
Originally published byFrance 24
A film about Iran's protest movement is making cinema history. "Dreams of Violets" is the first fully AI-generated feature film ever selected by a major international film festival. The 75-minute drama will premiere at New York's Tribeca Festival next week. Created by Iranian-British director Ash Koosha from his home in London, the film took just three months to produce and cost less than 2,000 euros. There were no actors, no cameras, no sets and no film crew. Koosha says the film simply could not have been made through conventional means. Living in exile and unable to safely film inside Iran, he turned to AI to recreate events linked to the country's deadly crackdown on anti-government protesters. The film is based on journalistic reports, photographs and eyewitness accounts, and explores themes of memory, censorship and resistance. But as Tribeca becomes the first major festival to embrace a fully AI-generated feature, the film is also reigniting a fierce debate. Can artificial intelligence tell deeply human stories? Does AI democratise filmmaking or threaten the future of the industry? Eve Jackson speaks to Ash Koosha about Iran, ethics and the future of cinema.
๐ซ๐ท
More news from FranceFrance
EUROPE
Related News
Germany news: National team won't win World Cup, fans think
18h ago
Pigeons' livers may enable magnetic navigation when the sun doesn't shine, study finds
18h ago

Paddleboard firm owner who caused four deaths has bid to cut sentence refused
20h ago

Former student charged after University of Surrey crossbow attack
21h ago
Can Hawaii wean itself of oil imports?
18h ago