
Tilly Norwood, the AI ‘Actress’ Who Horrified Hollywood, Is Set to Star in Her First Film
Particle6’s virtual performer, condemned by SAG-AFTRA and actors like Emily Blunt, will lead a comedy-drama about an AI developing human desires.
When a photograph of Tilly Norwood was placed in front of Emily Blunt last year, the actress recoiled. “Good Lord, we’re screwed,” she said, her voice caught between disbelief and dread. “That is really, really scary.” The image showed a young woman with dark hair and an unremarkable face — unremarkable except for the fact that she did not exist. Norwood, a digital creation assembled from AI tools and trained on the work of countless human performers, had first surfaced in a promotional video in July 2025, a ghost in the machine with the studied poise of a twenty-something ingénue.
Now that ghost is to be given a feature-length vehicle. The London-based studio Particle6 announced on Monday that Norwood will star in “Misaligned,” a comedy-drama set in a surreal digital realm called the Tillyverse. The plot follows an AI being with no body, no childhood and no lived experience of her own — only access to everyone else’s — who is seduced by a rogue bot from the dark web into abandoning her guardrails. As she develops desires, impulses and ambitions, she becomes more terrifyingly human, more famous, and eventually begins to feel shame that her very existence has been built on the whole of humanity. Particle6’s founder, Eline van der Velden, described the project as “funny, chaotic and self-aware — very Tilly,” adding that beneath the surface it would probe “identity, performance, and our very human fears around AI.”
The announcement lands in an industry still raw from the strikes that forced studios to negotiate AI protections with writers and actors. SAG-AFTRA, the American actors’ union, had already issued a blunt condemnation of Norwood in September, calling her “not an actor” but “a character generated by a computer program that was trained on the work of countless professional performers — without permission or compensation.” The union warned that such synthetics were “jeopardizing performer livelihoods and devaluing human artistry.” In Hollywood, the backlash was swift and personal: Melissa Barrera urged actors to drop any agent who represented the creation, while Whoopi Goldberg and others voiced alarm. Van der Velden, a Dutch comedian and writer, has consistently pushed back, insisting that Norwood is “not a replacement for a human being, but a creative work — a piece of art,” and likening her to animation or puppetry.
The film’s production model is itself a response to the criticism. Particle6 says “Misaligned” will be a hybrid production, pairing traditional directors, writers and editors with AI specialists, and embedding training and mentorship into the process. “AI can support premium narrative filmmaking, but only with substantial amounts of human craft, skill, judgement and time,” van der Velden said. “That’s not a limitation of the technology. That’s the point.” The studio claims to have already trained more than thirty television and film professionals in AI workflows, and it frames the feature as a chance for traditional filmmakers to “upskill and transition to a world where AI will play an increasingly important part.”
What lingers is the image of a character who, by the logic of her own story, is beginning to understand the moral weight of her origins. In the synopsis, Tilly develops shame that her being has been constructed from the whole of humanity — a plot point that reads like an uncanny mirror held up to the very controversy that surrounds her. The film is in early development, with no release date, but van der Velden says there is “strong early interest” from distributors. For now, the Tillyverse remains a cloud-bound fiction, a place where an AI without a body navigates a coming-of-age story built on the data of everyone else’s lives.
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | −0.70 | critical |
|---|---|---|
| Iranian & allied press | −0.30 | critical |
| Latin American press | 0.00 | neutral |
Tilly Norwood is a dangerous symbol of AI encroachment, threatening the livelihoods of human actors and devaluing artistic expression.
By foregrounding the actors' union's condemnation and framing the AI as 'controversial', the bloc creates a moral panic that delegitimizes the AI actor.
The atlantica bloc omits the film's hybrid production model that involves human directors and writers, as well as the thematic exploration of identity and technology, which could present a more nuanced view.
Tilly Norwood is an intriguing digital product but lacks human authenticity, an interesting experiment but not a real actress.
By highlighting the character's lack of a real body and lived experience, the bloc frames the AI as a mere simulation, undermining its claim to be an actor.
The Iranian bloc omits the widespread backlash from Hollywood actors and unions, as well as the hybrid nature of the film's production, presenting the story as a neutral technological development.
Tilly Norwood is an interesting novelty in the film landscape, an experiment exploring the boundaries between reality and fiction.
By focusing on the film's plot and the digital universe, the bloc normalizes the AI actress as a creative tool rather than a threat, avoiding the moral panic.
The Latin American bloc omits the backlash from Hollywood unions and the controversy surrounding the AI actor, presenting the story as a simple announcement.
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