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Steven Spielberg says he’s ‘never used AI’ in any of his films

TechCrunch / 3/14/2026

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Key Points

  • Spielberg said at SXSW 2026 that he has never used AI on any of his films and does not outsource creativity to machines.
  • He clarified that while he’s not anti-technology, there won’t be an empty chair with a laptop in writers’ rooms, underscoring a preference for human-driven storytelling.
  • He cautioned that AI should not replace a creative individual, emphasizing his stance against using AI to supplant human creativity in filmmaking.
  • The article situates his remarks within a broader industry context, noting AI startups courting indie filmmakers and major players like Amazon testing AI tools for production, along with Netflix’s reported $600 million acquisition of Ben Affleck’s AI filmmaking company.
  • The stance reflects ongoing debates about AI in cinema and signals industry-trend moves rather than a shift toward widespread automation of creative work.

Legendary filmmaker Steven Spielberg spoke out against the use of AI technology when used in creative endeavors in an interview at the SXSW conference in Austin on Friday. Asked how he viewed AI’s utility as part of the filmmaking process, Spielberg said, “I’ve never used AI on any of my films yet,” to which the audience erupted with cheers and applause.

The director/producer/screenwriter, who became a household name for blockbusters like “Jaws,” “E.T.,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” and many others, is not anti-technology, necessarily. His own films have imagined worlds filled with technology, for both good and bad, like “Minority Report,” “Ready Player One,” and, of course, “A.I. Artificial Intelligence,” to name a few.

At SXSW 2026, Spielberg said he didn’t want to go on a rant about AI, noting that he was for the technology “in many disciplines,” but in his writers’ rooms, even in TV, “there’s not an empty chair with a laptop in front of it.” Meaning, he’s not outsourcing creativity to the machine.

“I am not for AI if it replaces a creative individual,” he said.

Of course, someone like Spielberg may not need an AI assist. AI startups are pitching themselves to resource-constrained indie filmmakers. Elsewhere, big names in streaming are also looking to use AI. Amazon this year said it’s testing tools for AI in film and TV production, and Netflix earlier this month acquired Ben Affleck’s AI filmmaking company for a reported $600 million.