Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Anthony Bourdain’s Widow: She “Certainly Did Not” Say Husband Would Be “Cool” with Filmmaker’s Use of Artificial Voice Clips in New Doc

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Here’s the story.

There’s a new documentary out today from Focus Features about CNN celebrity travel and food impresario Anthony Bourdain. Bourdain committed suicide in June 2018 after his actress/celebrity girlfriend, Asia Argento, flaunted another romantic relationship in the European tabloids.

(Here are some links to catch you up.)

The doc is from Oscar winner Morgan Neville, who has done something in the film never done before and hotly criticized today by filmmakers who are just finding out about. He used Artificial Intelligence to piece together Bourdain’s voice. He’s got Bourdain reading aloud in the film things he never said and there are no recordings of.

This is considered blasphemy among real documentary filmmakers. It’s also questionably unethical. On top of that, Neville said in a New Yorker interview: ““I checked…with his widow and his literary executor, just to make sure people were cool with that,” Neville said. “And they were like, Tony would have been cool with that. I wasn’t putting words into his mouth. I was just trying to make them come alive.”

His widow, Ottavia Bourdain, responded to that assertion swiftly on Twitter: “I certainly was NOT the one who said Tony would have been cool with that.”

Neville is a serious filmmaker. I can’t for the life of me understand how such an idea was invented in the first place. It would have been one thing to have an actor read Bourdain’s thoughts or emails, but to cobble together his voice from shards and teach it to speak like the subject– this is an outrageous mistake in judgement.

He tells the New Yorker: “I created an AI model of his voice,” Neville says. He goes on to say, “If you watch the film, other than that line you mentioned, you probably don’t know what the other lines are that were spoken by the AI, and you’re not going to know.”

In a GQ interview he explained:  “We fed more than ten hours of Tony’s voice into an AI model. The bigger the quantity, the better the result. We worked with four companies before settling on the best. We also had to figure out the best tone of Tony’s voice: His speaking voice versus his “narrator” voice, which itself changed dramatically of over the years. The narrator voice got very performative and sing-songy in the “No Reservation” years. I checked, you know, with his widow and his literary executor, just to make sure people were cool with that. And they were like, Tony would have been cool with that. I wasn’t putting words into his mouth. I was just trying to make them come alive.”

What???? And no one stopped him to say, Are you insane? Something has gone way wrong here in the thought process that led to this episode.

 

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Roger Friedman
Roger Friedman
Roger Friedman is the founder and editor-in-chief of Showbiz411. He wrote the FOX411 column on FoxNews.com from 1999 to 2009, where he covered Michael Jackson, and previously wrote the "Intelligencer" column at New York magazine in the mid-1990s, where he covered the O.J. Simpson trial. He also edited Fame magazine. His bylines have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, the New York Daily News, the New York Post, Vogue, Details, and the Miami Herald. He is a voting member of the Critics Choice Awards (Film and Television branches), and his movie reviews are tracked by Rotten Tomatoes. With D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus, he co-produced the 2002 documentary "Only the Strong Survive," which screened at Directors' Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival.

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