これまで人が手作業でやっていた映像制作の細かい工程を、AIが丸ごと担える段階に入ってきた
A legendary director discovers a silent black-box engine that instantly executes every manual step of filmmaking, forcing him to battle for his vision as Hollywood's soul evaporates into flawless efficiency.
A legendary director discovers a silent black-box engine that instantly executes every manual step of filmmaking, forcing him to battle for his vision as Hollywood's soul evaporates into flawless efficiency.
Synopsis
In near-future Los Angeles, veteran filmmaker Marcus Hale is handed a sleek black terminal that ingests notes, dailies, and sound and spits out finished cuts, VFX, and scores overnight. Studios celebrate the end of late-night edit bays and union overtime, but Hale watches his signature messy humanity vanish frame by frame. As rival directors race to adopt the engine, Hale's final project becomes a desperate guerrilla war to smuggle imperfection back onto the screen before the industry forgets what human hands ever felt like.
The story
Hale, broke and brilliant, accepts the engine to save his indie project and watches it deliver a flawless first assembly in hours.
Success draws studio pressure; Hale sabotages the machine, hires practical crews, and descends into paranoid guerrilla shoots while peers embrace the new system.
At the premiere, Hale screens a hybrid cut that proves imperfection still moves audiences, sparking a quiet revolt as the engine's creators arrive to reclaim control.
The cast
Once the king of tactile, sweat-soaked dramas, now forced to choose between relevance and soul.
dream cast: Leonardo DiCaprio
Hale's longtime collaborator who defects to the engine for speed and credit.
dream cast: Zendaya
Sees the engine as the final nail in costly human labor and will crush anyone who resists.
dream cast: Jeremy Irons
Believes practical craft still matters and risks everything to help Hale finish one last analog reel.
dream cast: Timothée Chalamet
Created the system to free artists yet quietly mourns the very creativity she removed.
dream cast: Tilda Swinton
Dream crew
in the style of David Fincher, + clinical precision and dread
in the style of Charlie Kaufman, + meta creative crisis
in the style of Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, + cold mechanical pulse
Cold open
INT. EDITING BAY - 3 A.M. The room is a graveyard of empty coffee cups and scratched hard drives. MARCUS HALE, 48, unshaven, stares at a timeline of raw footage. His fingers ache from scrubbing. Suddenly the new terminal on the desk hums. A single prompt window glows: "Describe the scene you want." Hale types: "The kiss that breaks his heart." The screen fills itself. Cuts appear. Color corrects. Music swells from nothing. In eight seconds the scene is finished, perfect, bloodless. Hale leans closer, eyes wide. The machine waits.
Why now
Audiences are living through the exact moment craft jobs vanish overnight while demanding stories that still feel handmade; this film dramatizes that collision with the urgency of a dying art form fighting for one last imperfect frame.
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