The $500K AI Film That "Premiered at Cannes" Was Not in the Official Festival

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The $500K AI Film That 'Premiered at Cannes' Didn't Actually Premiere at Cannes - Firethering

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HomeTechThe $500K AI Film That 'Premiered at Cannes' Didn't Actually Premiere at...

The $500K AI Film That ‘Premiered at Cannes’ Didn’t Actually Premiere at Cannes

By Mohit Geryani

May 29, 2026

Last updated: May 29, 2026

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Last week an AI startup called Higgsfield announced it had premiered a fully AI-generated feature film at Cannes. The Wall Street Journal covered it. The founder posted on LinkedIn that "for decades, Cannes has been the room where new cinema gets legitimized." The story spread fast.

There was one problem. Cannes said it never happened.

"We can confirm that ‘Hell Grind’ was not screened as part of the official Festival de Cannes program," a festival spokesperson said. The film was shown at a paid third-party screening at a local theater in the town of Cannes during the festival period. That’s a meaningfully different thing and the distinction matters because the entire credibility of the announcement rested on the Cannes name.

It’s a clean example of how AI hype gets manufactured and how quickly it travels before anyone checks.

What Hell Grind actually is

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Higgsfield, a San Francisco startup valued at $1.3 billion, made a 95-minute action film called Hell Grind in two weeks using AI video generation tools including Google’s Veo 3. Total cost was $500,000. Of that, $400,000 went to compute costs, which tells you something about where AI filmmaking economics currently sit.

The film follows four street thieves whose heist goes wrong when an ancient artifact pulls one of them into the underworld. It’s campy, action-heavy, and exactly the kind of spectacle you’d expect from a proof-of-concept designed to sell Hollywood studios on AI video tools rather than win awards.

The technical process was more involved than the "just prompt an AI" framing suggests. Each prompt averaged 3,000 words. Every generation produced about 15 seconds of footage which then had to be generated multiple times with tweaks to get a usable shot. The first 25 minutes of the film required 16,181 initial video generations that became 253 final shots. Maintaining visual consistency across a feature-length film is genuinely hard with current AI tools and the team had to build detailed style prefixes into every prompt defining lighting, camera type, physics behavior, and more to avoid the over-lit artificial look that gets dismissed as slop.

"You can’t go into AI and say make me a 95-minute cool video," said Adil Alimzhanov, a content lead at Higgsfield. That’s honest and worth crediting. The work was there even if the marketing around it wasn’t.

How the Cannes claim fell apart

The venue where Hell Grind screened was the Marché du Film, which has a business relationship with the Cannes Film Festival but operates as a separate commercial marketplace with no meaningful selection process. It will screen any film that pays the fee. It has screened Sharknado. Calling it a Cannes premiere is roughly equivalent to buying an ad in the New York Times and describing yourself as a Times journalist.

When Higgsfield’s founder posted on LinkedIn implying the film had premiered at Cannes proper, a director named John Washburn replied directly. "This isn’t screening at the Festival de Cannes, which is what you’re implying. The suggestion that paying for a screening at some random theatre in the same town and at the same time as a major festival is somehow the same thing as being selected by that festival is misleading at best. Spurious bullshittery, really."

Higgsfield later defended itself by saying the Marché du Film was an accredited component of the Cannes ecosystem. That’s technically true in the same way that a hotel gift shop is part of the hotel ecosystem. The Wall Street Journal’s original article made no mention of the Marché du Film and left readers with the clear impression the film was part of the festival proper. The paper later added a correction at the bottom of its original story clarifying the film screened at the Marché...

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