Generation is a short with rating 7.1 which seems to be mostly AI-generated (awarded by AIFF)
“It was only after experimenting with AI text-to-image algorithms that I really saw a way to visualise that (overwhelming) feeling”, the director reveals. With his objective in mind, Fusetti filmed and rotoscoped his dance sequence, before feeding “the results to a text-to-image open source machine learning algorithm (Disco Diffusion)” before he “composited the results back onto the original footage”. (source)
@jacksonpolack I wouldn’t consider a 2 minute short to be a movie (e.g. I think few would consider any of the Pixar shorts, which range from 2-8 minutes, to also be Pixar movies), but I won’t belabor the point if others are convinced it should qualify
@hominidan It's 2 a minutes long video, was released before the market opened (I think), has only 10 reviews on IMDb and uses real footage mixed with ai generated images and a lot of manual editing. One one hand, I wouldn't personally count it, on the other there's no resolution criteria whatsoever so I wouldn't be particularly upset either way.
@ProjectVictory maybe resolve partially? But I agree, if it's only 2 minutes and edited it's not very impressive
@jacksonpolack AI drawn means mostly AI generated. Seems a reach to resolve with a 2 minutes film that just incorporated AI in its production process.
@SneakySly To be clear I would consider this a blatant mis-resolution and against the spirit of the market.
- Not a movie
- Heavily edited
- Literally filmed and rotoscoped not in AI!
I'm surprised that I really can't find anything! The closest match seems to be Nothing, Forever that was allegedly modelled by humans and an AI only controlled the Unity environment & script
Sure, I'll bet against that.
I don't see this as a capabilities play, probably some video diffusion model will be capable of creating a 7.0-worthy movie in that timeline.
I'm mostly buying NO reading into public sentiment. Artsy types have been broadly against AI so far. I'm predicting that will accelerate, and their collective tastemaking capacity will still be intact in 2025, enough to tank IMDB user ratings