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How Canadian-made artificial intelligence is helping Hollywood write better scripts

The movie industry is a hit-or-miss, high-stakes business. But some Canadian tech entrepreneurs believe they have a way to improve the odds.

'We could put hundreds of millions of dollars back into the industry,' says one tech entrepreneur

The Kissing Booth is currently one of the most popular movies on Netflix. The story was originally written on the Wattpad story-sharing platform. (Komixx Entertainment/Netflix)

Jurassic World, Avengers: Infinity War, the latest in the Star Wars franchise, Solo:Movie theatres, as usual, arejam-packed with sequels this summer.

Hollywood is addicted to sequels for one reason: A proven concept can reduce the risk of failurein a business where hundreds of millions of dollars are at stake.

But some Canadian tech entrepreneurs believethe odds of making an original hit movie could be greatly improved and so could sequels with the help of artificial intelligence.

"Hollywood is using very primitive data analytics," saidJack Zhang, of Greenlight Essentials in Kitchener, Ont.

His company's software analyzesmovie plots, audience profiles and box office ticket sales to predict a film'sfuture success and help identify who will watch.

Aron Levitz, of the Toronto-based Wattpad Studios, is just as confident in his technology.

"We want to change the entire entertainment industry," he said."Whether scripts are in Turkish, or French, or Englishor whatever. We could put hundreds of millions of dollars back into the industry."

From an app to a blockbuster

Wattpad is a story-writing platform with 65 million users worldwide, whereanyone can self-publish books viathe website or the app.Users can also read and comment on stories written by others.

The company uses artificial intelligence to mine its readership data for insights into what's popular, which has helped turn some of its writersinto bestselling authors. Now WattpadStudios a two-year-old offshoot of the original brand is increasingly producing more movies and TV series.

Wattpad Studios head Aron Levitz listens as a staff member describes the plot of a story posted on the Toronto-based company's platform. (CBC)

One of the most-watched movies on Netflix right now, The Kissing Booth, started as a story written on Wattpad by 15-year-old Beth Reeklesof Wales. She landeda book deal with Random House, and the book spawned the movie.

Then last month, Wattpad announced Huluhad picked up the platform'ssupernatural thriller, Light as a Feather, in a straight-to-series deal,while Sony acquired the rights toa series of stories calledDeath is My BFF.

And Wattpad'sanalyticstrackthe whole chain of success.

"We can see this story is growing faster than any other story this week.This story got 15 comments before any other story got 15 comments," explainedLevitz, giving an example of how the system works. "This story has 6times more reading time than any other story in that genre."

The company's technology not only identifies popular stories with potential, Levitzsays, but also helps with the script-writing process.

"You can go and see what people think about page 50 [or]Chapter 6," he said. "We know nobody commented on Chapter 7, for example, so we can leave that out of the script."

'You need to compete with Netflix'

Greenlight Essentials takes a different approach to its high-tech script-writing, using about 40,000 "plot attributes" in its database to predict a film's box office success.

"So, really, anything you can think of, we can check," Zhangsaid of his company's software. "We can help figure out what combination would help a story create more demand among the audience."

Greenlight Essentials' founder Jack Zhang demonstrates how his company's software can predict the odds of financial success for movies. (CBC)

Zhang and his partner built an algorithm to determine how those various plot elements correlated with the financial success of hundreds of movies. A wedding, a beach, a father-daughter relationship, jealousy, drunkenness a wide range of different ideas and combinations can be put into the system to generate a prediction.

"Today you need to compete with video games, you need to compete with Netflix," saidZhang. "We find plot elements that can go up to a 80-90 per centsuccess rate when we look at the entire data set."

Don't bother asking Zhangexactly which elements will do that he says that's a "trade secret."

Sequels can flop

Zhang tested his software last year by making a trailer for a non-existent movie called Impossible Things. A film student was hired and given a budget of $30 and the trailer went on to attract 2.3 million views on YouTube.

That attracted interest from film financiers.

Zhang's experiment now has investors andGreenlightEssentialsis currently hiring a director before starting production on theAI-drivenhorror filmlater this year.

"We know exactly what people are looking for.And if we can do this for $30, why isn't everybody in the industry using this?"Zhangasks.

Algorithms and art?

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom opens in North America on June 21, but it already appears to be a winner. It earned $400 million US in overseas markets after 13 days. But success isn't guaranteed for every sequel: Solo will reportedly be the first in the Star Wars series to lose money.

Even films based on bestselling books can flop.

A Wrinkle in Time, based on Madeleine L'Engle's popular series of science fantasies, featured big names like Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon and Mindy Kaling. But Disney is estimated to lose $86 million US after the film bombed atthe box office.

The latest Star Wars movie, Solo, is expected to pull in more than $400 million US globally. But industry sources say Disney could still lose more than $80 million US, due to production and promotion costs. (Lucasfilm/Disney)

But can algorithms and software aloneactually create art? ForZhang,it's more about giving the film industrya leg up in a data-driven society.

"It's like a compass, but someone still needs to sail;someone needs to use their creative brain to pull the story together to write a good story on the software," he said.

Levitz also says he views the technology as a tool but one that will ultimately help audiencestired of sequels, as well as studios worried about risk.

"People want to see something new, they want to see something bigger and brighter," he said."But when you look at the way entertainment works, that's a big risk to take if you don't know what that story is going to be like when it hits the screen."

According to culture writer and film programmer JesseWente, movies will always need the human touch.

"These are new tools so we should look at thembut they are tools," he said."They are not the thing themselves. You need humans to wield them."