Ex-Google Engineer Cecilia Shen Wants to Replace Hollywood With AI-Generated Movies
A former Google engineer is now trying to change how Hollywood works by pushing AI-generated films as the next big step in entertainment.
Cecilia Shen, a 25-year-old cofounder of Utopai Studios, is building what she believes could become a full AI-powered studio system for movies and television. Her company, based in Silicon Valley, is working on technology that can generate long-form visual content using artificial intelligence instead of traditional production crews.
The idea gained more attention after NBA star Carmelo Anthony partnered with Utopai through his Creative 7 Productions label. Anthony is helping produce AI-generated content about his life and sports stories. His investment in the company, which was not officially disclosed, is estimated by Forbes to be around $5 million, based on a reported $1 billion valuation for Utopai.
Anthony explained why he joined the project, focusing on storytelling in sports. “What stood out to me wasn’t just how advanced the technology is, but the vision and intention behind it,” he said in a statement provided to Forbes. He added that sports stories have always been strong material for entertainment, but they are often difficult and expensive to turn into films.
Shen’s path into the film industry is unusual. She was born in China and raised in Toronto, later attending the University of Waterloo before dropping out during the pandemic. She worked in AI roles at the Royal Bank of Canada and later at Google’s experimental X division, where she met her cofounder Jie Yang. In 2022, they launched their company under the name Cybever, which initially focused on AI tools for building 3D environments used in video games before shifting toward film and TV production.
The company is now part of a growing wave of AI studios entering Hollywood. According to industry estimates, more than 60 similar startups have launched since 2022, all trying to merge AI with filmmaking in different ways. Some focus on speeding up production, while others aim to fully generate movies without traditional filming.
Shen believes the real opportunity is in long-form content. “Long-form is a total empty market right now,” she said in comments reported by Forbes. “We want to really monopolize the entire long-form content market.”
Her company recently launched a platform called PAI, which allows creators to design characters, scenes, and camera movements digitally. The system can reuse assets across scenes and reduce the need for full re-rendering, which significantly lowers production costs and time.
Since launching PAI, Utopai has reported early revenue growth through licensing deals with production companies. The company has also attracted attention from investors and entertainment figures, including other athletes exploring AI-generated content.
Industry interest in AI filmmaking is growing quickly, with major studios and investors testing different approaches. At the same time, there is ongoing concern in Hollywood about how AI could affect traditional jobs in writing, acting, and production.
Shen says her goal is not just to sell software but to build a full studio system. She believes AI will allow smaller teams to produce large-scale films at a fraction of the usual cost, potentially changing how global entertainment is made and distributed.
While many in Hollywood are still unsure how far AI filmmaking will go, Shen is betting that it will become central to the future of the industry, especially in markets outside the United States where production budgets are smaller and demand for local content is growing.
For now, Utopai remains one of the most closely watched companies in the emerging AI film space, with investors, creators, and studios watching to see whether Shen’s vision of fully AI-generated Hollywood content can become reality.
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