Introduction
The Creator is a 2023 American science fiction film produced and directed by Gareth Edwards, who co-wrote the screenplay with Chris Weitz.
The film stars John David Washington, Gemma Chan, Ken Watanabe, Sturgill Simpson, Allison Janney, and Madeleine Yuna Voyles (in her film debut). Its plot, set in a future impacted by war between the human race and the forces of artificial intelligence, follows an ex-special forces agent who is recruited to hunt down and kill the “Creator”, who has developed a mysterious weapon with the power to end the war by destroying mankind itself.



Outline
In 2050, an artificial intelligence created by the US government detonates a nuclear warhead over Los Angeles, California. In response, the US and its Western allies pledge to eradicate AI from the earth. Their efforts are resisted by New Asia, a country in southeast Asia whose people continue to embrace AI despite outcry from the West. The US military launches an extensive military campaign against AI, seeking to assassinate “Nirmata”, the mysterious architect behind New Asia’s AI advancements. The USS NOMAD (North American Orbital Mobile Aerospace Defence) is developed as a space station capable of launching destructive attacks from orbit.
Sergeant Joshua Taylor is sent as an undercover operative to infiltrate New Asia and marries Maya, whom the US army believes to be the daughter of Nirmata. After US forces attack Taylor’s home, exposing his cover, a pregnant Maya is killed in the ensuing NOMAD strike. Five years later, Taylor works as part of the ground zero cleanup crew in Los Angeles. He is approached by General Andrews and Colonel Howell of the US army, who tell him Maya is alive and recruit him on a reconnaissance mission to destroy a new weapon engineered by Nirmata. In New Asia, Taylor discovers during their raid that the weapon is a robotic “simulant” girl with the ability to remotely control technology, dubbing her “Alphie”. Separated from the rest of the strike team, Taylor and Alphie enter a city to find Drew, a friend and former comrade of Taylor’s.
Examining Alphie’s code, Drew tells Taylor she is capable of becoming the most powerful weapon on the planet as her abilities grow exponentially. New Asian police attack Drew’s apartment, killing his simulant girlfriend Kami, as Howell and squad member McBride close in. Taylor locates Maya’s beacon but does not find her, and the group once again comes under attack. Before Drew perishes, he tells Taylor that Maya is “Nirmata”. Taylor and Alphie are captured by New Asian forces led by Harun, a simulant soldier and former ally of Taylor during his undercover operation, and are brought to their village.
Harun states that the tragedy in Los Angeles was caused by a human coding error, and that the US government unfairly cast the blame on AI, who only wish to peacefully co-exist with humanity; Maya became the second Nirmata after her father’s death. After escaping his captors, Taylor rescues Alphie and prepares to flee as Howell and the US army attack the village. Alphie intervenes with her abilities but is gravely wounded by McBride. She is rushed to Nirmata, whom Taylor learns has been in a coma since the strike on her home. Because simulants cannot harm Nirmata, she is “stranded” and unable to die. It is also revealed Alphie was based on Maya’s unborn child, who had been scanned in utero. Emotional, Taylor takes Maya off life support as Howell and her forces arrive. They are killed by Harun, who tells Taylor NOMAD must be destroyed in order for the war to end.
Taylor and Alphie are captured by US forces and taken to Los Angeles, where Taylor is forced to kill Alphie with a stun gun. However, Andrews later discovers this to be a ruse, and the pair escapes before Alphie can be incinerated. Boarding a lunar shuttle at the Los Angeles Interplanetary Air and Space Port, Alphie forces the spacecraft to land aboard NOMAD. As Andrews orders NOMAD to launch a large-scale assault on remaining AI bases across the globe, Taylor plants a timed explosive while Alphie disables the ship’s power. Before they can escape, Andrews activates a tentacled robot which prevents Taylor from entering Alphie’s escape pod. Taylor ejects the vehicle and reunites with a simulant bearing Maya’s likeness, whom Alphie had activated using a memory chip downloaded by Howell. As NOMAD explodes around them, the couple share a final embrace and kiss. On Earth, Alphie lands safely in New Asia and joins with the other AI in celebrating the destruction of NOMAD.
Cast
- John David Washington as Joshua Taylor, a military sergeant and undercover operative of the US Army.
- Madeleine Yuna Voyles as Alpha-O / “Alphie”, a robotic “simulant” with the ability to remotely control technology.
- Gemma Chan as Maya Fey-Taylor / Nirmata, the daughter of the original Nirmata (the titular “Creator”) and Taylor’s wife.
- Allison Janney as Howell, a colonel in the US Army who recruits Taylor.
- Ken Watanabe as Harun, a simulant soldier in New Asia.
- Sturgill Simpson as Drew, Taylor’s former comrade and best friend.
- Amar Chadha-Patel as Omni / Sek-on / Sergeant Bui, a citizen of New Asia who has donated his likeness to multiple simulants.
- Marc Menchaca as McBride, a soldier in the US Army who is part of Taylor’s squad.
- Robbie Tann as Shipley, a soldier in the US Army who is part of Taylor’s squad.
- Ralph Ineson as Andrews, a general in the US Army who recruits Taylor.
- Michael Esper as Cotton, the captain of Taylor’s squad.
- Veronica Ngo as Kami, Drew’s simulant girlfriend.
Production
Development
Development on the film began in November 2019, when Gareth Edwards signed on to direct and write an untitled science fiction project for New Regency to produce, along with Edwards’ Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016) co-producer Kiri Hart serving as producer. A test shoot and location scouting was conducted that year, with Edwards using it as the opportunity to envision the look of the film. He described the process as “I took a camera and a 1970s anamorphic lens, we went location-scouting in Vietnam, Cambodia, Japan, Indonesia, Thailand, and Nepal. Our whole plan was just to go to the greatest locations in the world, because the cost of a flight is way less than the cost of building a set. We were going to hopscotch around the world and shoot this film, then layer in the science-fiction on top afterwards. If our film is trying to achieve something visually, it’s trying to feel real in terms of science-fiction.”
In February 2020, Edwards was officially announced as director. Edwards cited films such as Apocalypse Now (1979), Baraka (1992), Blade Runner (1982), Akira (1988), Rain Man (1988), The Hit (1984), E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) and Paper Moon (1973) as this film’s sources of inspiration.
Casting
In May 2021, John David Washington was announced to star, and the film’s working title was revealed to be True Love. In June 2021, Gemma Chan, Danny McBride, and Benedict Wong entered negotiations to star. The involvements of Chan and Wong were confirmed in January 2022, with Allison Janney, Sturgill Simpson, and Marc Menchaca joining the cast. Simpson was reported to be taking over for McBride who departed due to scheduling conflicts. In February 2022, Ken Watanabe joined the cast to replace Wong, who also had to drop out due to scheduling conflicts; Watanabe had previously worked with Edwards on Godzilla (2014).
Filming
On a production budget of $80 million, principal photography began in Thailand on 17 January 2022, with Greig Fraser (who also serves as a co-producer) and Oren Soffer serving as cinematographers, and COVID-19 safety precautions in place. To give the film the feel of classic Hollywood epics such as Ben-Hur (1959), the filmmakers opted to shoot the film in the 2.76:1 ultra-wide aspect ratio.
Among the on-site filming locations in Thailand are Suvarnabhumi Airport, Ban Mung, Sangkhla Buri, Chiang Dao, and Sam Phan Bok. As the trailer was released, hyped-up Thai fans also pointed a scene shot at Makkasan station of Bangkok’s ARL.
For their duties, Fraser was involved in the pre-production process before moving to working remotely due to his commitment to Dune: Part Two (2024), while Soffer, for his first major studio film, served as the main director of photography throughout the production shoot. In an interview with Total Film, Edwards, who also served as one of the camera operators, commended Soffer and what he brought to the film’s production, calling him a “real future rising star in the DoP world. He’s super-smart. He’s got a great eye.” The film was shot on the prosumer Sony FX3 camera, the low cost of which is a rarity for a blockbuster film. Edwards would ultimately confirm the camera’s usage during Collider’s “Directors on Directing” panel at the 2023 San Diego Comic-Con, where director and fellow panellist Louis Leterrier noting that this creative decision could “change cinema” forever. In light of the budget, the filmmakers utilized guerrilla filmmaking methods by having very few crew members and natural lighting on set for select on-location scenes, and limited sound recording. Rather than build sets, or rely exclusively on digital methods such as greenscreens or StageCraft, the production found it was more cost effective to pay to send a small crew to film in 80 locations around the world which came closest to matching the desired sci-fi look. Then, only once the film had finalised the edit would visual effects be layered into the image. Using this method for visual effects, Edwards estimated the production spent only $80 million on a project which would have typically cost $300 million. Filming wrapped on 30 May 2022.
Visual Effects and Post-Production
The visual effects were provided by Industrial Light & Magic, Wētā FX, Folks VFX, MARZ, Misc Studios, Fin Design + Effects, Supreme Studio, Outpost VFX, Crafty Apes, Jellyfish Pictures, VFX Los Angeles, Frontier VFX, Outpost VFX and Clear Angle Studios. James Clyne, who worked as a concept artist on Rogue One, reunited with Edwards on this film as its production designer.
One of the most significant elements of the film is the fictional US military space station NOMAD, which was noted for its distinctive visual design and sound effects. Edwards revealed that it took the entirety of the lockdowns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic to design it, describing the ship as “a bird of prey and an all-seeing eye in the sky, always looking at everybody. So we kept playing with those two shapes and merging them in a way until it just felt right.” Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van der Ryn, who worked with Edwards on Godzilla (2014), provided the sound effects work for the ship, described as “a dance, is probably the nice way to say it, between music and sound, and it’s never a fight.” The assembly cut of the film, which ran for 5 hours, did not use any temp tracks for the music and just the sound design, which Edwards likened to that of the talkies during the late-1920s. Because of this, it was decided that no music be added to the film throughout the entire editing process in order to get the pacing and story structure right in an efficient manner. Edwards called the experience “super interesting. Part of me thinks that I would do that again, because it puts a lot of pressure on the sound design, but then you’re not hiding behind music to save the storytelling.”
Music
On 17 July 2023, Edwards confirmed on the film’s Twitter account that Hans Zimmer was hired to score the film. On 19 September 2023, Edwards revealed that he initially planned on having a company specialising in AI-generated music replicate Zimmer’s style of music. Although, the process gave him satisfying results, Edwards instead chose Zimmer to originally score the film. The soundtrack is scheduled to be digitally released by Hollywood Records on 29 September 2023.
Marketing
A first look at the film was shown at CinemaCon on April 26, 2023, with Anthony D’Alessandro of Deadline Hollywood praising the production design, saying that it made “Blade Runner look like child’s play”. It was also announced that the title was renamed from True Love to The Creator. Edwards later explained why the title was changed, saying that it “sounded too much like a romantic comedy, and that message would confuse potential audiences who weren’t familiar with the film’s plot or trailer.”
The film’s teaser trailer, set to a remix of Aerosmith’s “Dream On,” premiered online on 17 May 2023. The official trailer was released on 17 July 2023, three days after the beginning of the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike. James Whitbrook of Gizmodo and EJ Tangonan of JoBlo.com found the move coincidental, given the similarities between the film’s premise and SAG-AFTRA’s fears of the film studios using artificial intelligence to replicate the likenesses of actors without compensation. Edwards agreed with this take, saying “I have a trick with AI is to get the timing as a sweet spot window where it’s before the apocalypse and not after, which I think it’s in November — maybe December — and so, I think we got really lucky…The joke would be that when you write a film, especially a science fiction film, I try to avoid putting a date…at some point, you have to so, I picked 2070. Now I feel like an idiot because I should’ve gone for 2023 ’cause everything that’s been unfolding in the last few months is kind of scary and weird.”
Exclusive footage from one of the film’s battle sequences and a first listen to some of Zimmer’s score were presented at the 2023 San Diego Comic-Con on 21 July 2023. A behind-the-scenes featurette introducing Edwards’ vision for the film and featuring interviews with the cast was released on 21 August 2023. An IMAX fan event showcasing exclusive footage from the film with a live Q&A with Edwards took place in select IMAX theatres nationwide on 29 August 2023, one month before the film’s release.
Publicity stunts were also conducted in September 2023 when actors dressed as “AI robots” depicted in the film appeared during a National Football League game between the Los Angeles Chargers and the Miami Dolphins at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, a Major League Baseball game between the San Diego Padres and the St. Louis Cardinals at Petco Stadium in San Diego, and the first race of the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. A book showcasing concept artwork and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the film, written by James Mottram, will be published by Insight Editions and released by Simon & Schuster on 14 November 2023.
Controversy
On 17 July 2023, the official trailer for The Creator received negative criticism for using footage from the 2020 Beirut explosion as a visual effects plate shot of a futuristic Los Angeles being obliterated by a nuclear explosion. It was first noticed by a Reddit user and was subsequently covered by the YouTube channel Corridor Crew as part of their “VFX Artists React” series, where they expressed disdain at the incorporation of the footage. On 15 September 2023, during a Reddit AMA with Gareth Edwards, he revealed that the alleged footage was never meant to be included in the trailer in the first place and that it is typical in filmmaking that archival footage be used as placeholders for VFX shots, while revealing that the shot is not in the film itself.
Release
The Creator held its Texas premiere at Fantastic Fest on 26 September 2023, with a special screening as the opening night film of Beyond Fest that same day at the Aero Theatre in Santa Monica, California. An early press and industry screening of the film, originally meant to have been its world premiere until being impacted by the 2023 Hollywood labour disputes, took place at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles on 18 September 2023, with props and costumes from the film on display in the lobby. Edwards was also present and voiced his support for the film’s cast, who could not attend and promote the film due to the strikes, in a speech before the film began. The film’s United Kingdom premiere took place on 26 September 2023 at the The Science Museum, South Kensington in London.
It was released on 29 September 2023 in both conventional theatres and in IMAX, Dolby Cinema, 4DX and ScreenX, just two days after the end of the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike. It will compete with Paramount Pictures’ PAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie and Lionsgate’s Saw X. It was set to originally be released on 06 October 2023 before it was announced at CinemaCon on 26 April 2023 that the film would be moving up a week.
Box Office
In the United States and Canada, The Creator was released alongside PAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie, Saw X, and the wide expansion of Dumb Money, and is projected to gross $16-19 million from 3,680 theatres in its opening weekend. Cindy White of The A.V. Club cited the predicted result as due to being an original film not based on an existing IP, the cast and filmmakers not being entirely household names (save for Washington and Janney), the poor timing of the release in the midst of societal and governmental issues regarding generative AI’s place in everyday life, and lacklustre marketing due in part to the 2023 WGA and SAG strikes. It made $5.6 million on its first day, including $1.6 million from Thursday night previews.
Critical Response
Critics praised the film for its visual effects, Edwards’ direction, performances and its portrayal of the conflict between humans and AI as timely and relevant, although some criticism was aimed towards the writing, especially the third act.
Future
On 26 September 2023, Edwards stated that there are no plans for a sequel, saying “I was like endings, my favorite part of the story is the end. My favorite part of a joke is the punchline. And so I just want it to be this self-contained thing. So I mean, it’s a high class problem. If someone ever came up and said, ‘We want a sequel.’ That’d be a really good problem to have. But it is not the plan. No.”
Trivia
- Easter egg nod to Star Trek The Changeling (S02E03, 1967) where the Enterprise encounters a form of A.I. called “Nomad” who is searching for “the creator”.
Production & Filming Details
- Director(s):
- Gareth Edwards
- Producer(s):
- Courtney Cunniff … co-producer (as Courtney L. Cunniff)
- Gareth Edwards … producer (p.g.a.)
- Zev Foreman … executive producer
- Greig Fraser … co-producer
- Kiri Hart … producer
- Natalie Lehmann … executive producer
- Nick Meyer … executive producer
- Arnon Milchan … producer
- Yariv Milchan … executive producer
- Galileo Mondol … producer: Los Angeles unit
- Chidchanok Plodripu … line producer: Thailand (as Chidchanok ‘Pam’ Plodripu)
- Ace Salvador … producer: Los Angeles unit
- Michael Schaefer … executive producer
- Nicholas Simon … co-producer
- Jim Spencer … producer (p.g.a.)
- Writer(s):
- Gareth Edwards … (screenplay by)
- Chris Weitz … (screenplay by)
- Gareth Edwards … (story by)
- Music:
- Hans Zimmer
- Cinematography:
- Greig Fraser … director of photography
- Oren Soffer … director of photography
- Editor(s):
- Hank Corwin
- Scott Morris
- Joe Walker
- Production:
- 20th Century Studios
- New Regency Productions
- Entertainment One
- VS Service
- Distributor(s):
- Feelgood Entertainment (Greece, 2023)(theatrical)
- Forum Hungary (Hungary, 2023)(theatrical)
- HKC Entertainment (Pakistan, 2023)(theatrical)
- Kinomania (Ukraine, 2023)(theatrical)
- NOS Audiovisuais (Portugal, 2023)(theatrical)
- The Walt Disney Company Iberia (Spain, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Argentina (Argentina, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Finland (Finland, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Germany (Germany, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Japan (Japan, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Mexico (Mexico, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Norway (Norway, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (Brazil, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (Canada, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (France, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (Poland, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (Singapore, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (United States, 2023)(theatrical)
- Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, Italia (Italy, 2023)(theatrical)
- Release Date: 26 September 2023 (Ivry-sur-Seine, Premiere, France).
- Running Time: 133 minutes.
- Rating: 12A.
- Country: US.
- Language: English.




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