There is a particular corporate awkwardness in funding a film that roasts your most valuable business partner, and Amazon MGM Studios is currently living inside it. The studio developed, produced, and nearly completed a biographical comedy-drama about OpenAI’s chaotic 2023 leadership crisis — then quietly announced it won’t release the film. The timing lands like a punchline nobody at Amazon wants to hear: the company recently locked in a multi-billion-dollar AI and cloud partnership with OpenAI, per the Wall Street Journal.
The Film That Got Too Real #
“Artificial” boasts an A-list pedigree and a subject no tech billionaire wants dramatized.
Directed by Luca Guadagnino and written by humorist Simon Rich, the film stars Andrew Garfield alongside an ensemble that includes Yura Borisov, Monica Barbaro, and Billie Lourd. It dramatizes the five-day Thanksgiving 2023 board coup that briefly ousted Sam Altman, structured largely around Ilya Sutskever — the idealistic co-founder whose actions helped trigger the firing, played by Borisov. Elon Musk also appears as a character, with the story tracing OpenAI’s arc from nonprofit idealism to commercial arms race.
The film is essentially finished. CAA is now shopping it to other distributors.
Puck described the project as a “Social Network”-style treatment — critical, layered, nobody coming out looking saintly. Puck’s Matt Belloni wrote that it was “surprising and applause-worthy that Amazon would make this movie,” given how unflattering it risked being to powerful figures. That applause, apparently, grew uncomfortable somewhere between principal photography and the release calendar.
The Conflict Amazon Won’t Name #
The studio’s public statement is polite, precise, and conspicuously missing one thing: a reason.
“We have the utmost respect and admiration for Luca Guadagnino as an award-winning filmmaker – not to mention a longstanding relationship that we hope to continue. We believe that Artificial will be better served if it were released by a different studio and are working closely with the filmmaking team to find the film a new home” Amazon MGM said, per Deadline. What’s absent from that statement is any explanation whatsoever.
Studios do shelve finished films — Warner Bros. vaulted “Batgirl” as a tax write-off. But that was budget math and franchise strategy, not subject matter. This case is structurally different: the film’s central figure directly implicates a current business partner carrying billions in strategic value. Far Out Magazine and JoBlo both link Amazon‘s reversal explicitly to the OpenAI partnership, arguing that releasing a film critical of Altman could strain a lucrative AI alliance. A Showbiz411 opinion column went further, alleging billionaire image-management drove the decision — though that interpretation remains unconfirmed opinion, not documented fact.
That broader pattern — platform-owned studios making critical stories about the same industries funding their parent companies — is precisely the conflict regulators and media critics have flagged as a structural problem worth watching.
CAA is screening “Artificial” for potential buyers. Industry observers speculate Universal or Disney could absorb the cost and step in, but no deal has been confirmed. The deeper irony is hard to miss: the controversy over whether you will ever see this film has already become the exact story the movie set out to tell.