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Scantly clad women in Mad Max: Fury Road stare out at something beyond the camera.
Game Reviews

Mad Max Director George Miller Makes Silly Pro-AI Comments

by admin October 10, 2025



Talented creators say the darndest things. The latest one to put his foot in his mouth is George Miller, director of the very good, fantastic, wonderful girl-power post-apocalyptic action film Mad Max: Fury Road, as well as many other great movies. In an interview the filmmaker gave shortly before he’s expected to lead a panel of judges at an upcoming Australian AI film festival (they generated a festival?), homeboy opened his mouth to proudly declare that “AI is here to stay.”

In his interview with The Guardian (h/t real person Megan Garside at GamesRadar), the famed filmmaker said: “AI is arguably the most dynamically evolving tool in making moving image. As a filmmaker, I’ve always been driven by the tools.” If he has any concerns over labor, plagiarism, and Shinra-esque data centers sucking the planet dry, they seem to be, at best, secondary.

But okay, let’s hold off on the pitchforks and torches for a second and hear the writer and producer of Babe out:

It’s the balance between human creativity and machine capability, that’s what the debate and the anxiety is about […] It strikes me how this debate echoes earlier moments in art history.

Miller went on to loosely deliver some pseudo-historical background, comparing AI’s rise to that of oil painting in the Renaissance and photography in the mid-19th century. “It will make screen storytelling available to anyone who has a calling to it,” Miller said, echoing the common pro-AI argument that it’s some kind of democratizing force. “[Kids not yet in their teens are] making films–or at least putting footage together. It’s way more egalitarian.”

Read More: Open AI Is Already Backtracking After Flood Of Video Game Slop Including Sam Altman Eating Pikachu

There is a degree of truth to some of these statements, but it’s about time we’ve started to have a more honest conversation about the history of human technological development and the intentions of those who own these means of production. These same tools that, yes, may make it easier to mush together some ideas to produce a concept of a movie or piece of art, are not only doing so at extreme cost to the planet (and people’s energy bills). They’re also making it harder for aspiring creatives to make a living doing this work, as those deploying AI are largely doing so to replace functioning, compensated labor in creative endeavors (and other forms of work). Throwing a sentence at a machine to have it spit out a neat-looking idea might lower the barrier to entry, but I’m not sure how denying people the ability to make a living with their art by replacing their ability to make money by producing that art is more egalitarian.

And as to kids “not yet in their teens” making films? Steven Spielberg made his first “movie” when he was but a pre-teen himself, a boy scout earning a badge for an 8mm film, and that was after a youth spent filming model trains to recreate a scene from The Greatest Show on Earth. And he certainly wasn’t the only filmmaker doing such things at a young age.

So remind me again what AI is going to offer aspiring filmmakers that history has shown will already act on their passions? And if AI eats away at job opportunities for young filmmakers in a world where everyone’s just typing prompts into slop machines, how is this more egalitarian?



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October 10, 2025 0 comments
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An image of a spoof ReCAPTCHA with text that reads "Select all the squares without a traffic light".
Product Reviews

This browser game transforms the reviled reCAPTCHA into a delightfully silly puzzler

by admin September 27, 2025



I was already beginning to suspect that I am, in fact, a robot, given my historic ineptitude when it comes to filling out reCAPTCHAS. It’s the ones where you need to click all the squares of a bicycle or whatever that catch me out. There’s always one tiny bit of wheel or handlebar that the system can never decide whether it counts as a bicycle or not, and I go from simply trying to access a web page to a full-blown existential crisis.

But my possibly synthetic brain was sent into overload by I’m Not a Robot, the latest browser-based caper by game developer and Internet mischief maker Neal Agarwal. I’m Not a Robot takes the Internet’s reviled not-really-a-security-check and stretches it to its most preposterous limits.

The first few levels of I’m Not a Robot are straight remakes of reCAPTCHAS (a re-reCAPTCHA, if you will). Click the button to declare your status as a sentient organism, type out some swirly letters, and select all the squares that contain a Stop sign (which, of course, I failed at). But things take a weirder turn once you’re asked to start selecting vegetables from a mixture of fruit, veg and, well, you’ll see.


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Before you know it, I’m Not a Robot is adding full-blown word searches into its reCAPTCHAS, having you play a game of Tic Tac Toe against an AI, and trying to tell the difference between chihuahuas and blueberry muffins. There are some great jokes hidden among them, particularly level 11, which folds in another classic game of identification into the mix.

(Image credit: Neal Agarwal)

I made it as far as level 17, which requires you to draw a circle with 94% accuracy. Turns out I am really bad at drawing circles with a mouse. The closest I got is 92.2%, aka “squashed satsuma”. In my defence, I’m Not a Robot only lets you move your mouse so slowly, which makes drawing the circle more challenging. Even so, I am now ashamed of being bad at something I didn’t know it was possible to be bad at, which is what videogames are all about!

I’m Not a Robot is hardly Agarwal’s first game that stretches a humdrum part of the Internet to absurd extremes. Mollie Taylor was driven to distraction by The Password Game a couple of years back, which requires players to come up with passwords according to increasingly demanding parameters. More recently, Jonathan Bolding yielded his brain to a tsunami of Internet nonsense in the perfectly pointless Stimulation Clicker.

While Agarwal’s reCAPTCHAs are as baffling and annoying as the real thing, it’s worth noting that they’re considerably more benign. A study conducted in 2023 revealed that reCAPTCHA’s are nothing more than ‘a tracking cookie masquerading as a security service’ which has generated nearly $1 trillion in revenue for Google. And all it cost me was my grasp on reality. Isn’t the Internet fun?

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.



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September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Chris Tilly
Esports

Coyotes review: Justin Long stars in a very silly movie about when animals attack

by admin September 21, 2025



Coyotes stars Justin Long and Kate Bosworth as a couple doing battle with a pack of rabid dogs, in a comedy-horror that leans into laughs rather than scares.

Coyotes concerns a very real problem facing the people of Los Angeles, and over the opening credits, that phenomenon is explained via news reports.

Thanks to a spate of wildfires, coyotes have been pushed deeper and deeper into LA neighborhoods, and these opportunistic predators are now doing whatever it takes to survive.

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That’s the jumping off point for director Colin Minihan’s new horror movie, which addresses a serious subject, in the silliest way imaginable.

What is Coyotes about?

Aura Entertainment

Following a prologue that sees a Paris Hilton type mauled by one of the title characters, the story proper introduces a family living in the Hollywood Hills – Scott and Liv (played by real-life couple Justin Long and Kate Bosworth) and their teenage daughter Chloe (Mila Harris).

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They seem happy, though have an apparent problem with rats in their beautiful home, which is revealed to them by an eccentric exterminator called Devon (Keir O’Donnell, channelling John Goodman in the similarly themed Arachnaphobia).

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While they’re waiting for Devon to wipe the rodents out as a way of sending a message to all other vermin in the area, a storm arrives on their doorstep, knocking down trees, and killing their power. 

Which is when the coyotes appear, seeming vaguely threatening at first, before becoming more direct by growling, bearing their teeth, and then going on the attack. 

“I think it wanted to eat you” a confused Liv tells Scott during a particularly concerning coyote interaction, and as more of the rabid beasts congregate on their lawn, then try to get into their house, it becomes apparent that the family is facing a fight for their lives.

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Wild animals vs wild characters

That story is told with its tongue firmly in cheek, as potential victims are painted in the broadest of brush-strokes, and oftentimes asking for the doggie assault that’s coming their way.

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From the coked up neighbor and drunk Irishman in a shell-suit to the sex worker obsessed with conspiracy theories, Coyotes is filled with colorful characters that aren’t to be taken seriously.

Meaning each ultra-violent death is played for laughs, from a tragic barbecue demise to a shocking ribcage cameo, they’re memorable deaths, but the type that will inspire more laughs than scares.

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That said, there are moments of levity in the movie, thanks to Liv’s issues with Scott’s workaholic tendencies. Indeed, his comic book career and obsession inspires some interesting visuals, character introductions, and jokes, but also threatens to tear his family apart.

Though every time Coyotes flirts with getting serious on that front, the script by Ted Daggerhart, Daniel Meersand, and Nick Simon undercuts the tension, most notably in a hilarious scene where Scott pours his heart out to a wife who can’t hear him.

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Is Coyotes good?

Aura Entertainment

Coyotes is a fun film that delivers on the promise of wild dogs doing battle with dumb humans, while Justin Long – as ever – is a likeable lead, who has you rooting for his character, in spite of some truly terrible decisions.

But there’s a fatal flaw in many of those scenes, as the coyotes rarely look real. Indeed, there are times when the movie feels like live-action merged with bad animation, and all that computer-generated imagery frequently takes you out of the movie.

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If audiences can put up with that issue however, the horror and comedy elements complement each other nicely, while Coyotes deserves bonus points for not demonising the coyotes themselves, thanks to a surprising sting in the tale/tail…

Coyotes score: 3/5

If you can ignore the bad CGI, and like a broad comedy about even broader characters, Coyotes is a decent entry in the ‘when animals attack’ genre, that manages to sneak in an important environmental message.

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Coyotes was reviewed at Fantastic Fest, while the film hits theaters on September 29, 2025. While for more scary stuff, check out our list of the best horror movies ever.

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September 21, 2025 0 comments
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