
Hollywood filmmaker James Cameron, celebrated globally for revolutionising visual effects through films like Avatar and Avatar: The Way of Water, has once again clarified his stance on emerging technologies—specifically generative artificial intelligence, which he strongly opposes.
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In a recent conversation with CBS Sunday Morning, Cameron discussed the technological achievements behind his upcoming film, “Avatar: Fire and Ash.” While acknowledging that his long-standing use of performance capture may appear similar to AI-driven tools, he stressed that the two are fundamentally different. Performance capture, he explained, begins with the authentic emotional expression of an actor, which becomes the foundation for digital artistry—not a replacement for human creativity.
The director of “Titanic,” “The Terminator” and the “Avatar” series, which used performance capture technology to help create fantasy characters in 3-D, has consistently raised the level of movie visual effects.
But Oscar-winner @JimCameron tells @JonVigliotti that he believes… pic.twitter.com/ps96yc1XGY
— CBS Sunday Morning (@CBSSunday) November 30, 2025
“There has always been this perception that we’re replacing actors with computers,” Cameron said. “But when you really look at what we’re doing, it’s a celebration of the actor-director moment.” His comments came during a segment showing the “Avatar” cast performing complex underwater scenes in a massive 250,000-gallon tank, a hallmark of Cameron’s commitment to realism blended with technological innovation.
James Cameron says it’s “horrifying” that generative AI can “make up an actor”:
“Now, go to the other end of the spectrum, and you’ve got generative AI, where they can make up a character. They can make up an actor. They can make up a performance from scratch with a text… pic.twitter.com/tExnbniJzo
— Variety (@Variety) November 30, 2025
Contrasting this with generative AI, the director expressed deep concern. With AI systems able to create faces, performances and entire characters from simple prompts, Cameron fears the erosion of authenticity. “Generative AI can make up a character, make up an actor, make up a performance from scratch,” he said. “No — that’s horrifying. That’s exactly what we’re not doing.”
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Cameron, long regarded as a visionary for his willingness to embrace advances in filmmaking technology, maintains a clear boundary between tools that enhance actor-driven storytelling and those that replace human performance altogether. As Hollywood continues to navigate the rapid rise of AI-generated content, Cameron’s stance underscores an industry-wide debate about the future of artistic integrity in cinema.