Entering the expo, large booths and flashy displays immediately catch your eye. But if you just stay with the exhibits, many creative details are overlooked. Director sharing sessions are closer to the real production environment.The Director’s sharing session focused on AI short film production. Directors and writers chatted casually, with minimal technical jargon—more like friendly conversation. They shared how they adjusted shot pacing and tested different story versions on the AI platform “WuJi.” Honestly, for creators, this kind of exchange is the most practical. In Hong Kong or Malaysia, teams often work with limited budgets and tight schedules. Delivering content quickly matters more than advanced tech.
AI Short Films: Saving Time for Creativity

The AI short films shown were quite polished, with visuals and editing sometimes comparable to traditional short films. Directors stressed that AI isn’t replacing humans but handling time-consuming parts. What used to take days in technical setup can now be managed by AI, freeing directors to focus on creative decisions. Many creators can relate—it’s not about lacking ideas but lacking time to realize them.
Booth Interaction: Stars Meet the Creative Team
The AJENDLESS AI MOTION booth attracted a lot of attention. When Hong Kong stars visited, they didn’t just take photos—they learned about production processes and talked with the team. This is similar to Penang Arts Festival or KL’s creative markets, where artists occasionally show up, and people gather to chat rather than watch from a distance.
The session gradually led to cross-media collaboration talks. Many partnerships aren’t finalized in meeting rooms but emerge casually by the booth or after sessions. AI short films are just the starting point, extending to social platforms, interactive content, or brand collaborations. AJENDLESS usually acts as a neutral, supportive unit, helping creators explore possibilities.

After the session, there was a simple group photo with Mr. Wen Jun, Meiya Entertainment CEO Li Dengxu, and Zocco Group founder Dr Kervis. Small as it was, it showed the warmth of industry interactions and gave creators a real sense of AI short film potential.

AI short films are not only tech experiments—they respond to real production challenges. Malaysian creators may not copy these methods immediately, but it inspires new ways to work efficiently and explore cross-media collaborations.
