New Delhi: In a category crowded with demonstrations, demos and technology claims, SimplifyGenAI has chosen a more compelling route to showcase generative AI’s capabilities: creating a film that serves as both a creative narrative and a proof of concept.
The studio’s 111-second AI-generated short film features co-founders Gurleen Khurana and Daksh Sharma as the central characters, taking viewers through a series of visually distinct worlds—from a desert battlefield and space combat sequence to an anime-inspired forest, an underwater environment and a corporate boardroom. The objective is clear: demonstrate how far AI-powered video creation has progressed from experimental outputs to commercially viable storytelling.
At its core, the film addresses a question increasingly being asked by marketers and brand teams: can AI-generated video deliver production quality suitable for real campaigns? Instead of answering through presentations or case studies, SimplifyGenAI turns the question into the campaign itself
The strategic strength of the initiative lies in its ability to showcase versatility. By moving across multiple genres and visual styles within a single narrative, the film highlights how generative AI can compress production timelines while expanding creative possibilities. For marketers evaluating AI as a content production tool, the project positions AI not merely as an ideation platform but as a scalable execution engine.
Speaking about the project, Gurleen Khurana, Co-founder, SimplifyGenAI, said: “The brief we keep getting is: ‘show us what’s actually possible, not what’s coming.’ So we stopped putting it in a deck and started putting it in a film. We used ourselves as the cast because we wanted the proof to be as direct as possible.”
Adding further perspective, Daksh Sharma, Co-founder, SimplifyGenAI, said: “The interesting thing about AI video at this stage is that the gap between idea and execution has collapsed. What used to be a six-week production is now an iteration cycle. That changes how creative teams should be thinking about content volume, personalisation, and campaign speed.”
Beyond its technical showcase, the film also hints at a broader shift in content creation. By placing the founders themselves inside high-production-value cinematic environments, the project demonstrates how AI tools can lower traditional barriers associated with casting, scale and production infrastructure. The result is greater creative ownership and the ability for creators to place themselves directly at the centre of their stories.
















