The Great Cinematic Divide: India vs. Hollywood
While Hollywood has spent recent years locked in high-stakes battles over contractual guardrails, the Indian film industry is sprinting in the opposite direction. The contrast is stark: where U.S. Guilds like the WGA and SAG-AFTRA fought to limit the encroachment of synthetic media, India has become a vast, live experiment in AI integration. This divergence stems largely from a lack of empowered industry unions and a regulatory vacuum. In India, studios and independent creators are not just experimenting with AI. they are weaving it into the very fabric of the production pipeline. From writing and pre-visualization to fully AI-generated features, the technology is being treated as an indispensable collaborator rather than a threat.
Slashing Budgets: The Era of the Ultra-Low-Cost Feature
One of the most disruptive trends is the collapse of the traditional cost-to-scale ratio. For decades, “epic” storytelling required massive capital. Now, generative AI is decoupling visual scale from financial investment. Take the case of director Rahi Anil Barve. His 80-minute AI feature, Mann Pisahach
, was completed for under ₹33,000 (roughly $360). By shooting actors on an iPhone and using AI to generate costumes and production design, Barve proved that world-building no longer requires a studio lot. The commercial implications are massive. Industry experts suggest that if a story that would typically cost $200 million can be told for $50 million through AI efficiency, the entire economic model of global cinema changes. This allows smaller markets to compete on a global visual scale without needing the screen capacity of a Hollywood blockbuster to recoup costs.
From Concept to Screen: AI-Driven Pre-Visualization
The most immediate impact of AI isn’t in the final render, but in the “invisible” stages of filmmaking. Estimates indicate that around 80 percent of Indian films are already utilizing AI extensively in pre-visualization. Tools like the Kubrick platform are transforming how directors communicate. Instead of relying solely on verbal descriptions—which can lead to misalignment—cinematographers are using AI to generate precise visual proofs. For example, cinematographer Siddharth Diwan used AI to demonstrate a specific “golden moonlight” effect that resisted verbal explanation, ensuring the crew understood the biological perception of light he wanted to capture.
The Ethics of the “Digital Ghost”: De-aging and Resurrection

We are entering an era where an actor’s physical age—or even their death—is no longer a barrier to performance. The 2025 feature Rekhachithram
serves as a primary case study, deploying a de-aged AI composite of 74-year-old superstar Mammootty. Even more provocative is the use of AI to alter the lip movements of deceased individuals. In the same film, the team used AI to make the late screenwriter John Paul appear to deliver new lines of dialogue using archival footage. Unlike Western audiences, who have often reacted with “uncanny valley” skepticism, Indian audiences have shown a high degree of acceptance. Rekhachithram
became a superhit, grossing more than ₹57 crore ($6.7 million) worldwide, suggesting that novelty and emotional connection often outweigh the technical discomfort of synthetic performances.
The Battle for Creative Sovereignty
Despite the bullish adoption, a critical tension is emerging regarding who “owns” a character’s emotional arc. The controversy surrounding the film Raanjhanaa
highlighted a legal loophole: many industry agreements are written so broadly that studios can exploit a work across all future technologies, even those not yet invented. When the studio Eros used AI to create an alternate “happy ending” for a film that originally ended in tragedy, the director felt the emotional integrity of the work was compromised.
“I was hurt that the ending of my film was being changed and that someone was playing with the emotions in my work.” Rai, Director
This incident is sparking a movement toward “responsible use” frameworks. Future trends likely include:
- Consent Clauses: Directors pushing for contracts that require explicit consent before AI is used to alter the plot or tone of a finished work.
- Hybrid Workflows: A shift toward the “hybrid” model championed by filmmakers like Shakun Batra, where human performances are captured traditionally, but world-building is handled by AI.
- Environmental Accounting: A growing awareness of the human and environmental costs associated with training massive AI models.
For more on the intersection of tech and art, explore our guide on Virtual Production Trends or see how industry regulators are responding to synthetic media.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will AI replace human actors and directors?
Most industry leaders, including Ajay Devgn, argue that AI is amplifying filmmakers, not replacing them
. While it handles repetitive tasks and world-building, the “intention” and emotional depth still require human direction.
How does AI reduce film budgets?
AI reduces costs by automating time-consuming processes like rotoscoping (frame-by-frame masking) and production design. It allows filmmakers to create complex environments digitally that would otherwise require expensive physical sets or location shoots.
Is AI-generated content legal in cinema?
Currently, it depends on the contract. In many regions, “work-for-hire” agreements give studios ownership of the material, allowing them to modify characters or scenes using AI. Although, creators are now pushing for more specific protections.
