logo
‘You can make really good stuff – fast': new AI tools a gamechanger for film-makers

‘You can make really good stuff – fast': new AI tools a gamechanger for film-makers

The Guardian20-07-2025
A US stealth bomber flies across a darkening sky towards Iran. Meanwhile, in Tehran a solitary woman feeds stray cats amid rubble from recent Israeli airstrikes.
To the uninitiated viewer, this could be a cinematic retelling of a geopolitical crisis that unfolded barely weeks ago – hastily shot on location, somewhere in the Middle East.
However, despite its polished production look, it wasn't shot anywhere, there is no location, and the woman feeding stray cats is no actor – she doesn't exist.
The engrossing footage is the 'rough cut' of a 12-minute short film about last month's US attack on Iranian nuclear sites, made by the directors Samir Mallal and Bouha Kazmi. It is also made entirely by artificial intelligence.
The clip is based on a detail the film-makers read in news coverage of the US bombings – a woman who walked the empty streets of Tehran feeding stray cats. Armed with the information, they have been able to make a sequence that looks as if it could have been created by a Hollywood director.
The impressive speed and, for some, worrying ease with which films of this kind can be made has not been lost on broadcasting experts.
Last week Richard Osman, the TV producer and bestselling author, said that an era of entertainment industry history had ended and a new one had begun – all because Google has released a new AI video making tool used by Mallal and others.
'So I saw this thing and I thought, 'well, OK that's the end of one part of entertainment history and the beginning of another',' he said on The Rest is Entertainment podcast.
Osman added: 'TikTok, ads, trailers – anything like that – I will say will be majority AI-assisted by 2027.'
For Mallal, a award-winning London-based documentary maker who has made adverts for Samsung and Coca-Cola, AI has provided him with a new format – 'cinematic news'.
The Tehran film, called Midnight Drop, is a follow-up to Spiders in the Sky, a recreation of a Ukrainian drone attack on Russian bombers in June.
Within two weeks, Mallal, who directed Spiders in the Sky on his own, was able to make a film about the Ukraine attack that would have cost millions – and would have taken at least two years including development – to make pre-AI.
'Using AI, it should be possible to make things that we've never seen before,' he said. 'We've never seen a cinematic news piece before turned around in two weeks. We've never seen a thriller based on the news made in two weeks.'
Spiders in the Sky was largely made with Veo3, an AI video generation model developed by Google, and other AI tools. The voiceover, script and music were not created by AI, although ChatGPT helped Mallal edit a lengthy interview with a drone operator that formed the film's narrative spine.
Google's film-making tool, Flow, is powered by Veo3. It also creates speech, sound effects and background noise. Since its release in May, the impact of the tool on YouTube – also owned by Google – and social media in general has been marked. As Marina Hyde, Osman's podcast partner, said last week: 'The proliferation is extraordinary.'
Quite a lot of it is 'slop' – the term for AI-generated nonsense – although the Olympic diving dogs have a compelling quality.
Mallal and Kazmi aim to complete the film, which will intercut the Iranian's story with the stealth bomber mission and will be six times the length of Spider's two minutes, in August. It is being made by a mix of models including Veo3, OpenAI's Sora and Midjourney.
'I'm trying to prove a point,' says Mallal. 'Which is that you can make really good stuff at a high level – but fast, at the speed of culture. Hollywood, especially, moves incredibly slowly.'
Sign up to TechScape
A weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our lives
after newsletter promotion
He adds: 'The creative process is all about making bad stuff to get to the good stuff. We have the best bad ideas faster. But the process is accelerated with AI.'
Mallal and Kazmi also recently made Atlas, Interrupted, a short film about the 3I/Atlas comet, another recent news event, that has appeared on the BBC.
David Jones, the chief executive of Brandtech Group, an advertising startup using generative AI – the term for tools such as chatbots and video generators – to create marketing campaigns, says the advertising world is about to undergo a revolution due to models such as Veo3.
'Today, less than 1% of all brand content is created using gen AI. It will be 100% that is fully or partly created using gen AI,' he says.
Netflix also revealed last week that it used AI in one of its TV shows for the first time.
However, in the background of this latest surge in AI-spurred creativity lies the issue of copyright. In the UK, the creative industries are furious about government proposals to let models be trained on copyright-protected work without seeking the owner's permission – unless the owner opts out of the process.
Mallal says he wants to see a 'broadly accessible and easy-to-use programme where artists are compensated for their work'.
Beeban Kidron, a cross-bench peer and leading campaigner against the government proposals, says AI film-making tools are 'fantastic' but 'at what point are they going to realise that these tools are literally built on the work of creators?' She adds: 'Creators need equity in the new system or we lose something precious.'
YouTube says its terms and conditions allow Google to use creators' work for making AI models – and denies that all of YouTube's inventory has been used to train its models.
Mallal calls his use of AI to make films 'prompt craft', a phrase that uses the term for giving instructions to AI systems. When making the Ukraine film, he says he was amazed at how quickly a camera angle or lighting tone could be adjusted with a few taps on a keyboard.
'I'm deep into AI. I've learned how to prompt engineer. I've learned how to translate my skills as a director into prompting. But I've never produced anything creative from that. Then Veo3 comes out, and I said, 'OK, finally, we're here.''
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Spotify's price is going up again, here are 6 cheaper music streaming services
Spotify's price is going up again, here are 6 cheaper music streaming services

The Independent

time13 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Spotify's price is going up again, here are 6 cheaper music streaming services

Spotify is one of the most expensive music streaming services in the world, and it's about to get even pricier. On 4 August, Spotify announced it would be increasing prices in a number of regions, though it didn't elaborate on which countries would be affected. In a blog post, Spotify said individual premium subscriptions would be going up from €10.99 per month to €11.99 per month in September, including Europe, South Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America and the Pacific. If the price hike comes to the UK, Spotify subscribers could be asked to pay £12.99 per month. The streamer already increased the price of an individual subscription by £1 last year to £11.99, and raised the price of its other plans, like the family and duo subscription, by £2 per month, leaving many disgruntled users looking for cheaper alternatives to the platform. According to Reuters, despite increasing its user base and subscriber numbers, Spotify is having to pay more tax on employee salaries, which is the reason for the price hike. If you've started looking at switching away from the music platform and want to cancel your Spotify Premium membership, we've rounded up the best, cheaper Spotify alternatives to subscribe to right now. Amazon Music Unlimited is the retail giant's premium music streaming service tier. With a subscription, you can listen to more than 100 million songs ad-free, offline and with unlimited skips. You also get access to Amazon Music's HD CD-quality tracks, lossless hi-res tracks and spatial audio. At the start of the year, Amazon hiked the price of its Amazon Music Unlimited streaming service, increasing the individual membership fee to £11.99, the same price as Spotify. But – and this is a big but – its individual subscription is £1 cheaper than Spotify's if you're subscribed to Amazon Prime (£10.99, and you get access to lossless audio. If you're a Prime member and don't subscribe to Amazon Music Unlimited, you get free access to all of Amazon Music's catalogue already, but you can only listen in shuffle mode and usually have to pick songs from Amazon's all-access music playlists. If you own a Fire TV stick or an Amazon Echo smart speaker, there is also a single-device subscription available for £5.99 a month. Individual plan: £10.99 per month Student plan: £5.49 per month Family plan: £16.99 per month (up to five additional members) Free trial: A one-month free trial is offered with a paid subscription Strip out all the cat videos, low-res vlogs and memes but keep all the songs, albums, remixes, live performances and music videos, then throw in some recommended playlists. That's YouTube Music Premium in a nutshell. If you subscribe to the service, you'll be able to play music in the background whenever your phone's screen is locked or you're using a different app. It also removes the ads and enables offline play. For an extra £2 per month (£1 more than Spotify Premium) you can get full YouTube Premium, which removes ads from all YouTube videos, watch using picture-in-picture mode, and listen to YouTube videos with your screen switched off. A subscription to YouTube Music Premium is cheaper than all of Spotify's plans, with the individual plan costing £1 less, and the family plan costing £3 less. Individual plan: £10.99 per month Student plan: £5.49 per month Family plan: £16.99 per month (up to six members) Free trial: A one-month free trial for new subscribers DJ extension: £9 extra on Individual and Student plans, for mixing music with stem separation Tidal sets itself apart as a streaming service with high-fidelity sound. The brainchild of the rapper Jay-Z, it bills itself as offering lossless music that sounds the way the artists intended it, and it pays artists one of the best fees per play. The streaming service features more than 110 million tracks, exclusive releases, interviews and music videos. Tidal simplified its pricing structure in April 2024, combining its two former tiers (HiFi and HiFi Plus) into a single subscription. All users pay £10.99 per month and get access to the platform's full suite of premium features, including high-fidelity FLAC audio, Master Quality Authenticated (MQA) tracks, and immersive formats like Dolby Atmos and Sony 360 Reality Audio, making it one of the best value music streaming services around. Last year, Tidal launched the DJ Extension, which lets users mix songs and separate stems, giving them access to enhanced BPM metadata within apps like rekordbox, Serato and DJ Pro. It costs an additional £9 on top of a regular Tidal subscription. Individual plan: £10.99 per month Student plan: £5.99 per month (with the first six months free) and a free subscription to Apple TV+ Family plan: £16.99 per month (up to six members) Free trial: A one-month free trial is available for new members, and six months free with the purchase of an eligible device Apple Music is, unsurprisingly, Apple's ad-free music streaming service. It has more than 100 million tracks, over 30,000 curated playlists, live radio and original shows, concerts and exclusives. Its entire catalogue can be listened to in lossless hi-res audio, and spatial audio can be enabled on its tracks. You can download up to 100,000 songs to play offline, and you also get access to Apple Music Classical – the new classical-only service – as well as Apple Music Sing, which is Apple's karaoke mode. In October 2022, Apple increased the price of its Apple Music subscription. An individual membership currently costs £1 less than a Spotify individual membership, while the family tier is £3 cheaper. It's good to note that you do get lossless hi-res audio and spatial audio with Apple Music, and students get a subscription to Apple TV+ for free. There is, of course, the Apple One subscription, which gives you up to six Apple subscriptions for one lower monthly price, including up to 2TB of iCloud+ storage and access to Apple Music. Individual plan: £11.99 per month (£8.99 per month if paid annually) Student plan: £5.99 per month Duo plan: £15.99 per month (£14.58 per month paid annually) Family plan: £19.99 per month (£18.25 per month paid annually), up to five additional members Free trial: A one-month free trial for new users In an alternate reality, Deezer could have been the Spotify of today, having launched a year before the Swedish company and featuring the same rich library of music and features. Deezer is free if you're prepared to put up with the ads, but the good stuff is all in its premium tier. It has more than 90 million tracks, and Deezer Premium gets rid of the ads, adds offline listening and high-fidelity FLAC audio, which Spotify lacks. As well as music, there are podcasts and radio stations, personalised recommendations and a Shazam-style SongCatcher feature to help identify tracks around you. Deezer also works on smartwatches, smart speakers and car audio systems. While Deezer is as expensive as Spotify, if you pay for a full-year subscription, you'll get a 25 per cent discount, making it significantly cheaper than Spotify. SoundCloud Go plan: £5.99 per month SoundCloud Go+ plan: £10.99 per month Student plan: Go+ for £5.49 per month Free trial: 7-day trial with Go, 30-day trial with Go+ Underground music fans will be very familiar with the music distribution platform SoundCloud. Launched in 2007, SoundCloud is a music streaming service for music producers, independent up-and-coming artists, podcast producers and their listeners, hoping to discover new music. It also has a giant library of 180 million tracks, mostly uploaded directly by artists. There are two premium SoundCloud tiers. SoundCloud Go costs £5.99 per month – it gets rid of all the ads and you get unlimited offline downloads. However, Go+ costs £10.99 per month and gets you access to SoundCloud's entire library, as well as higher-quality audio. SoundCloud Go+ is still significantly cheaper than Spotify. While it doesn't have a family plan, there is a student plan for £5.49 per month. The Go+ plan also lets you listen on up to three devices at once.

Lucra Taps Autosana to Turbocharge QA with AI
Lucra Taps Autosana to Turbocharge QA with AI

Reuters

time44 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Lucra Taps Autosana to Turbocharge QA with AI

NEW YORK, NY, August 5, 2025 (EZ Newswire) -- Lucra, opens new tab, the leading provider of social gamification technology, today announced a strategic partnership with Autosana, opens new tab, a platform for AI-powered UI testing, as part of Lucra's broader efforts to integrate AI thoughtfully and selectively across its product development pipeline. Initial results from the pilot are already driving meaningful impact: Lucra has significantly reduced the manual workload required to validate product releases—freeing up engineering and quality assurance resources while increasing overall test coverage. 'With over 15 years in mobile development, I've seen firsthand how painful and time-consuming UI testing can be—especially for end-to-end flows,' said Michael Schmidt, CTO of Lucra. 'Autosana is a game changer. It's the first solution I've used that makes robust, automated UI testing truly accessible. We were able to automate the majority of our regression suite in a matter of hours instead of weeks or months, and the self-healing capabilities mean we spend far less time maintaining brittle tests. It's saved our team countless hours already and fundamentally changed how we approach QA.' Lucra's current regression suite includes over 250 manual test steps, requiring 1–2 hours of effort for each full run. In under 15 hours of work, the team has already automated approximately 70% of these steps using natural language instructions. Compared to the months of setup required for traditional UI test scripting—work that previously consumed nearly a full-time engineer—the return on investment has been immediate. Autosana's self-healing architecture has eliminated the brittleness of legacy UI testing frameworks. As Lucra continues to expand test coverage, the QA team is now able to focus more on feature validation and bug identification—while overnight test cycles handle regression automatically. This partnership is part of Lucra's deliberate approach to AI—investing in purpose-built tools that deliver real operational value while continuing to build proprietary systems internally. By combining thoughtful external integrations with in-house innovation, Lucra remains committed to delivering best-in-class technology to its partners and users. About Lucra Lucra is the leading provider of social competition services, offering hospitality, entertainment, and media brands the ability to natively integrate competitive gameplay into their digital platforms. Clients like Five Iron Golf, Puttshack, Backyard Sports, Dave & Buster's, TouchTunes, and more use Lucra's white-label technology to power tournaments and challenges, build loyalty, and drive new revenue. Learn more at opens new tab. About Autosana Autosana is a cloud-based tool for mobile teams to run natural language end-to-end tests. Eradicates the need to write/maintain E2E tests and manual testing. Seamlessly integrates into your CI and GitHub, supports both iOS and Android, and is framework-agnostic (React Native, Flutter, Swift, etc). No code, no setup, just catching bugs before users do. Visit opens new tab. Media Contact Michael Maddingmichael@ ### SOURCE: Lucra Copyright 2025 EZ Newswire See release on EZ Newswire

Senators ask US to probe data security issues with DeepSeek
Senators ask US to probe data security issues with DeepSeek

Reuters

time44 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Senators ask US to probe data security issues with DeepSeek

Aug 5 (Reuters) - A group of seven Republican U.S. senators on Tuesday asked the Commerce Department to evaluate potential data security vulnerabilities posed by Chinese open-source AI models like DeepSeek. The senators including Jon Husted, Ted Budd and John Cornyn want the Commerce Department to detail any threats from data collected by applications being fed back to Chinese servers or whether the AI models are feeding American personal or enterprise data to China's military or to companies with Chinese military ties. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in January it appeared DeepSeek had misappropriated U.S. AI technology and vowed to impose restrictions.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store