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AI Lights Camera Action as IFFI Masterclass Maps Cinema’s Next Frontier

Filmmakers unpack creativity ethics and disruption as AI redraws cinema’s future.

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MUMBAI: Moviemaking may once have begun with a camera, but at IFFI this week, the consensus seemed clear: in the age of artificial intelligence, all you really need is curiosity and a prompt. At the 56th International Film Festival of India in Goa, the masterclass The New AI Cinema: A Discourse on Generative AI and LLMs quickly turned into one of the festival’s most electric sessions, a spirited, sometimes philosophical, often provocative debate about how AI is reshaping the craft, the industry and even the idea of storytelling itself.

Helmed by filmmaker V. Muralitharan, auteur Shekhar Kapur, and writer-director Shankar Ramakrishnan, the session moved far beyond technical demos. Instead, it cracked open the cultural, artistic and ethical tensions simmering beneath cinema’s AI revolution.

Muralitharan opened with a glimpse into AI’s unexpected role in education. He described sitting with an academic panel studying the human nervous system — a complicated animation traditionally achievable only with expensive modelling tools, now fully AI-generated. Neural networks visualising actual neural networks: the irony wasn’t lost on anyone.

He argued that the same technology could resurrect history, lost characters, forgotten struggles, major events and accidents, all recreated with precision as long as research materials were robust. “Our project is only just taking shape,” he said, hinting at a future where historical cinema no longer depends on scarce archives.

Muralitharan also offered a deeply personal confession. After a decade in corporate managerial roles, his hands-on artistic skills had faded. He felt the gap acutely. But AI, he said, had restored his ability to “make my films and tell my stories” without needing to relearn complex software.

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Initially guided by engineers, he soon realised that modern tools “are like talking to a person”. Simple English prompts could now generate shots, scenes or entire sequences. “There is no technical expertise needed today,” he said. Creativity, not coding, had become the entry barrier and even that barrier was getting lower.

Kapur agreed. “It’s become very democratic,” he added, before launching into an unexpected tale of how AI fed his obsession with the relationship between physics, poetry and schizophrenia.

Kapur recounted spending three months on ChatGPT exploring the idea that Van Gogh, declared schizophrenic, may have intuitively painted the true nature of fluid dynamics — something physicists still struggle to mathematically resolve.

If art can reveal truths that science can’t express, Kapur argued, then AI becomes a tool not for shortcuts but for deeper inquiry. “I found relationships I had never learnt before,” he said, describing the chatbot as an engine of personal education.

While some debated continuity flaws in AI-generated shots like three dogs inexplicably shrinking to one, Muralitharan insisted the tools evolve weekly. Literally. “What I saw two weeks back is not the tool today,” he said, describing how character consistency across ages had recently become achievable.

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Their seven-minute demonstration film featured a protagonist across three life stages, generated consistently something impossible even months earlier.

To create long continuous sequences, they generated eight-second blocks, each feeding the next. It took three or four cycles to create a smooth 20-second time-lapse with crowds, movement and controlled camera speed. Soon, he said, tools will generate arbitrarily long shots, though “they must be meaningful”.

One of the biggest misconceptions in public discourse, the speakers stressed, is confusing AI with VFX.

“AI is far, far more sophisticated,” Muralitharan said. VFX still requires cameras, green screens and physical shoots. AI requires nothing but data, imagination and prompts.

Yet the two are now merging. Most VFX pipelines already secretly incorporate AI for set design, costumes and environmental generation. Kapur admitted he had recently seen a commercial where even he couldn’t distinguish the real Hrithik Roshan from his AI double.

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Kapur then pulled back the curtain on why OTT platforms and theatrical distributors wield such power: the barrier to entry is high because budgets are high. AI, he said, will bulldoze that barrier.

“A. R. Rahman and I are setting up an AI film school in Dharavi,” he announced, explaining that kids with no equipment, no training and no industry access will soon make films purely through AI tools.

“When budgets crash, gatekeepers lose control,” Kapur said. OTT platforms will acquire AI-made films, “they won’t have a choice.”

When asked whether AI can replicate great performances, Kapur answered with characteristic bluntness: AI can replace a superhero suit but not Shabana Azmi’s eyes.

“AI eyes have a dead look,” he explained, offering a scientific nugget: a human pupil performs around 1,000 micro-movements per minute movements so subtle even scientists rarely acknowledge them. AI, he said, cannot recreate that expressiveness anytime soon.

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Close-ups of great actors will remain the human domain at least for now.

On intellectual property, Muralitharan emphasised responsibility. If a filmmaker wants to use someone’s image, they must seek consent and sign contracts. AI may be a mirror and a provocateur, he said, but it doesn’t erase ethics.

Kapur added that artistic inspiration has always been a form of borrowing. “We study every painter in art school,” he said. “Of course we’re influenced.” The problem isn’t influence, it’s inertia. “How much you depend on AI depends on how lazy you are,” he added, earning laughs.

Kapur warned that AI will transform how organisations, hierarchies and power structures function. Traditional pyramids thrive on inertia and AI “sucks inertia out of systems”. As roles blur, “you won’t know who leads and who follows anymore”. The shift, he said, will redefine how we live, work and learn.

One of the conversation’s most poetic turns came when Muralitharan spoke about his fascination with lost Indian cinema. Many early films, including the 1928 silent Tamil film Vigadha Kumaran, survive only in photographs. AI, he said, could reconstruct these films not perfectly, but evocatively enough to restore what history has forgotten.

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Kapur acknowledged AI’s early Western bias but said India is quickly training its own sub-models. Today, he said, AI-generated characters increasingly “look very Indian”, and models are learning Indian language structures. The days of a tiger with white stripes, a famously wrong early AI output are fading.

The speakers did not shy away from AI’s energy demands. Kapur cited data showing AI prompts consume up to 10 times the energy of a Google search. Even small prompt choices matter. “Remove the word please,” he said. “It saves power.”

But he pointed to emerging quantum chip research, where chips compute “maybe” rather than binary “yes/no”, cutting heat and energy drastically. “It will change everything,” he predicted.

In a moment of déjà vu, a crew member reminded Kapur that 20 years ago he had predicted that digital filmmaking would enter every home. “It happened,” Kapur said. And now AI is doing it again but faster, deeper, and in ways that will reshape not just cinema, but society itself.

 

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Boney Kapoor acquires remake rights of Tamil political satire Thalaivar Thambi Thalaimaiyil

Strong word-of-mouth turns Pongal satire into remake pick

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MUMBAI: A Pongal release, a village satire and a theatre visit in Coimbatore have turned into Boney Kapoor’s latest acquisition. The producer has secured the remake rights to the Tamil political satire Thalaivar Thambi Thalaimaiyil (TTT), a film that has been enjoying a strong theatrical run powered by word-of-mouth and praise for its sharp, rooted writing.

Set in a rural milieu, the story follows a panchayat leader thrown into disarray when a wedding and a funeral land on the same day. What unfolds is a swirl of satire and humour that skewers local politics, power games, bruised egos and family tensions, all anchored in the textures of everyday village life.

Kapoor first encountered the film earlier this year while in Coimbatore for the Celebrity Cricket League. With time to spare, he caught a screening at a local theatre. That viewing proved decisive. According to sources, the narrative style, performances and the film’s balance of political commentary and comedy caught his attention.

Interest quickly turned into intent. Kapoor reached out to the producers soon after to explore a remake. Talks gathered pace over the following weeks and came to a head last Friday at the film’s success party in Chennai, where Kapoor joined the celebrations and continued negotiations with the makers.

By the end of the evening, the deal was sealed, with Kapoor formally acquiring the remake rights.

For an industry constantly mining regional cinema for the next crossover story, the move is telling. A small-town satire with local flavour has found a national backer. And if Kapoor’s instincts hold, a tale born in one village may soon echo far beyond it.

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Fans take centre stage as Zee Cine awards turns the spotlight around

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MUMBAI: When the applause gets louder than the dialogue, you know the fans have taken over. That was the unmistakable mood as Zee formally announced the Zee Cine Awards 2026, flipping the script to celebrate not just cinema’s stars, but the people who cheer them on the loudest.

The 24th edition of the awards marks a fresh chapter in Zee’s long-standing relationship with Hindi cinema, anchored in its fan-first philosophy, Fantertainment. This year’s theme, ‘Yeh Pal Hai Fans Ka’, reinforces a simple idea: cinema’s most powerful moments are shaped as much by audiences as by actors on screen. Presented by Maruti Suzuki, the awards aim to turn fandom into the main event.

The announcement, held in Mumbai, was anything but a routine press conference. Bollywood stars Akshay Kumar, Tamannaah Bhatia, Jacqueline Fernandez, Sonam Bajwa, Aparshakti Khurana, composer Mithoon and singer Palak Muchhal joined fans to kick off the celebrations, turning the launch into a high-voltage, participative spectacle.

Staying true to the theme, fans didn’t just watch the announcement, they drove it. Akshay Kumar took the lead, pulling fellow stars on stage and energising the room, before the unveiling of a live LED Fan Meter. Powered purely by audience cheers, the rising meter culminated in the reveal of the Zee Cine Awards 2026 ground event date, announced in unison with fans, blurring the line between performer and spectator.

The momentum continued as Tamannaah Bhatia, Jacqueline Fernandez, Sonam Bajwa and Aparshakti Khurana recreated iconic hook steps, joined by Mithoon and Palak Muchhal for music-led interactions. Games, spontaneous performances and playful banter kept the focus firmly on shared moments, underscoring the evolving bond between cinema and its audience.

Beyond the launch, the awards will roll out as a multi-platform journey across television, digital, print and fan-led experiences. The aim is sustained engagement from the first announcement to awards night cementing fandom as a cultural force rather than a footnote.

Commenting on the milestone edition Zee head of advertisement revenue, broadcast & digital Laxmi Shetty said the 24th Zee Cine Awards continue to draw strength from the network’s omni-channel ecosystem, reflecting how audiences consume content today across TV, digital and social platforms. She noted that long-standing brand associations, including Maruti Suzuki’s three-year partnership and support from brands such as Hell Energy, underline the platform’s scale, trust and cultural relevance.

As Zee Cine Awards 2026 gathers pace, one thing is clear: this year, the loudest cheers won’t just echo in the auditorium, they’ll shape the show itself.

 

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Prime Video to stream Don’t Be Shy, produced by Alia Bhatt

Eternal Sunshine’s coming-of-age film promises laughs, love and growing pains

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MUMBAI: Prime Video has found its next feel-good original, and it comes with a healthy dose of heart, humour and youthful chaos. The streaming platform has announced Don’t Be Shy, a coming-of-age romantic comedy produced by Alia Bhatt and Shaheen Bhatt under their banner, Eternal Sunshine Productions.

Written and directed by Sreeti Mukerji, the film follows Shyamili ‘Shy’ Das, a 20-year-old who believes her life is neatly mapped out until it suddenly is not. What follows is a relatable tumble through friendship, love and the awkward art of growing up, when plans unravel and certainty gives way to self-discovery.

The project is co-produced by Grishma Shah and Vikesh Bhutani, with music composed by Ram Sampath, adding to the film’s promise of warmth and energy. Prime Video describes the story as light-hearted yet emotionally grounded, with a strong female-led narrative at its core.

Prime Video India director and head of originals Nikhil Madhok, said the platform was delighted to collaborate with Eternal Sunshine on a story that blends sincerity with humour. He noted that the film’s fresh writing, earnest characters and infectious music make it an easy, engaging watch for audiences well beyond its young adult setting.

For Alia Bhatt, Don’t Be Shy reflects the kind of storytelling Eternal Sunshine set out to champion. She said the film stood out for its honesty, its coming-of-age perspective and Mukerji’s passion, which she felt was deeply woven into the narrative. Bhatt also praised Prime Video for supporting distinctive voices and bold creative choices.

With its breezy tone and familiar emotional beats, Don’t Be Shy aims to charm viewers whether they are rom-com regulars or simply in the mood for a warm, unpretentious story about life refusing to stick to the plan.

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