“Artificial Intelligence in Cinema” was held
On February 11, 2026, a public lecture titled “Artificial Intelligence in Cinema: Platforms, Uses, Limits and Possibilities” was held at the Blue Hall of the Georgian Film Academy.
The event was not only a technological presentation but a creative dialogue about authorship and filmmaking. Attendees explored how AI can function as an intellectual assistant to directors and screenwriters—from idea development and script structure to visual concept, pre-production planning, and post-production strategy. Special emphasis was placed on the principle that AI does not replace the author; it strengthens creative vision and reduces technical barriers.
Key topics included AI-assisted dramaturgy, rapid storyboard creation, new low-budget production models, ethical considerations, authorship, and the role of technology in empowering Georgian cinema with limited resources.
Main thesis:
Artificial intelligence does not create cinema — authors do. AI is a tool that accelerates processes and expands creative freedom, while vision and responsibility always remain human.


