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James Dean revival spurs debate on raising the digital dead

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The men bringing James Dean back to life for a forthcoming film are aiming not just to give his digital likeness a role, but a whole new career.

Dean's planned appearance in the Vietnam War movie 'œFinding Jack,'ť and the possibility of future parts, comes as digital de-aging and duplication of real actors has tipped from cinematic trick into common practice. And it's giving new life to old arguments about the immortality and dignity of the dead.

'œOur intentions are to create the virtual being of James Dean. That's not only for one movie, but going to be used for many movies and also gaming and virtual reality,'ť said Travis Cloyd, CEO of Worldwide XR, who is leading the design on the Dean project. 'œOur focus is on building the ultimate James Dean so he can live across any medium."

Legally, they have every right to do it, via the full agreement of the Dean estate and his surviving relatives.

'œOur clients want to protect these valuable intellectual property rights and the memories that they have of their loved ones,'ť said Mark Roesler, CEO of CMG Worldwide, the legal and licensing company that has long owned the title to Dean's likeness. 'œWe have to trust them. ... They want to see that their loved one's image and memory continues to live on."

Dean is an obvious candidate for revival with his embodiment-of-Hollywood image and the brevity of his life and career - he died at 24 and made just three films: 'œEast of Eden,'ť 'œRebel Without a Cause'ť and 'œGiant.'ť

Roesler and Cloyd have not obtained the rights from Warner Bros. to use footage from those films, but they have a large trove of photos and Dean's dozens of TV roles.

'œThere are thousands of images that we do have to work with,'ť Cloyd said. 'œWhat we typically do is we take all those images and videos and we run them through machine learning to create that asset.'ť

That will be added to the work of a stand-in actor using motion-capture technology as commonly done now with CGI characters, along with the overdubbed voice of another actor.

The announcement of the role last year caused a quick backlash, with responses like that of "Captain America" star Chris Evans on Twitter: 'œMaybe we can get a computer to paint us a new Picasso. Or write a couple new John Lennon tunes. The complete lack of understanding here is shameful.'ť

"I think there's definitely something cynical and what feels like a little bit distasteful about bringing especially long-dead actors back to life," said Terri White, editor-in-chief of film magazine "Empire.'ť 'œThe reaction to the likes of the James Dean news has actually shown that I think most people don't really want that.'ť

For the people behind the Dean project, the negative reaction is as inevitable as they believe the eventual acceptance will be. Cloyd foresees a Hollywood where even living actors have a 'œdigital twin'ť that helps in their work.

'œThis is disruptive technology,'ť Cloyd said. 'œSome people hear it for the first time and they get shaken by it. But this is where the market is going.'ť

The revival of the dead, often done clumsily, has been happening for much of Hollywood's existence.

Footage of Bela Lugosi, combined with a double holding a cape over his face, was used in 1959's 'œPlan 9 From Outer Space,'ť released after the horror star's death. Bruce Lee's film 'œGame of Death,'ť left unfinished before his 1973 death, was completed using doubles and voice overdubs and released five years later. 'œThe Fast and the Furious'ť star Paul Walker died in 2013 before shooting was done on 'œFurious 7.'ť His two younger brothers and others acted as stand-ins so his scenes could be finished.

Even Lennon, and many other dead historical figures, were digitally revived in 1994 in 'œForrest Gump.'ť

But the technology of recreation and resurrection has taken a major leap forward in quality and prestige, with the extensive de-aging and re-aging used in Martin Scorsese's 'œThe Irishman'ť; a young Will Smith digitally returning to play opposite the current version in last summer's 'œGemini Man"; and Carrie Fisher, whose younger self briefly returned digitally in 2016's 'œStar Wars: Rogue One'ť and appeared again after her death, in 'œStar Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.'ť

These instances have elicited scattered skepticism - both of the quality of the technology and the propriety of the revivals - but audiences have largely accepted them.

Guy Williams, visual effects supervisor at filmmaker Peter Jackson's Weta Digital, said the possibilities do offer a moral dilemma.

'œThe question isn't so much if you use somebody's likeness to bring them back or to create a digital version of them, it's what you do with it and the respect that you show to it,'ť Williams said. "So that, to me, is the more important question.'ť

Pablo Helman, the visual effects supervisor behind the de-aging of Robert De Niro and others in 'œThe Irishman,'ť said he considers that moral dilemma in his work.

'œThe main question that you need to ask yourself is why do it?" Helman said. "You know, just because you can do it doesn't mean you should, you know? That would be one thing that I'm always questioning: Is it in service of the story?'ť

Ethical considerations are likely to give way to market forces if viewers decide they find digital versions of dead actors plausible, and palatable.

'œI think the moral question is going to be decided by the audiences and society, whether they want to see that,'ť said Bill Westenhofer, visual effects supervisor on 'œGemini Man.'ť

Dean will be playing a supporting role in 'œFinding Jack,'ť which is now in pre-production. The limited screen time is, at this point, as far as those recreating him want to go. But they hope the digital avatar can eventually carry a movie, possibly even playing James Dean himself at different ages.

'œAt some point there's going to be the James Dean biopic,'ť Cloyd said. 'œI think the technology is not necessarily there today to take the risk."

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Kemp reported from London.

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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Andrew Dalton on Twitter: https://twitter.com/andyjamesdalton.

In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2020, photo, school children walk past a bust of actor James Dean during a field trip, at the Griffith Observatory in the Griffith Park area of Los Angeles. Travis Cloyd, who is leading the revival of Dean for his appearance in "Finding Jack," says his company will eventually offer the late actor's digital likeness for a range of roles in movies, TV and video games. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2020 photo, school children walk past a bust of actor James Dean at the Griffith Observatory in the Griffith Park area of Los Angeles. Travis Cloyd, who is leading the revival of Dean for his appearance in "Finding Jack," says his company will eventually offer the late actor's digital likeness for a range of roles in movies, TV and video games. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2020, photo, the Hollywood hills are seen behind a bust of actor James Dean at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles. Travis Cloyd, who is leading the revival of Dean for his appearance in "Finding Jack," says his company will eventually offer the late actor's digital likeness for a range of roles in movies, TV and video games. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel) The Associated Press
This Friday, Jan. 17, 2020, photo shows a bust of actor James Dean at the Griffith Observatory in the Griffith Park area of Los Angeles. Travis Cloyd, who is leading the revival of Dean for his appearance in "Finding Jack," says his company will eventually offer the late actor's digital likeness for a range of roles in movies, TV and video games. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel) The Associated Press
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