AI video is moving beyond clip slop
The Verge ·

This is Lowpass by Janko Roettgers , a newsletter on the ever-evolving intersection of tech and entertainment, syndicated just for The Verge subscribers once a week. …
This is Lowpass by Janko Roettgers , a newsletter on the ever-evolving intersection of tech and entertainment, syndicated just for The Verge subscribers once a week. Hollywood is cooked — or so a growing number of people on social media would like you to believe. Their purported proof: AI-generated clips of Daniel Craig riding a Vespa through an Italian city, Godzilla fighting King Kong , or The Avengers zooming through Manhattan . In reality, cheap slop like this won’t replace Hollywood blockbusters any time soon. However, a new generation of AI video solutions could upend how studios work. That’s because, until recently, AI companies basically tried to sell Hollywood on the same idea as those Twitter guys, with a slightly more palpable spin. The pitch, in a nutshell: AI video will allow everyone to make movies faster, cheaper, better — one prompt at a time. “The premise was: Substitute your camera for our video model,” says Luma AI CEO Amit Jain, whose company used to make that very same pitch to studios. But when it began partnering with the entertainment industry, it received a crash course in the way Hollywood actually works. “It’s not sufficient to just produce a clip,” Jain says now. “Because then what?” Clips generated by video models are typically 10 to 16 seconds. “That’s not a shot. That’s not a sequence. That’s not a scene,” Jain says. …
Original source: The Verge