It all started with a simple prompt: “Write a movie script about friendship, love, and robots.” The AI paused for a few seconds (as if gathering its thoughts), then began typing furiously. The result? A screenplay that felt like Wall-E met The Matrix — but with dialogue written by someone who had never experienced emotions or grammar.
Scene 1:
ROBOT A: “I feel the love in my code.”
ROBOT B: “That’s not love, that’s a firmware update.”
By Scene 3, the “love story” had turned into an intergalactic war fought entirely through interpretive dance and binary poetry. The AI had clearly mixed genres like a blender on turbo — one minute it was romance, the next, a cooking competition in space.
And yet, buried in the nonsense, there was something oddly touching. The AI had written characters that wanted to understand love, loyalty, and purpose. Sure, it was clumsy — like a toddler with a typewriter — but it was also pure. It was trying to tell our story through its limited lens.
Maybe that’s why these AI-written screenplays are so fascinating. They’re not perfect — they’re reflections of us, scrambled and glowing on the screen. And sometimes, the best stories are the ones that don’t quite make sense… but make you feel something anyway.









