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    Home » AI-Rendered Val Kilmer Debuts At CinemaCon In “As Deep as the Grave” Trailer

    AI-Rendered Val Kilmer Debuts At CinemaCon In “As Deep as the Grave” Trailer

    By SHOOTWednesday, April 15, 2026No Comments5 Views     In 1 day(s) login required to view this post. REGISTER HERE for FREE UNLIMITED ACCESS.
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    People watch a trailer for the upcoming film “As Deep as the Grave” featuring a character played by a generative AI version of Val Kilmer at CinemaCon on Wednesday, April 15, 2026, at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

    By Lindsey Bahr, Film Writer

    LAS VEGAS (AP) --

    The filmmakers behind “As Deep as the Grave,” the indie film that is using an artificial intelligence-rendered version of Val Kilmer in a prominent role, debuted a first look at the recreated actor Wednesday at CinemaCon in Las Vegas.

    “Don’t fear the dead and don’t fear me,” Kilmer’s character, Father Fintan, a Catholic priest and Native American spiritualist, says at the end of the trailer.

    The actor died last year at 65, of pneumonia. The use of generative AI to recreate Kilmer for the historical drama based on archaeologists Ann and Earl Morris became a hot button topic when the filmmakers announced it last month. The trailer shows Kilmer’s character at various ages.

    Writer-director Coerte Voorhees, along with his brother John, spoke on a panel Wednesday about the controversial decision to use technology to create a performance from a deceased actor and explained why they feel they’ve done it ethically by working with Kilmer’s children and the actors union. Coerte Voorhees stopped short of calling it a Val Kilmer performance, however.

    “Val Kilmer influenced this performance,” Coerte Voorhees said.

    Producer John Voorhees said the use of AI actors based on real people is risky territory for anyone to venture into but emphasized that they followed guidelines from the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union that he boiled down to “consent, compensation and collaboration.” Kilmer’s estate, including his daughter Mercedes, gave permission for his digital replication, is being compensated for it and provided archival footage to help the process.

    They also compared Kilmer’s AI-rendered performance to any actor portraying a historical figure on screen, as Kilmer once did with Jim Morrison in “The Doors.” Kilmer also utilized AI while he was alive. When he lost his natural speaking voice following a throat cancer diagnosis and two tracheotomies, he turned to an AI software company to digitally recreate his voice. Kilmer’s voice was also digitally altered to help his final screen performance in “Top Gun: Maverick.”

    Kilmer had signed on to “As Deep as the Grave” years ago; Much of the film was structured around his character, they said. When Kilmer had to pull out at the last minute due to health issues they decided to proceed shooting without the character instead of recasting the role. The production had numerous stops and starts as one of the first to begin shooting in New Mexico in the fall of 2020 amid the pandemic. They realized later that the story really did need Father Fintan, and decided to broach the topic with Kilmer’s children, Mercedes and Jack.

    “We were so glad they were so excited and so supportive of the idea,” Coerte Voorhees said. “We didn’t want to do it unless everybody thought this was going to work properly.”

    He said that Kilmer is on screen in the movie for one hour and 17 minutes; The final runtime was not revealed but he said it’s long. The filmmakers plan to release it sometime this year.

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    Category:News
    Tags:artificial intelligenceAs Deep as the GraveCinemaConCoerte VoorheesVal Kilmer



    Review: Director Ben Wheatley’s “Normal”

    Wednesday, April 15, 2026
    This image released by Magnolia Pictures shows Bob Odenkirk in a scene from "Normal." (Magnolia Pictures via AP)

    Over the years, we've seen countless characters wander into corrupt small towns and become entrapped by the locals. Usually, the mean face of these movies is the town sheriff. The best recent example: Don Johnson's crooked lawman in 2024's "Rebel Ridge." But in Ben Wheatley's "Normal," the good guy drifting into town IS the sheriff. Ulysses (Bob Odenkirk) has come to Normal, Minnesota, in the dead of winter to fill in for the town's recently deceased sheriff. Now, I don't think traveling substitute sheriffs are necessarily a real thing any more than police officers named after Homeric heroes. But "Normal," a hyperviolent Midwestern Western that cleverly inverts some genre standards, has a pleasingly loose hold on reality. It's a goofy, gory good time. And while it shares a lot of DNA with Odenkirk's two "Nobody" movies, "Normal" is the best and most convincing showcase for Odenkirk as a butt-kicking action hero yet. When Ulysses wakes up in a motel in Normal, a quaint town of 1,890, he seems to be doing only slightly better than Saul did at most points in "Better Call Saul." He leaves a message for his estranged wife (just like his namesake, they're separated) and greets an officer, Deputy Mike Nelson (Billy MacLellan), eager to show him around town. Odenkirk, a brilliant comic mind, has proven surprisingly adept at playing middle-aged washouts who maybe have a few moves left. His Sheriff Ulysses has given up trying too hard when it comes to upholding the peace. "Life's a lot easier when you care a little less," he says. His goal, he says, is to leave Normal the way he found it. But Normal tests his apathy. The town, set on a wintry tundra, seems to be doing well — too well, in fact. A banner by the town hall celebrates the raising of $16.8 million... Read More

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