When tele­vi­sion mogul Ted Turn­er died ear­li­er this month, it gave cinephiles occa­sion to remem­ber his brief but high-pro­file for­ay into col­oriza­tion. In the mid-nine­teen-eight­ies, he com­mis­sioned for broad­cast col­orized ver­sions of more than 100 clas­sic movies, from The Trea­sure of the Sier­ra Madre to It’s a Won­der­ful Life to Casablan­ca. It was only thanks to a clause spec­i­fy­ing a black-and-white pic­ture in Orson Welles’ con­tract with RKO that Cit­i­zen Kane nev­er got the full Turn­er treat­ment. That bless­ed­ly failed project is now being invoked again in com­par­i­son with the start­up Fable Stu­dio’s enter­prise, under­way even now, of using arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence to restore Welles’ sopho­more fea­ture The Mag­nif­i­cent Amber­sons, which was noto­ri­ous­ly muti­lat­ed by the stu­dio before its release in 1942.

The recut hap­pened in Welles’ absence. After the attack on Pearl Har­bor, he received what sounds like some­thing more than a request from Nel­son Rock­e­feller, then the government’s Coor­di­na­tor of Inter-Amer­i­can Affairs, to go to Brazil and shoot a doc­u­men­tary about Car­ni­val in the inter­est of “Pan-Amer­i­can uni­ty.” Due to a dis­as­trous test screen­ing, as Welles explains in the clip from a 1982 Are­na broad­cast above, “it was thought by every­one in Hol­ly­wood, while I was in South Amer­i­ca, that it was too ‘down­beat,’ a famous Hol­ly­wood word at the time.” Yet the entire film, to his mind, was about the down­fall of the tit­u­lar fam­i­ly, who lose their wealth and pres­tige as the soci­ety they knew slips out from under­neath them dur­ing the trans­for­ma­tions of the ear­ly auto­mo­bile age: not a wide­ly res­o­nant theme, it seems, in mid-twen­ti­eth-cen­tu­ry Amer­i­ca.

“They destroyed Amber­sons,” Welles says of the RKO’s recut, “and the pic­ture itself destroyed me.” Yet even the Bowd­ler­ized ver­sion has more than a few admir­ers. Among them is Edward Saatchi, the movie-lov­ing adver­tis­ing-com­pa­ny scion behind this AI restora­tion and/or recon­struc­tion project. “His Ama­zon-backed generative‑A.I. plat­form, Showrun­ner, would feed off the data from the extant ver­sion of the film to prompt entire new scenes, based on volu­mi­nous pro­duc­tion mate­ri­als that sur­vived, includ­ing scripts, pho­tographs, and detailed notes,” writes the New York­er’s Michael Schul­man. “For emo­tion­al authen­tic­i­ty, Fable would first shoot live actors, then over­lay the footage with the dig­i­tized voic­es and like­ness­es of the long-dead cast mem­bers.” The result has the poten­tial to be unset­tling on sev­er­al lev­els at once.

As Schul­man empha­sizes, the film’s con­cern with the human cost of a tech­no­log­i­cal rev­o­lu­tion is hard­ly lost on Saatchi. “With all their speed for­ward, they may be a step back­ward in civ­i­liza­tion,” says Joseph Cot­ten’s char­ac­ter, an ear­ly auto­mo­bile investor, in a scene from the stu­dio cut. “It may be that they won’t add to the beau­ty of the world or the life of men’s souls — I’m not sure. But auto­mo­biles have come, and almost all out­ward things are going to be dif­fer­ent because of what they bring.” Even the human mind, he spec­u­lates, will be “changed in sub­tle ways,” a process clear­ly in effect by the for­ties. As far as the con­se­quences of AI, we can already see how it’s begun chang­ing the think­ing of its ear­ly adopters. Saatchi him­self dis­plays an ambiva­lence about the tech­nol­o­gy, describ­ing it as “poten­tial­ly the end of human cre­ativ­i­ty” but also going full-speed-ahead with his unau­tho­rized work on The Mag­nif­i­cent Amber­sons — which, at the very least, he’s keep­ing in black-and-white.

Relat­ed con­tent:

Watch the New Trail­er for Orson Welles’ Lost Film The Oth­er Side of the Wind: A Glimpse of Footage from the Final­ly Com­plet­ed Film

AI “Com­pletes” Kei­th Haring’s Unfin­ished Paint­ing and Con­tro­ver­sy Erupts

Arti­fi­cial Intel­li­gence Brings to Life Fig­ures from 7 Famous Paint­ings: The Mona Lisa, Birth of Venus & More

Dis­cov­er the Lost Films of Orson Welles

Isaac Asi­mov Describes How Arti­fi­cial Intel­li­gence Will Lib­er­ate Humans & Their Cre­ativ­i­ty: Watch His Last Major Inter­view (1992)

When Ted Turn­er Tried to Col­orize Cit­i­zen Kane: See the Only Sur­viv­ing Scene from the Great Act of Cin­e­mat­ic Sac­ri­lege

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.

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