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In 2026, a 75-Minute Film Was Made for $2,000
Description
This episode looks at Dreams of Violets — a 75-minute feature film depicting Iran's 2026 pro-democracy movement, made for $2,000 by two brothers who fled the country in 2009, using generative AI because live-action production would have put everyone involved at risk.
It reflects on what that number actually means: a short self-produced film can easily exceed $2,000 on equipment rental and editing alone, and yet this became a feature screened at major festivals.
The episode draws a quiet contrast with the previous post about the SpaceX IPO and its $1.8 trillion valuation — not to rank them, but to hold them side by side. One story about overwhelming physical infrastructure, and another about two people in exile finding a way to tell their country's story when no safe way existed to tell it.
There's also a question raised about what falls away when the cost barrier drops — not just "things that couldn't be made," but voices that couldn't be heard. How many works trying to depict Iran's democracy movement never made it into the world, quietly accumulating, for want of funding or safety or distribution.
A quiet look at a moment when the question shifts — not how to make something, but who gets to speak.