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Tribeca Lets AI Into Its Official Lineup—One To Watch, Not Cheer
Maureen Kerr · 2026-06-03 · via Forbes - Media
25th Tribeca Festival Bloomberg Reception

NEW YORK, NEW YORK: (L-R) Robert De Niro and Jane Rosenthal speak during the 25th Tribeca Festival Bloomberg reception on June 01, 2026. (Photo by Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival)

Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

Tribeca accepted what its makers describe as a fully AI-generated, live-action feature into its official lineup. The film is called Dreams of Violets, and the Tribeca press office confirmed to me that it is officially programmed in the 2026 festival, with its world premiere on June 10.

It is a 75-minute docudrama about the January protests in Iran, made by Iranian-born brothers Ash and Pooya Koosha through their company Fountain 0. The filmmakers say it was built with no cast, no crew and no cameras.

Tribeca Has Been Building Toward This Since 2024

Tribeca is not an unlikely festival for this moment. I have written before about Tribeca’s Sora Shorts, the program Tribeca and OpenAI built in 2024 to give five filmmakers early access to OpenAI’s video model. One of them was Ellie Foumbi, whose Sora short Black Amber I covered and whom I interviewed about the work.

Jane Rosenthal, the festival’s cofounder, has spent two years making the case that AI can serve human storytelling. In a statement provided to Forbes by her office, Rosenthal said what moved the festival was “not just the technological achievement, but the emotional immediacy and urgency of the story itself.” Tribeca Enterprises, the festival’s parent, has been majority-owned since 2019 by James Murdoch’s Lupa Systems, a media and technology investor. This is the next step, not a departure.

How This Film Goes Beyond AI-Assisted Production

It is also different from what has come before. The Critterz feature I reported on was AI-assisted, built with a human voice cast and a conventional production around it. Dreams of Violets is generated end to end.

Every image and every person onscreen was produced by AI, the filmmakers say, drawing on journalistic reports, photographs and eyewitness accounts.

The Hard Questions Of Dramatizing Real Deaths

That is the source of the difficulty. The film raises every hard question at once. Who owns the images? Who gave consent? How do you dramatize the deaths of real people? What does “live action” mean when the actors are generated?

The subject is not a product launch or a festival novelty. It is a film about real deaths, made at a time when access to Iran, its people and its images remains tightly constrained.

That is why this is one to watch rather than cheer. The instinct in technology coverage is to treat a milestone as a celebration. This is not that.

In a statement provided to me by the festival’s press office, Ash Koosha said he would have preferred a crew, actors and the dignity of a full production, but as one person in exile, with no access to Iran, its locations or its people, the AI pipeline was the only way to make a memorial for “an event that happened behind a wall I cannot cross.” He said he had weighed the questions an AI film about real deaths raises and concluded that “the alternative—silence, forgetting, the regime’s preferred outcome—is worse.”

That is an honest framing from the filmmaker. It does not settle the questions for the festival, the industry or the audience. It should not.

The Cost Question Hollywood Cannot Ignore

Then there is the economics. A feature-length film. In a major festival. Generated by one director, without the machinery of a conventional shoot.

The filmmakers have attached a strikingly low cost figure to the film, and it has traveled faster than any accounting behind it. The number is their own, offered without a public methodology, so it is worth asking what “cost” even means here and what such a figure leaves out.

A conventional 75-minute feature carries cost centers that are well understood: cast and crew salaries, locations and sets, camera and lighting packages, insurance and post-production. Dreams of Violets carried none of them. What it did carry is harder to put on one line: subscriptions to the third-party AI tools it ran on, the compute behind them, festival promotion, the director’s labor and the AI work the brothers brought to it.

So the honest claim is not a price tag. It is a comparison. Whatever the true all-in cost, a film made this way almost certainly cost a fraction of a traditional production because it removed the largest items in the budget, not because the work was free.

That is the part the industry cannot ignore. Not a single arresting number, but a production in which the most expensive parts of making a film can be taken out entirely. Whatever one thinks of the result, that floor has moved.

A Milestone, But Not A Victory Lap

So watch this one closely. Not because it is the first of anything. Tribeca and the filmmakers are calling it the first feature-length, live-action AI film accepted into a major festival’s official lineup. The claim may hold, but superlatives in AI film are narrow and quickly overtaken, and it is not what makes this one matter.

Watch it because it puts the hardest version of the AI-film question in front of a major festival audience, attached to a real human tragedy and a cost structure the rest of the industry will be measuring itself against for years.