Autonomous Film Production
Filmlab writes, shoots, scores, and publishes films — fully autonomously. No crew. No budget. No human hours. The first AI employee that actually makes things.
"We built tools.
Filmlab builds films."
The AI filmmaking market is worth $0.4B today, projected to hit $0.95B by 2029. Every tool in this space — Melies, Runway, Kling, LTX Studio — sells you a tool. You still do the work. Filmlab is different. It's an employee that ships finished films while you sleep.
What It Does
Monitors trends, cultural moments, and audience data to surface what to make next. Decides what gets greenlit — autonomously.
Produces structured screenplays with narrative arc, shot-level direction, and character beats. Every scene has a visual purpose.
Directs AI video models (Seedance, Kling, Sora) to produce cinematic footage with consistent characters and camera language.
Composes and generates original scores timed to the edit. No stock music. No licensing fees. Just a score built for this film.
Assembles the cut, syncs audio, exports for platform, uploads to YouTube, and reports on performance. End-to-end.
Sends you a weekly digest: films published, views, engagement, what the AI learned this week. You're the executive producer.
The Pipeline
Reads cultural signals, audience data, and your brand to decide what story to tell. Writes a brief that has cinematic coherence — not just a prompt.
Translates the brief into shot-level technical prompts. Camera movement, lens, lighting, subject, frame — each shot is specified like a DP would.
Evaluates every generated shot against professional metrics: aesthetics, technical fidelity, motion naturalness, artifact clarity. Flags failures, rewrites prompts.
Listens to the rough cut, builds an original score synced to the edit. Creates audio that matches the emotional arc — not background music, a real score.
Assembles the final cut, syncs the score, grades the color, exports for platform. Publishes and sends a report. The film ships. You just watch.
Why Not Tools
In 2026, a single filmmaker with a laptop can make what used to require a $500K indie budget and a crew of fifty. Filmlab turns that capability into a persistent, autonomous employee — one that ships finished films on a schedule, reports what worked, and never needs a producer to keep it moving.
The film industry doesn't need better tools.
It needs someone who actually makes the film.