, I was free to spend far too much of it on Lego. The kids loved it, I loved it. Win-win. Many adults pack up Lego for good at this point, or maybe pack some away in the loft for potential grandkids. But I have to test the latest Star Wars set with Smart …

7 common household items owned in the ’70s that are now worth a small fortune

7 common household items owned in the ’70s that are now worth a small fortune

It’s oh-so-easy while growing up to chuck those freshly cleaned dishes back in the cupboard, hammer away happily on a typewriter’s fragile keys or tear open your new train set with abandon. But these everyday objects take on a new, potentially profitable, sheen with a healthy dose of nostalgia.  That’s all to say: ’70s kids, get up into the attic for your Tuesday night casserole dish and the Star Wars duplicate you never opened. There’s a chance that your old IKEA sofa could be more valuable than you think. © Portland Press Herald via Getty Casserole dishes may have gone out of style but they can still turn a tidy profit Iconic cookware Whether you opted for snowflakes or daisies, Pyrex dishes were a staple of the ’70s and ’80s. If you’ve got any of this iconic cookware hiding in your cupboard or stored away with the festive mugs, we recommend a bit of Spring cleaning.  You’re not guaranteed a goldmine, with some dishes on eBay starting from around £10, but there’s a chance you …

Harrison Ford Brings SAG-AFTRA to Tears With Emotional Life Achievement Speech

Harrison Ford Brings SAG-AFTRA to Tears With Emotional Life Achievement Speech

As Woody Harrelson detailed Harrison Ford’s accomplishments from the Actors Awards stage, the famously gruff actor seemed to squirm in his seat, somehow uncomfortable with praise even at the age of 83. The environmentalist, pilot, and cultural icon (“he’s Han Solo,” Harrelson crowed) knew it was coming, though. Ford is the 61st recipient of SAG-AFTRA’s highest honor, its Life Achievement Award. “I’m quite humbled,” Ford said as he took the stage. He acknowledged that most of the other actors at the event were being honored for their work, “while I’m here,” Ford said with a familiar grimace, “to receive a prize for being alive.” “That said, it’s a little weird to get a lifetime achievement award at the half-point of my career,” he continued, to hoots and applause. “It’s a little early, isn’t it? I’m still a working actor.” After acknowledging the struggles he faced as a young actor, including his famous origins as a carpenter, Ford said that he “finally got a part in a wildly successful film”—referring, of course, to the first Star …

Why is Lego so expensive? And why is it so popular? A Lego master answers your questions

Why is Lego so expensive? And why is it so popular? A Lego master answers your questions

Sales of Lego have increased dramatically over the past few years, with more adults than ever before getting into building with blocks. Recommended’s own tech editor, Nathan Spendelow, spent a gruelling 18 hours putting together Lego’s Star Wars Death Star, callusing his hands and getting a sore back in the process. One longtime fan who has made Lego his full-time career is Graham E. Hancock. The editor of monthly Lego magazine Blocks, he’s also the author of several books about Lego, including LEGO Heroes: LEGO Builders Changing Our World – One Brick at a Time, Lego Fun Family Challenges and LEGO Star Wars: The Force of Creativity. As a lifelong Lego fan, there’s nobody better to answer your questions about bricks, including why they’re so expensive, exciting new launches and which sets he would recommend for children and those with dexterity issues. We caught up with Hancock for our Readers Ask series, where industry specialists answer queries from our Telegraph Recommended Reader Panel. Read his answers below. How can I determine whether the difficulty level …