Spending 40 million USD but calling it off! Amazon abandons filming the OpenAI biopic "Artificial," Sam Altman's dark palace intrigue urgently seeking a successor

According to foreign media outlet The New York Times, Amazon’s film division has recently pulled off a major shock by announcing that it will abandon the release of the upcoming OpenAI biopic film Artificial. The film, which costs approximately $40 million and tells the story of CEO Sam Altman’s “power struggle,” is reportedly being forced to back down, possibly due to Amazon’s recent strategic investment of up to $50 billion in OpenAI—highlighting potential conflicts between the interests of tech giants and film production. At present, the agency is actively looking for new buyers to take over the project.
(Background context: Google Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer leaves and joins OpenAI)
(Additional background: AI giants including OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind will attend the G7 summit)

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  • A $40 million emergency brake, involving $50 billion investment interests
  • An “AI version of a community internet war” could severely damage Altman’s image
  • A star-studded lineup urgently seeks a “replacement knight”

Amid the global wave of artificial intelligence (AI), the commercial interests among Silicon Valley giants are profoundly reshaping the entertainment landscape of Hollywood. According to the latest report from The New York Times on June 19, 2026, Amazon’s film division, Amazon MGM Studios, has made a major decision: it will completely give up the release of the narrative feature film Artificial, which stars OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

A $40 million emergency brake, involving $50 billion investment interests

The decision, personally issued by Mike Hopkins, head of Prime Video and Amazon MGM Studios, has left the entire production team extremely shocked. The report states that Amazon previously strongly backed the project, having already poured as much as $40 million into the film’s production costs. It also completed test screenings in four markets. The film was originally scheduled to premiere at the 2027 South by Southwest (SXSW) festival and have its release date locked in.

However, the attitude has made a 180-degree turn, which clearly reflects far larger commercial considerations. Earlier this year, Amazon had just publicly announced a massive investment of up to $50 billion in OpenAI, deepening strategic cooperation between the two parties in areas such as AI chips and cloud services. To avoid angering this most important strategic partner through a film release, Amazon said in an official statement in a measured way: “We believe it would be better for Artificial to be released by other studios. We are working closely with the production team to find a new home for this film.”

An “AI version of a community internet war” could severely damage Altman’s image

Dubbed by industry insiders as “The Social Network of the AI era,” the film’s plot focuses precisely on the OpenAI internal power struggle in 2023 that shocked the global tech world, vividly portraying the dramatic sequence of how Sam Altman was suddenly dismissed yet quickly regained control and returned to power.

According to analyses by multiple foreign media outlets, the film’s depiction of Altman is not entirely positive, and may even carry a strong critical tone. At a sensitive moment when Amazon and OpenAI are deeply intertwined in interests, releasing a film that could deal a negative blow to the image of the investment partner is undoubtedly a major taboo in business cooperation. This is also widely viewed as the main reason why Amazon would rather cut its losses and hand the project over.

A star-studded lineup urgently seeks a “replacement knight”

Despite Amazon’s cancellation, the production team behind Artificial is undeniably star-studded. The film is directed by acclaimed director Luca Guadagnino, who previously directed Call Me by Your Name and Challengers. Andrew Garfield plays Sam Altman. Meanwhile, fellow tech fanatic Elon Musk is portrayed by comedian Ike Barinholtz, and the screenplay is written by Simon Rich, who is from Saturday Night Live (SNL).

At present, the film has entered a stage close to completion. The American talent agency CAA is actively seeking a new buyer for this highly talked-about “hot potato,” and has already held private screenings for potential buyers including Netflix, A24, Neon, Focus Features, and Warner Bros. This contest of strength between tech giants and Hollywood not only reveals the direct influence of capital on content creation, but also makes this highly topical AI epic film a sensation even before it has been released.

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