[In recent weeks, both the
Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, the
union that represents professionals in the media, including film and
television, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the
organization which presents the Academy Awards, commonly known as the Oscars,
have enacted firm rules to restrict artificial intelligence.
[SAG-AFTRA secured a tentative agreement imposing stricter rules on synthetic characters, among other restrictions. In May, the union reached a tentative four-year contract agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers which, while it doesn’t completely ban synthetic digital characters, it heavily disincentivizes their use. Studios must prove that a synthetic character adds “significant additional value” that a live union actor can’t provide.
[If a studio wishes to use
a fully synthetic performer (like, say, Tilly Norwood), it must formally notify SAG-AFTRA and enter a specific negotiation
and arbitration system. If an agreement
isn’t reached, the union can arbitrate for damages that exceed standard human-actor
compensation.
[Pending ratification by the membership, the SAG-AFTRA contract with AMPTP will run from 1 July 2026 through 30 June 2030.
[Also in May, the Academy updated its eligibility rules for the 99th Academy Awards (scheduled for March 2027), drawing a hard line around core creative categories. Only roles “credited in the film’s legal billing and demonstrably performed by humans with their consent” are eligible for Academy Awards. This effectively bans synthetic or fully AI-generated performers from receiving acting nominations.
[The rules also now explicitly codify that screenplays must be entirely "human-authored to be eligible" for Best Original or Adapted Screenplay. Submitters must sign a formal declaration confirming human creation; false declarations result in immediate disqualification.
[Generative AI remains permitted in technical fields like Best Visual Effects. The Academy stated that AI tools used outside of acting and writing will “neither help nor harm” a film’s overall nomination chances.
[The AMPAS restrictions take effect immediately for the 99th Academy Awards cycle and apply to all feature films with a qualifying theatrical release between 1 January and 31 December 2026. The Board of Governors reviews its campaign and eligibility rules annually, however, so these AI guidelines will be re-evaluated and potentially updated every spring ahead of future Oscar cycles.
[So, now Dreams of Violets, a 75-minute feature-length docudrama that is the first fully AI-generated live-action feature film ever accepted into the official lineup of a marquee film festival, is scheduled to make its world première on Wednesday, 10 June 2026—that’s three days from now.
[(Hell Grind, a 2026 95-minute AI-generated sci-fi action-fantasy movie made by Aitore Zholdaskali [b. 1996], director and co-writer, and Adilkhan Yerzhanov [b. 1982], co-writer, two experienced and respected Kazakh filmmakers based in Almaty, premièred on 16 May 2026 at the Cannes Film Festival. It was, however, a peripheral event of the festival, not in the official program.
[(The Tribeca Film Festival takes place from Wednesday, 3, to Sunday, 14 June, in New York City at various locations around Manhattan. The screening of Dreams of Violets on the 10th will be at the AMC 19th Street East 6:, located at 890 Broadway at East 19th Street in the Flat Iron District of Manhattan, near Union Square. [For the festival, the theater is designated the “AMC Flat Iron Theatre.” This is a temporary event name used for special film screenings hosted at the Tribeca Festival.])
[Because every visual aspect, background, and character was built using generative AI platforms, the film’s première has sparked significant discussion regarding the ethics and future of AI technology in Hollywood filmmaking. The primary controversy surrounding Dreams of Violets is the displacement of human jobs in the film industry, as the feature was created by just two filmmakers on a $2,000 budget, eliminating traditional roles like actors, cinematographers, and set designers.
[On other topics, critics question whether AI-generated content possesses genuine human emotion and soul. Controversy also remains over whether AI models were trained on copyrighted works without permission or compensation. Finally, purists argue that major festivals like Tribeca should exclusively honor traditional, human-made cinema (essentially the same issue that the new Academy Awards rules address).
[After I heard the report “A.I. Backlash” by business and technology correspondent Jo Ling Kent on the CBS Evening News of 29 May, I was interested enough to look a little more into this film “made with no lights, no cameras, and no actors.” Below are the results of my investigation.]
Tehran, January 2026. Dreams of Violets is a
75-minute docudrama feature inspired by real events from 47 years of Iranian
civilian resistance. Through the eyes of
five strangers, it brings protest footage to life with raw immediacy.
—From the producers’
plot précis
“At this time in history when both artificial intelligence and Iran are central to global conversation, [Dreams of Violets] offers audiences a rare and intimate perspective into a conflict many have not been able to fully see or understand,” said Jane Rosenthal, Tribeca Festival co-founder with Robert de Niro, in a statement.
Let’s do the fundamentals first.
Dreams of Violets is a fictional, Farsi-language (Persian) docudrama running one hour and 14 minutes that was entirely generated by artificial intelligence. It was made in the United Kingdom by Fountain 0, a “film studio that blends traditional creative principles with frontier technologies to produce previously impossible movies and TV shows,” according to its own website. It’s Fountain 0’s initial production.
The movie’s director, writer, and composer is Ash Koosha (who’s also the CEO of Fountain 0); its producers are Ash Koosha and his older brother, Pooya Koosha (co-director of Dreams of Violets and chief technology officer of Fountain 0), who are Tehran-born citizens of the U.K. They founded Fountain 0 in 2025 to develop custom-built software to solve the technical limitations of commercial AI tools and to lower the financial barriers associated with traditional filmmaking.
(Ash Koosha’s birth name is Ashkan Kooshanejad [b. 1985], and he’s also a well-known and popular multi-instrumentalist, composer, and record producer. He’s based in London. Pooya Koosha (also known as Pooya Kooshanezhad [b. 1982]—note the variant spellings of the brothers’ family name) is a tech entrepreneur, systems architect, and filmmaker. He’s based in Silicon Valley in the San Francisco Bay Area of California. When the brothers established their professional careers in the U.K., having fled the Islamic Republic in 2009, they simplified their last names for the Western tech and media industries.)
Dreams of Violets is a fully AI-generated feature film. As CBS’s Jo Ling Kent reports, there’s “No cast, no crew” and “AI programs . . . generate all of the film's imagery.”
The plot, set against the backdrop of civilian protests in Tehran in January 2026 when the Iranian government perpetrated widespread massacres of civilians, centers on five strangers trapped in a shadowy dead-end alley by a soldier who’s about to execute them, while Amir, a 10-year-old boy with cerebral palsy, watches in a wheelchair from a window above.
Other elements of the storyline, as related in Rolling Stone, are “unrest . . . stirring outside as people gather on motorcycles. A separate story follows a woman whose family asks her to stop going out. And then there’s a man falling from a building, smoke bombs, and an army quelling protesters.”
Nothing that I read, however, provides an interpretation of the movie’s title, Dreams of Violets, and I gather that there are no lines in the script that explain it directly. The closest there is may be some words heard in the trailer that’s on several sites online, spoken to Amir by a family member as he wheels away from the camera: “Did you know a violet is the only flower that grows in the dark? The root doesn't need light. It only needs a crack. A gap in the earth. That's all!”
Though not botanically accurate, that line is apparently symbolic of the film’s theme. First, violets bloom in late winter and early spring and thus appear in Iranian and Persian poetry as harbingers of renewal or rebirth after the desolation and deprivations of winter. (Think of the Prague Spring of 1968 or the Arab Spring in the early 2010s.)
The “dark” certainly represents the totalitarian regime of the Islamic Republic and the brutal military crackdown under which the movie shows the Iranian citizens living. The “root” might refer to the generations of Iranians and Persians who came before and cherished and guarded their freedom, as well as those over the past 47 years who’ve resisted tyranny in Iran. The “crack in the earth,” then, might represent the small gaps where freedom survives today in the Iran the Koosha’s depict.
The “dreams” of the title, then, would be the Iranian people’s vision of the hopes for the future promised by the metaphorical violets. Even though the movie takes place in a dark landscape, both literally (the alley) and figuratively due to the communications blackout and the armed repression imposed by the regime, the Kooshas want it to encourage hope—a field of violets growing in the dark, waiting to burst out in color in the awaited sunshine.
The live-action docufiction was filmed in a mere three months at a cost of $2,000, with actors, sets, and cameras replaced by AI models. Ash Koosha worked at home evenings and weekends while performing his duties as CEO of Claigrid, the bothers’ AI start-up, during the day.
Director Koosha observed, “It would take probably a year or two to get this right” in the tradition process. “The notion of making films at the speed of news itself is something I’m super interested in.” With so “little first-hand journalism” coming out of Iran about the events of last January, Koosha was inspired “to make the first film about” the massacres.
There are no actors, or even digital clones (of either actual actors or real people on the scene) in Dreams of Violets; all the characters, though based on news photographs and videos, are entirely fictional digital models created using generative AI tools.
The AI movie “is a specific genre, at least for me,” Ash Koosha told CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) News. It’s a way to tell stories much like animation, says the director-producer. RollingStone, however, reports that “signs of AI exist in the smudged backgrounds of the shots, but the 83-seconds makes it seem as though Koosha . . . has created a realistic-looking film.”
On the other hand, Business Wire expressed the opinion, “The combination of creativity and technological innovation resulted in a film that appears as realistic as films produced through traditional human labor.” The website found that the AI tools were “used to create a remarkably touching, impactful and at times shocking film.” Business Wire states that Dreams of Violets “is indistinguishable from an independent film with human writers, directors, and actors.”
While the characters’ faces and bodies are entirely fake, their visual designs, emotional expressions, and the scenarios they endure were guided by real photos, journalistic reporting, and eyewitness accounts of the brutal suppression of protests in Iran.
Co-directors Ash and Pooya Koosha say they designed the synthetic cast this way to capture a sense of raw realism without exploiting the identities—or risking the safety—of actual Iranian citizens and protestors. Ash Koosha explains that he created the characters by describing people he’s known in the past—though no one living in Iran today—as references.
The Hollywood Reporter recorded that to make Dreams of Violets, in addition to Fountain 0’s own technology, the Koosha brothers used AI software tools like Google’s Nanobanana for imagery and core frames, Kling AI (developed by the Chinese tech company Kuaishou) for video generation from frames, Anthropic’s Claude AI for language-related editing, and Google’s Gemini for helped with researching the project.
THR further reported that, on the other hand, the writing and editing of the script, the voicing of characters (before alteration by AI), and the movement and positioning (blocking) of the AI-generated actors on screen was all done by Ash Koosha using human creativity.
In a statement recounted in Variety, Ash Koosha acknowledged,
I understand that an AI-generated film about people who actually died raises difficult questions. I have thought about those questions for every minute of every day I have worked on this film. My answer is that the alternative — silence, forgetting, the regime’s preferred outcome — is worse. The film exists because the dead deserve to be witnessed and because the families inside Iran, who cannot speak, deserve someone outside who refuses to forget.
It’s significant to note that this particular story had personal meaning for Pooya and, especially, Ash Koosha. The movie is far more than an artistic or political mission for its creators. A recently published report in the Guardian of the U.K. reveals some of the reasons.
Ash Koosha began his career as a musician in Tehran playing in underground rock bands. Rock music was strictly forbidden by the Iranian Ministry of Culture as part of the regime’s restrictions on Western-influenced music, so Koosha and his band were already in risky territory.
In 2007, Koosha organized and played in clandestine, underground rock concerts. After a semi-festival, initially planned as a cultural event with the support of UNICEF, was canceled at the last minute by the government, Koosha and his heavy rock band, Font, moved the gig to a private suburban villa outside Tehran.
The organizers invited 150 people, but word spread quickly in the underground scene, and 700 people showed up. The authorities used soldiers and hovering helicopters to raid the unauthorized festival and more than 200 attendees and musicians were arrested because not only was rock music forbidden by the regime, but so were mixed-gender gatherings.
Koosha was arrested after the raid and he spent 21 days in a maximum-security prison following the raid. Two years later, in the aftermath of the disputed presidential election of June 2009, the Koosha brothers feared for their freedom.
The 2007 raid broke up Ash Koosha’s previous band, Front, but the brothers formed a new indie-rock band called Take It Easy Hospital. Ash was the front man, while Pooya served as the band’s bassist.
Filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi recruited Ash Koosha and the band to star in his underground docudrama, No One Knows About Persian Cats. The movie secretly chronicled the plight of underground Iranian musicians like Koosha.
The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2009, just as political tensions peaked in Iran. Following the heavily protested and violently suppressed presidential elections in June 2009, the Iranian regime began ruthlessly hunting down anyone involved in political dissent or unauthorized, Western-influenced media.
Because of their prominent roles in No One Knows About Persian Cats, which won the Special Jury Prize at Cannes, and their active participation in the underground scene, the band members were marked by the regime. Promoting an invitation to perform at a U.K. music festival as their ticket out of Iran, the Koosha brothers and their bandmates left together.
As soon as they arrived on British soil, they applied for asylum, stating that returning to Tehran would mean immediate imprisonment. What they saw in 2026 must have seemed like déjà vu. It’s not surprising that the Kooshas, especially Ash, would feel strongly about Dreams of Violets. As Ash Koosha says, “This is a very personal story to us having experienced brutality in Iran.’
As for those engaged in the project, but not viscerally involved, Variety reports that Rosenthal called the film “a powerful example of how emerging technologies like AI can be used not simply as tools of innovation, but as vehicles for deeply human storytelling.”
“What moved us,” asserted Rosenthal, “was not just the technological achievement, but the emotional immediacy and urgency of the story itself.” She added that “this film offers audiences a rare and intimate perspective into a conflict many have not been able to fully see or understand.”
According to TechEBlog, an online media outlet and blog that covers the latest technology, Dreams of Violets is “a fiction based on reality” since Ash Koosha focused on “the human aspect” of the Iranian uprising “and not on the chaos itself.”
Although Dreams of Violets is fiction, not a documentary, “I would say 80% of it is a recreation of events that actually happened,” says director Koosha.
Director Ash Koosha observed that he had started to work on the film soon after he saw online reports and videos of the January 2026 massacres (which may have ultimately killed over 36,500 Iranians) before the Internet blackout imposed by the regime.
“For 72 hours,” he attested, “we saw things that were just horrifying. It was a bloodbath.” What he had done until then, either in music or technology, hadn’t been politics. “This,” he declared, “made me political.”
In a statement quoted by THR, he said that Dreams of Violets couldn’t have even been made if not for AI. The director wrote:
I want to be honest about why I made it the way I did. It was not a technological exercise. I would have preferred to make this film with a crew, with actors, with the dignity of a full production. That was not available to me. I am one person, in exile, with no access to Iran, no access to the locations, no access to the people. The AI pipeline made it possible to do what would otherwise have been impossible: to create a memorial film for an event that happened behind a wall I cannot cross.
Tom Rogers, Fountain 0’s executive chairman, told DealBook, a New York Times newsletter, “The film industry is going to be transformed by A.I.” He added that Dreams of Violets demonstrated that “great independent films can be made without big studio financial backing”—not to mention actors, designers, camera operators, and stage crews—among other workers.
So Rogers conceded that there’d be “a lot of consternation” about job displacement as well, considering that AI fears ignited two strikes in the film and TV arena just three years ago (see “2023 Writers Guild Strike” [1 June 2023] and “‘The Actors' Strike Dims a Bright Spot For New York City'” [25 July 2023].)
Furthermore, while Kent on CBS reports on roiling elsewhere in the film-and-TV quadrant of the AI-verse (of a trio of kiddie shows from Amazon MGM that are animated by AI, one creator dropped out prompted by “a backlash” and the creator of another AI-animated series became “horrified and disgusted” when the producers moved without her input), DealBook reports that the première of Dreams of Violets “could ignite a debate about the role of generative A.I. in creating original entertainment and provoke fresh fears about job losses in Hollywood.”
As Fountain 0 is about to début its first feature, the Kooshas see their AI-generated movie model as production-ready for independent filmmakers—despite the prediction that AI will bring about the demise of Hollywood.
Ash Koosha asserts that “for the many independent filmmakers, and would be independent filmmakers, whose biggest barrier is access to money to make their films, Fountian 0 technology solves for the financial barriers they face.”
“There’s no way for me to go get millions of dollars to make” Dreams of Violets, insisted Koosha.
For a traditional “Micro-Budget” film, for instance, the average production cost would be $20,000 to $250,000 in the U.S. or £16,000 ($21,600) to £200,000 ($270,000) in the U.K. These are typically ultra-low budget projects, self-financed or backed by small investors.
A standard indie feature, which generally employs some union professionals, uses union-scale minimums, and must have enough capital to afford location permits, insurance, and professional post-production, costs from $20,000 to $250,000 in the United States and £350,000 ($472,500) to £1.5 million ($2.025 million) in the U.K.
At the high end, a full studio production requiring union crew rates, substantial visual effects, A-list talent, and comprehensive marketing, if made in the U.S., would cost between $5 million and $100+ million, while a top-end film made in the United Kingdom would run from £4 million ($5.4 million) to £60+ million ($81+ million).
“As a first time film creator, there is no way I could have brought this film to fruition without what our AI tools enabled me to do,” declared Ash Koosha, responding to the anxiety expressed by many in the film world. Foundation 0 has two more films in production, and Ash Koosha pledges that “we will actively seek top writer and director talent whose creativity can be harnessed to produce great movies without their imaginations and visions facing any financial constraints.”
Added brother Pooya:
Having been deeply involved for a number of years in how AI could be utilized and tamed at the highest and most sophisticated levels, I realized our video production techniques were way ahead of the rest of the marketplace. I also realized that our ability for each subsequent film to improve on our AI production techniques is an enormous opportunity for Fountain 0 to exploit.
[If, after Wednesday, there are reviews of Dreams of Violets, I may append one or two to this post. Come back then if you’re curious about the reception of this AI movie by the press—film and/or tech. You can be sure I’ll be looking around the ’Net to see what’s being said.
[If there are a range of assessments, it could be very interesting. One commentator has already raised a disturbing prospect. In an exchange on the CBC website, Richard Lachman, a professor of digital media at Toronto Metropolitan University and author of Digital Wisdom: Searching for Agency in the Age of AI (Routledge, 2026), put forth that the appearance of AI movies at film festivals could be the source of problems.
On the one hand, he said, there’s been vocal pushback within the industry, but on the other, the technology has the potential to open up access to filmmaking.
“This film was made for $2,000 [US], and it’s in festival competition. So there’s a democratizing effect,” he said.
“You don’t have access to a huge film crew and sets and A-list actors? Well, you can still make your unique point of view and get it in a film festival.”
But Lachman said he has concerns about how audiences will interpret AI content that looks real.
”We have a lot of expectations of, if it looks like a person, if it looks like photojournalism footage, then I’m going to interpret it as photojournalism footage,” he said.
“So I’m a little worried about just cautioning everyone ‘don’t believe what you see’ because then we won’t be able to believe real news footage in the same way.”
[On top of concerns about job
losses in the industry and a diminution of human creativity and human feelings,
Lachman raises the issue of a further reduction of faith in news reporting,
this time aided and abetted by people who ought to be journalism’s ally, the film
producer, rather than the politician.]