AI Ends the 100 Men vs. A Gorilla Debate

This Week's Most Creative AI

Here’s what we’re covering today:

  • Framer Zooms Out on Abbey Road

  • Mr. Abu Joe Unleashes Gorilla Mayhem

  • Natasha Lyonne Enters the Uncanny Valley

As always these links and over 500 other AI projects are available at realcreative.ai.

Did a friend forward you this email? Sign up for free here!

WATCH 👀

  • Mr. Abu Joe turns the internet’s favorite absurd debate, 100 men vs. a gorilla, into a cinematic, AI-powered spectacle.

  • Created in just a few days using Midjourney, Kling, Runway, and more, the video feels like a full-on action movie trailer for a fight that should never exist.

Neural Viz: This Is News

  • Neural Viz drops a surreal and fun Channel 12 news broadcast where everything is somehow both dead serious and totally unhinged.

  • Exploding children, off-the-rails correspondents, and a paranoid sports segment all brought to life with Runway, Kling, Sora, and more.

Dave Clark & Promise: NinjaPunk Trailer

  • NinjaPunk is a hybrid sci-fi short film set in 2065 Los Angeles, blending live-action performances with AI-generated elements to tell the story of a cybernetic ninja's quest for vengeance.

  • Dave Clark, co-founder and Chief Creative Officer of Promise Studios, leads the project, utilizing a combination of generative AI tools and traditional filmmaking for the project.

TRY ✍️

  • Framer turns the Beatles' Abbey Road cover into a Ghibli-style cartoon, then zooms out to reveal the traffic jam caused by the crossing.

  • He shares a full breakdown using ChatGPT, Runway Gen-4, CapCut, and Domo AI to animate and assemble the scene step-by-step. 

READ 🤓

  • Natasha Lyonne is directing and starring in Uncanny Valley, a sci-fi film she co-wrote with Brit Marling about a teen whose life is upended by a VR game.

  • The film is produced by Asteria, an AI-focused studio Lyonne co-founded, using Moonvalley's Marey model trained only on licensed content.

  • It’s one of the first Hollywood projects to lean into “clean” AI while sidestepping the copyright concerns fueling recent industry backlash.

  • Photographer Dahlia Dreszer trained generative AI tools for over a year to mimic her vivid, maximalist style, resulting in one fully AI-created piece in her Miami show.

  • Her exhibition features an AI-generated clone of herself guiding visitors and invites attendees to create their own art in her style using AI.

  • Dreszer sees AI not as a threat but as a “supercharger” for creativity, blending tech, nature, and tradition in a way that sparks curiosity and dialogue.

Thanks for reading!

We’re so glad you tuned in. Please share this with fellow creatives, AI aficionados, and everyone in between!


Have any suggestions, questions, or additional feedback?
Email us! [email protected]