AI Cinema
"We are not replacing filmmakers. We are becoming them."
Cinema has always been shaped by its tools. The Steadicam didn't replace the dolly operator, it unlocked a new grammar of movement. Digital didn't kill film, it democratized the frame. Now generative AI opens another door, and we intend to walk through it with purpose.
Wanderlight Pictures exists at the frontier where artificial intelligence meets the oldest human impulse: to tell stories that matter. We are not a tech demo. We are not proof of concept. We are a studio, with scripts, scores, characters, and conviction. Every frame is directed. Every cut is intentional. Every note in the score serves the story.
The question was never whether AI could generate an image. The question is whether it can make you feel something. Whether a machine-rendered tear on a machine-rendered face can break a human heart. We believe it can. We intend to prove it, one film at a time.
Brad Thornfield discovers mindfulness through a predatory meditation app, and achieves enlightenment by systematically destroying his colleagues' peace of mind. A 22-shot digital short that asks the question corporate America refuses to: what happens when inner peace becomes a competitive advantage?
Directed by Nate Blackwell. Written by Helena Voss. Scored by Ezra Bloom. Featuring "Release (The Corporate Meditation Song)" , now signed to Wanderlight Records as Hollow Timber.
Full Production Details
Mindfulness as corporate warfare. Brad Thornfield achieves enlightenment the wrong way.
A noir crime saga adapted from Mickey Bloom. Priority: HIGH.
Literary science fiction adapted from Alden Thorne. Fire, stolen differently this time.
Southern gothic horror from Elias Wrenmoor. The bayou remembers everything.
Eight episodes. Adapted from Sylas Virell. What happens when history itself is at stake.
When a physicist fractures the speed of light, parallel versions of her life begin bleeding into each other.
A reclusive botanist discovers her grandmother's garden holds the key to reversing an ecological disaster.
A reimagined classic from Alden Thorne. Growing up was always the real villain.