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From financial constraints to AI brunch: Will Sora make Indian cinema more accessible?

From financial constraints to AI brunch: Will Sora make Indian cinema more accessible?

By Kajal Sharma - 16 Apr 2025 07:17 PM

There were conflicting responses when OpenAI presented its potent text-to-video model, Sora, to Hollywood studios. Others viewed it as a powerful disruptive force that could endanger creative jobs, while others regarded it as a revolutionary instrument.Will Indian filmmakers encounter a similar wave of ethical, legal, and creative issues that are already igniting discussions in the West, or should they adopt AI-powered video technologies to get beyond long-standing financial constraints? In India, filmmakers who frequently lack the financial resources of major production companies might benefit from tools like Sora.The promise is alluring on the one hand. AI tools like Sora could democratize access to high-end visual storytelling in a nation where independent filmmakers and regional creators frequently operate with limited resources. This would allow for realistic simulations of elaborate sets, action scenes, or fantastical worlds—all without the need for enormous budgets.

They provide Indian film with a fresh avenue for creativity, pace, and genre exploration.However, the chance is accompanied by caution. Indian filmmakers must think about how AI will affect a sector that is based on human narrative, cultural diversity, and specificity, just as Hollywood struggles with issues of job displacement, copyright, and the erosion of creative authenticity. The path forward necessitates a careful balancing act that preserves the spirit and morals that characterize Indian cinema while embracing the efficiency and inventiveness AI can offer.

 

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