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As we look toward 2025 and beyond, the genre will evolve in three distinct ways.

The AI Revolution The next wave of documentaries will focus on the use of Generative AI in Hollywood. There will be films about voice actors losing jobs to synthesis, and screenwriters fighting algorithms. Expect a documentary called The Last Human Script to drop within 24 months.

Deep Fake Reconstructions We are entering an ethical minefield where documentary filmmakers can use AI to recreate lost performances or reconstruct events. If you make a documentary about the production of a film in 1975 but you can't find the footage, AI might generate it. This will force a new sub-genre: the "meta-documentary," which questions the reality of the documentary itself. -PornOnion.com- GirlsDoPorn.com SiteRip - 203 H...

The Unionization Movement With the strikes of 2023 still fresh, expect a flood of entertainment industry documentaries focusing on labor. The Hollywood Reporter and Variety have already optioned several projects about the deal-making behind the picket lines. The next big doc won't be about a movie; it will be about the contract negotiation for the people who made the movie.

Directed by Alex Winter, this HBO doc sits squarely in the exposé camp. It interviews former child stars (Evan Rachel Wood, Wil Wheaton) about the financial abuse, lack of education, and psychological damage of growing up on set. It is a necessary, heartbreaking watch. As we look toward 2025 and beyond, the

Not every entertainment industry documentary is virtuous. As the genre has exploded, ethical lines have blurred.

The Good: Preservation of Craft Documentaries like Jiro Dreams of Sushi (extended metaphor for cinema) or Side by Side (narrated by Keanu Reeves about the digital vs. film debate) preserve knowledge that would otherwise die with the retiring baby boomer generation of grips and best boys. Expect a documentary called The Last Human Script

The Bad: Glorified Marketing We are seeing the rise of the "flixclusive"—a documentary that is essentially a 90-minute commercial for a mediocre movie. These docs follow the "triumph of the human spirit" arc, but only for films that were never in real danger. They sanitize the struggle.

The Exploitative: Trauma Porn The most dangerous trend is the use of tragedy as content. Recent entertainment industry documentaries focusing on the death of stars or the abuse of extras have been accused of re-victimizing participants for the sake of a trailer clip. The line between "investigation" and "exploitation" is thinner than ever.

These are perhaps the most viral. They focus on a specific project that went horribly wrong. The audience watches a slow-motion car crash of egos, bad management, and hubris.