AI is still transforming the entertainment industry and more is to be done at this year’s Tribeca Festival. The show will be a defining moment in the evolution of AI-powered filmmaking with the premiere of a feature film, Dreams of Violets, entirely created by artificial intelligence.
The 75-minute movie depicts a fictionalized dramatization of the killings by the Iranian government of protestors during protests in January. The creators state that the project is based on the journalistic reports and eyewitnesses, as well as photographs. One of the major highlights of the film is that all the characters, visual elements, and scenes were produced with AI technologies.
Created by brothers Ash and Pooya Koosha, who left Iran in 2009, Dreams of Violets was produced through their company, Fountain 0. According to the reports, the production of this full-length feature film had a budget of just $2,000, which is much lower than the cost of a traditional film production.
According to Fountain 0, Dreams of Violets is the first feature film made with artificial intelligence to be accepted in the main program of a leading film festival. Other AI-produced films have been premiered in the industry circuit, but have typically been shown as part of bypass programs. This distinction puts the film in a class of its own when it comes to AI storytelling.
A variety of high-end generative AI tools were used heavily in the production process. The filmmakers reportedly utilized Google’s Nano Banana for creating images, Kling’s AI video generation tool, and Anthropic’s Claude language tool to refine and edit the video. The creators were able to create the entire movie without actors, film crews, movie sets or a huge post-production team.
The Tribeca acceptance of the film is coming as AI is becoming more and more integrated into the entertainment industry. Some of big media’s top firms are experimenting with AI-powered content production to see how they can cut back on production costs, speed up production time, and unlock possibilities for more creativity. As the technology evolves, streaming platforms and studios are testing out AI-generated animation, visual effects, script writing, and digital production pipelines.
Meanwhile, there has been some discussion about this among film industry experts. Issues of job replacement, creative ownership, copyright and the future of human artists are major issues that have been on the table all along. The creators of writing, acting, animation, and film have excitedly accepted and feared the swift adoption of generative AI tools.
The makers of Dreams of Violets recognise these concerns. They acknowledge that there is a fear of what AI might mean for the future of the creative industry, but explain that the film would not have been made without using AI. In their eyes, AI was a tool that extended their reach and enabled them to tell a complex, emotionally powerful and important story for an organization that was resource constrained.
One of the most impactful benefits of generative AI is its ability to democratize, which the project exemplifies. AI tools can offer independent creators opportunities that were once reserved for more highly funded studios, by drastically cutting down on production costs and technical hurdles. A little-known feature film made for thousands of dollars on a very small budget shows how new technology is changing the possibilities of today’s filmmaking.
Dreams of Violets is not simply a film screening; it is a celebration of creativity and inspiration, a journey through a film world defined by its vibrant colors and compelling performances. It is a testament to the transformative power of AI in the creative industry, disrupting the traditional production processes and creating new opportunities for storytellers globally.
AI-made movies have made their debut at prestigious festivals, painting a picture of a film that’s more of a breakthrough innovation than the groundbreaking start of a wider industry discussion.