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Chinese Young Man's AI Short Goes Viral Abroad! Hollywood Director Searches Online: Wants to Hire Him

A young Chinese creator, Mx-Shell, an amateur filmmaker from Yunnan with no formal film training, has gone viral internationally with his AI-generated short film "Zombie Scavenger." Created independently in about 10 days using the Chinese AI video tool Seedance 2.0 at a minimal cost, the film features a robot cowboy in a post-apocalyptic world. Its unique atomic-punk style and cinematic quality caught the attention of Hollywood. The film initially gained little traction on Chinese platform Bilibili. However, after PJ Ace, founder of LA-based AI studio Genre.ai, shared it on X (formerly Twitter), praising it as "one of the best short films I've seen in recent years," it quickly garnered millions of views overseas. PJ Ace then publicly sought to hire the unknown director, sparking a cross-platform search. The creator, who doesn't speak English, was unaware of the overseas buzz until Chinese internet users relayed the message. Connection was eventually made via a QQ email address shared in Bilibili comments, and Mx-Shell received a job offer from the Hollywood director. The article highlights this as a case of "talent export." It argues that while China's competitive AI tool market lowers technical barriers, true success still relies on individual creativity, aesthetic judgment, and narrative skill—qualities Mx-Shell demonstrated. His story exemplifies how AI tools can empower previously unseen creators with compelling ideas to reach a global audience, even if initial recognition sometimes comes from abroad before reverberating back home.

marsbit05/14 07:33

Chinese Young Man's AI Short Goes Viral Abroad! Hollywood Director Searches Online: Wants to Hire Him

marsbit05/14 07:33

Exporting to Domestic Sales: The Chinese-style Outbound Journey of an AI Short Film

From Export to Domestic Boom: The Chinese-Style Overseas Journey of an AI Short Film The story begins with PJ Ace, a prominent Hollywood AI filmmaker, launching a public search on X for the creator of a stunning AI-generated short film titled "Zombie Scavenger." The film, featuring a robot cowboy in a post-apocalyptic wasteland, impressed Ace with its quality, which he estimated would have cost $500,000 and six months pre-AI. The trail led back to China. The creator, Mx-Shell, is a self-described amateur from China with a photography and music background. Using ByteDance's AI video tool, Seedance 2.0, he independently produced the short in about ten days for a minimal cost. Ironically, while the film went viral overseas after Ace's endorsement, it initially gained little traction on Chinese platforms like Bilibili. This sparked a "cross-server" search. Ace posted in English on X, while Mx-Shell, who doesn't speak English, posted his QQ email in Chinese comment sections. With netizens' help, they connected. Ace extended an invitation, asking if Mx-Shell was interested in becoming a Hollywood director. The article highlights this as a case of "talent export" or "brilliance going overseas." A creator in China, using domestic AI tools and computing power, captured global attention first. This "export-to-domestic-sales" path succeeded due to China's competitive, low-cost AI video tool market and its vast pool of untapped creative talent. Mx-Shell's success underscores that AI lowers production barriers, but core creativity, aesthetic judgment, and storytelling sense remain uniquely human. His path—individual, low-budget, and quality-driven—contrasts with the industrialized, capital-intensive route of bulk-producing AI short dramas for overseas markets. His story, spontaneous and beyond any corporate marketing plan, serves as powerful validation for tools like Seedance 2.0. The piece concludes that while China has many creators whose traditional barriers (equipment, funds, teams) are being dismantled by AI, the challenge of visibility remains. Until a robust domestic AI creative ecosystem develops, this indirect route of gaining overseas recognition first may continue to be a viable path for Chinese talent.

marsbit05/14 04:24

Exporting to Domestic Sales: The Chinese-style Outbound Journey of an AI Short Film

marsbit05/14 04:24

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