Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
Tuesday 16 September 2025 5:15 am  |  Updated:  Monday 15 September 2025 11:39 am

The UK film industry isn’t ready for AI animation

By: Paul Armstrong

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image generated by Google Gemini

Critterz is a fully AI-generated animated film made for a fraction of what Disney or Dreamworks would spend on a comparable feature, says Paul Armstrong

OpenAI has chosen film as the next showcase for what its models can do, backing Critterz, a fully AI-generated animated feature scheduled for release in 2026 and aiming for a premiere at Cannes. The reported production budget is under $30m, a fraction of what Disney or Dreamworks would spend on a comparable project. The message is clear: generative systems are going beyond the writers’ room faster than people predicted, and it’s not just Hollywood that should be worried. Businesses have an interesting role to play here.

Budgets tell the real story. Disney’s Elemental cost around $200m. Dreamworks’ Puss in Boots: The Last Wish came in at close to $90m. If Critterz reaches global distribution at one-tenth the cost of a Pixar feature, the attraction for investors and studios will be undeniable. Animation has always been a high-margin but high-risk category, dependent on long pipelines, complex rendering and vast teams of artists. Compressing those workflows through AI shifts the balance of power inside Hollywood, with studios less reliant on armies of specialists and more reliant on engineers managing synthetic production pipelines.

The attraction isn’t just outlay. AI pipelines promise tighter control and repeatability. A feature could be localised for multiple markets in parallel, swapping dialogue, lip-sync, and cultural references at minimal cost. Sequels or spin-offs could be built in months rather than years. To a studio accountant, this is a dream scenario: higher utilisation of assets, faster monetisation of IP, and fewer delays from creative or contractual bottlenecks. For VFX artists, voice actors (but maybe not the ones Critterz uses) and animators, it looks like more time will be spent with lawyers, if they get called. 

Audiences may not reward efficiency as a feature in its own right. Hollywood is famed for thrilling audiences with technical prowess. The cycles of 3/4D this and that, or motion-capture fatigue, suggest that audiences reward originality and narrative quality, not internal economics. Early reactions to Critterz teaser footage suggest visual spectacle is possible, but ‘questions’ remain on coherence, tone and emotional connection. Efficiency may win headlines, but it sure doesn’t guarantee box office returns, or awards. 

For businesses outside entertainment, the lesson to learn is about signalling. OpenAI isn’t building a sustainable studio. Altman and co are building a proof-of-concept for global media, designed to demonstrate to executives in advertising, corporate training, education and gaming that generative models can deliver long-form content at a fraction of the cost. Even a middling box office performance becomes a powerful sales pitch for AI-driven media pipelines across dozens of other industries. Just pay right here, get hooked, and boom, repeating revenue for years. 

The strategic challenge for agencies and production firms is immediate. Clients will not wait for Cannes if the numbers look compelling. A marketing director who sees an AI feature produced for a tenth of the usual price will ask why training videos, branded shorts, or campaigns should still be commissioned through human-heavy pipelines. Agencies that survive will embrace hybrid workflows that feature generative efficiency combined with human creativity, rights management and cultural insight. Agencies that cling to manual production models will see margins squeezed as platforms automate both creative and distribution.

Governance risks are, of course, yet be resolved, but are in motion. Training data for generative models includes billions of copyrighted assets, raising questions of ownership and liability. If an AI-generated character resembles an existing design or dialogue mirrors a known work, who carries responsibility: the model creator, the producer, or the distributor? Regulators are already signalling interest in disclosure requirements, provenance standards, and ethical rules for synthetic media. Businesses entering this space must assess not only creative potential but legal terrain. Reputational damage from governance failures could erase financial savings. Will big tech’s ‘pay the fine, do the crime’ attitude work with Hollywood? So far it has. 

Democratisation of storytelling?

Arguments in favour of AI-generated films often frame them as democratisation of storytelling, giving smaller studios and independent creators once reserved for billion-dollar firm tools. Obviously, that framing is attractive. The counterpoint is a little sharper: democratisation at the top of the funnel will likely hollow out thousands of skilled jobs, concentrating revenue in the hands of a few technology providers and distributors. More stories may be told, but the economics will benefit fewer players. 

The UK has positioned itself as a global outsourcing hub for VFX and animation, with clusters in Soho, Pinewood and Cardiff supplying labour-intensive services to US studios. Thousands of jobs depend on that pipeline. If AI lets US studios collapse production pipelines back in-house, the UK loses export earnings and undermines one of its most globally integrated creative clusters. Subsidies like BFI funding and tax relief that the film industry gets only compound the issue. No headcount, no subsidies. Although these will go to emerging industries like gaming, AR, and immersive content where human skills still matter. Talent drain is also a big issue for the UK, but then it’s hard to find an industry where that’s not the case right now. 

Jamie Denman, CEO of Sliced Bread Animation, and animation industry veteran believes this offers creatives an opportunity too; “Hollywood has always been a battlefield between creativity and finance, and AI redraws the map. If a $30m feature can rival a $200m Pixar film, studios will ask – why spend more? The danger is that filmmaking becomes prompt-based production lines. The opportunity is that AI becomes a tool to strip out costs and free creatives to take bigger risks. Audiences will, as ever, decide.”Readers of ‘What Did OpenAI Do This Week?’ will know that the Cannes premiere is Altman theatre at its best. The real audience isn’t families buying tickets but executives, investors and policymakers. OpenAI isn’t dabbling in cinema, it’s detonating a signal flare. Critterz is not about Cannes or box office glory, it’s about proving that generative AI can gut the cost structures of one of the most entrenched creative industries on earth. The same playbook that’s hitting advertising, training, education and beyond. For the UK, that means a cornerstone export sector is staring down obsolescence. For global business leaders, it’s a blunt warning: synthetic media is no longer speculative. If you’re still debating whether AI belongs in your pipeline, you’re debating the wrong thing and are now behind.

Read more

Motive Brings AI Coach to the UK: Organisations Can Deliver Personalised Driver Coaching Automatically with Custom Avatars

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Opinion

Categories

  • Opinion

People & Organisations

  • Critterz
  • pixar
  • Sam Altman

Trending Articles

  • Reeves’ new tax charge on cash ISAs faces fierce industry backlash

  • As it happened: Stocks recover after markets rocked by tech-sell off; US claims ‘good foundations’ of Iran deal

  • Burnham’s new chief of staff ran City firm advising Thames Water and rival Heathrow bidder

  • Revealed: Secret Treasury plan to tax State Pension before it is paid out

  • As it happened: FTSE 100 scrapes into green after Segro’s surge; Oil at pre-war levels after Trump snaps at industry

More from City PM

  • Motive Brings AI Coach to the UK: Organisations Can Deliver Personalised Driver Coaching Automatically with Custom Avatars

    Business Wire
  • The AI Summit London turns 10 as businesses move past the AI hype cycle

    Partner
    Neil Lawrence at DeepMind office discussing AI innovations and advancements in a professional setting
  • Manchester United bank eight-figure fee from Amazon All Or Nothing deal

    Sport Business
    Business professionals discussing strategy at a conference table, highlighting teamwork and collaboration in a modern offi...
  • London Indian Film Festival Returns with Star-Studded 2026 Programme Led by Aamir Khan

    Partner
    Breaking news graphic with bold headline text on a dynamic blue background representing a general news update
  • Google hit with UK-first AI crackdown over publisher content

    Tech
    Googles modern Kings Cross headquarters showcasing innovative architecture in Londons dynamic tech district
  • Midnight Labs Announces Investment from Sony Innovation Fund to Lead AI-Powered IP Enforcement and Content Protection

    Business Wire
  • When AI’s taken all the work, what will we all do?

    Opinion
    Wall-E robot character in futuristic setting showcasing advanced robotics technology and innovation
  • IBM’s consulting chief warns AI will ‘implode’ unprepared rivals

    Consulting
    All eyes on IBM v Lzlabs as the tech giant kicks off legal battle

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM. All rights reserved.
About · Contact · Terms · Privacy