Netflix’s recently released Japanese short animation “The Dog & The Boy” is being criticized online for its AI-generated art.
The three-minute sci-fi short film released on Tuesday follows the story of a young boy whose robot dog waits for him as he goes off to war.
The anime was produced by Netflix Anime Creators Base in collaboration with Rinna Inc., an AI artwork company, and WIT Studio, the production company behind the first three seasons of “Attack on Titan.”
According to the streaming platform, its reason for using AI-generated art was due to the anime industry’s “labor shortage.”
“As an experimental effort to help the anime industry, which has a labor shortage, we used image generation technology for the background images of all three-minute video cuts!” Netflix Japan wrote.
Netflix アニメ・クリエイターズ・ベース×技術開発のrinna株式会社×WIT STUDIOによる共同プロジェクトアニメ『犬と少年』のショートムービー。
人手不足のアニメ業界を補助する実験的な取り組みとして、3分間の映像全カットの背景画に画像生成技術を活用! pic.twitter.com/GYuWONSqlJ
— Netflix Japan | ネットフリックス (@NetflixJP) January 31, 2023
AI-generated backdrops of cityscapes and mountain ranges can be seen throughout “The Dog & The Boy.”
The credits for the short shows step-by-step how a hand-drawn layout of a snowy road is morphed by AI. Netflix simply credits the background designer as “AI (+ Human),” without naming the human artist.
The announcement on Twitter instantly drew criticism from social media users, who claimed that Netflix was using AI-generated art to avoid hiring and paying human artists.
Twitter users also contended that there is no labor shortage, but rather a shortage of companies willing to pay a decent living wage for anime talent.
“Netflix Anime ‘Dog and Boy’ was created with AI because of ‘labor shortage,’ not…
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