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Steven Soderbergh Explains Why AI ‘Turned Out to Be Perfect’ for John Lennon ‘Last Interview’ Doc

Rolling Stone Jon Blistein 1 переглядів 4 хв читання

By Jon Blistein

Jon Blistein

Contact Jon Blistein by Email View all posts by Jon Blistein May 5, 2026
John Lennon and Yoko Ono photographed on November 2, 1980 - the first time in five years that Lennon had been photographed professionally and the last comprehensive photo shoot of his life. (Photo by Jack Mitchell/Getty Images)
John Lennon and Yoko Ono photographed in November 1980. Jack Mitchell/Getty Images

Filmmaker Stephen Soderbergh defended and explained his decision to use some generative artificial intelligence in his upcoming documentary centered around John Lennon’s final interview.

Announced last year, John Lennon: The Last Interview features the audio from an interview Lennon and Yoko Ono gave to RKO Radio on Dec. 8, 1980, just hours before Lennon was murdered. Soderbergh paired much of the audio with archival material, offered up with the support of Lennon’s estate. But during the moments when Lennon and Ono started to get philosophical and abstract, Soderbergh decided a different kind of visual accompaniment was needed.

While it was previously disclosed that Soderbergh had decided to use AI for these sections, in a new interview with Deadline, he offered an in-depth explanation of his use of AI and the reasons behind it. He also revealed that the AI portions of the film were created in partnership with Meta, who provided both tech tools and financial backing.

As Soderbergh explained, the more abstract portions of the interview that he paired with AI comprise “about 10 percent of the entire film.” He said he was looking for “imagery that enhances” what Lennon and Ono are saying, “but is metaphorical,” referring to the concoction as “thematic surrealism.”

The director acknowledged that AI is “a very emotional subject,” saying later that he thought a lot of that emotion was “legitimate,” especially when it comes to AI’s use in non-creative contexts and how it’s “affecting our lives.” But he insisted he wasn’t using AI in his doc to “fool” or “manipulate” viewers, “to create an image that you want them to think is real.” Rather, he said they were using it “essentially in the way that you would use VFX or CGI or any sort of non-photographic technology.” 

Soderbergh detailed two sequences from the film that exemplified why AI “turned out to be perfect for” the film. In one, he said, “a series of one-year-old babies dressed in Sixties outfits are bawling their eyes out; it’s a way of comically illustrating something that John is talking about. You can’t shoot that. And even if you did somehow — you came up with some justification for shooting a bunch of one-year-old babies dressed in tie-dye outfits, crying their eyes out — even if you did it, if people knew it was real, it wouldn’t be funny. And we were trying to be funny here.”

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The other sequence features “cavemen acting out some of the things that John is discussing when it comes to male behavior. Going out and shooting those images of men dressed up and made up as cavemen doing the things that are in this sequence: not as funny. It’s funnier if you know it’s not real.”

Soderbergh pushed back against what he figured were the worst conclusions people jumped to when news of his use of AI broke: “He’s going to try to bring John Lennon back to life.” The director countered: “And all I can say is, have we met? Do I look like somebody that would do that? So it’s a little hard to talk about also because I feel once you’ve seen the movie, you go, ‘Oh, of course.’”

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