In ‘Mercy,’ Chris Pratt is on trial with an AI judge
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Chris Pratt’s sci-fi thriller “Mercy” will aim to knock down the James Cameron juggernaut “Avatar: Fire and Ash” at the weekend box office. “Mercy” is aiming for $10 million to $13 million from 3,400 North American theaters over the weekend.
Mercy opens with a surprising Rotten Tomatoes score. Here’s how Chris Pratt’s latest sci-fi thriller stacks up against his last five films
Chris Pratt sparked backlash after calling AI-generated actress Tilly Norwood a slur during a red carpet interview.
"Break as much stuff as you can. It's always better."
Critics had no mercy on Chris Pratt’s latest film ahead of its theatrical release. Mercy, the new sci-fi thriller starring Pratt, faced harsh reviews and a low Rotten Tomatoes score as early reactions rolled in.
Chris Pratt told Variety Tuesday night at the New York premiere of “Mercy” that he doesn’t “feel like someone’s gonna replace me” with AI. He added that the panic surrounding synthetic AI performers like Tilly Norwood is “all bullshit.”