China’s entertainment industry may be heading into its most radical transformation yet and it’s being driven by code, not cameras.
One of the country’s biggest streaming platforms, iQIYI, is now openly pushing toward a future where most of its films are created with artificial intelligence. Not assisted by AI. Created by it.
The idea sounds futuristic, but the strategy is already in motion.
Inside the company, new AI tools are being developed to handle everything from storytelling to visual production. Scripts, characters, scenes, tasks that once required entire creative teams-are increasingly being handed over to algorithms. The goal is simple: produce more content, faster, and at a fraction of the cost.
China Is Rewriting How Films Are Made
For streaming platforms, that promise is hard to ignore.
The business model of streaming has always depended on volume. More shows, more films, more reasons for users to stay subscribed. But traditional production is slow, expensive, and difficult to scale. AI changes that equation almost overnight.
Instead of months of production, content can be generated in significantly shorter cycles. Instead of large crews, smaller technical teams can manage output. In a market where competition is relentless, that kind of efficiency is not just attractive – it’s strategic.
China has already been testing the waters. AI-generated short dramas and micro-content have quietly exploded in popularity, flooding platforms with quick, algorithm-driven storytelling. Audiences didn’t reject it. In many cases, they consumed it at scale.
Now, the industry is taking the next step: turning those experiments into full-length films.
That’s where things get complicated.
Because while AI solves the problem of scale, it raises a different set of questions, ones the industry hasn’t fully answered yet. Who owns an AI-generated story? What happens to actors, writers, and directors when machines take over core creative roles? And perhaps most importantly, will audiences accept films that are built by systems rather than people?
There’s also a growing concern that speed could come at the cost of substance. When content becomes easier to produce, the risk isn’t just automation – it’s oversaturation. A flood of films that look polished but feel empty.
Still, momentum is clearly on AI’s side.
What’s happening in China rarely stays in China for long, especially in tech-driven industries. Streaming platforms globally are facing the same pressures: rising costs, constant demand, and shrinking attention spans. AI offers a solution that directly addresses all three.
Whether the rest of the world follows quickly or cautiously, one thing is becoming clear: filmmaking is no longer just a creative process. It’s becoming a technological one.