Val Kilmer resurrected via AI in controversial new movie trailer | Films | Entertainment
Last month, the first look at an AI Val Kilmer performance in an upcoming Western split the internet.
Now the first trailer has launched today at CinemaCon, at a special event attended by the Daily Express in Las Vegas.
During a Q&A, the filmmakers behind As Deep As The Grave, which is yet to obtain a distributor, shared how the late Batman star was signed on to play Father Fintan, a Catholic priest and Native American spiritualist, prior to his death from throat cancer last year.
Ahead of the shoot, the casting director was simply told, āHe canāt do it and heās really upsetā.
Little did they know how ill Val was and the film was shut down just two days later. But following his death, the Hollywood starās family endorsed the idea of recreating him via AI and provided extensive archival material for his performance. It turns out Val ādocumented everything.ā
If you watch the trailer above, itās really quite uncanny how Kilmer has been resurrected across what will be three ages and for a total of 1 hour and 17 minutes of the filmās runtime. Speaking with Coerte and John Voorheers, the brothers behind the film, we asked how the actors, like Tom Felton (who plays real-life Indiana Jones Earl Morris), acted opposite a Kilmer who wasnāt there. Was there a tennis ball like Marvelās Rocket Raccoon?
Coerte, who wrote and directed the picture, told us exclusively: āIf we were shooting, yes, when youāre in physical production. But weāre in a post-production process.ā John, the producer, clarified: āVal is an AI generated character, everything beyond that is movie editing techniques to blend him into the story. What we didnāt want was him to be a cameo. We didnāt want him to just drop in, thatās not very faithful to what the story originally was. So heās actually be woven into the story. Things weāve already shot, we blend him into those scenes using this technology. When you see it, youāll see what we mean because there are scenes where heās interacting with people we shot. By the way, this happens all the time with movies when you re-edit things in different contexts, so this is just another iteration of that.ā
Although technologically impressive (they spoke of replacing his 1990s haircut with a 1920s do in one scene), just how ethical is it to resurrect a dead star and recreate them with AI in a movie theyāre āactingā in?
During the Q&A, John shared that Val had given his family their blessing (āIt was an enthusiastic yesā from them) and that they wanted to go about it as ethnically as possible, following the SAG guidelines of the three Cs: Consent, compensation and collaboration. The producer shared how they went through a painstaking process of drafting and redrafting the AI Val, admitting āit was a bold risk to takeā.
Asked by the moderator if this was truly a Val Kilmer performance, Coerte replied diplomatically: āVal Kilmer influenced this performanceā. Another one of the filmās producers in the audience told us, regardless of how controversial the AI recreation is, weād all better get used to it, as this groundbreaking new filmmaking is coming whether we like it or not.
As Deep As the Grave is set to be released later in 2026.


