Within the next two years, established studios and major IPs will shift aggressively toward AI production pipelines, reshaping the entertainment landscape in ways we've never seen. The competitive pressure will intensify, making it tougher for traditional players to differentiate.
Here's where it gets interesting though—right before that full-scale transformation takes hold, an independent creator with no industry backing will emerge from nowhere. They'll drop a fully AI-generated film distributed straight to audiences online, bypassing every traditional gate. No studio approval. No theatrical release. Just raw internet distribution fueled by ads and community support.
And it'll rake in $100M.
That one anomaly could reshape how we think about creative ownership, distribution rights, and what Hollywood gatekeeping even means anymore.
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Within the next two years, established studios and major IPs will shift aggressively toward AI production pipelines, reshaping the entertainment landscape in ways we've never seen. The competitive pressure will intensify, making it tougher for traditional players to differentiate.
Here's where it gets interesting though—right before that full-scale transformation takes hold, an independent creator with no industry backing will emerge from nowhere. They'll drop a fully AI-generated film distributed straight to audiences online, bypassing every traditional gate. No studio approval. No theatrical release. Just raw internet distribution fueled by ads and community support.
And it'll rake in $100M.
That one anomaly could reshape how we think about creative ownership, distribution rights, and what Hollywood gatekeeping even means anymore.