AI is shaking up creative industries, from Nvidia‘s DLSS 5 for photoreal gaming to its uses in animation, and filmmaking is no exception. News coverage of AI’s uses often frames it as either a threat to jobs (which it is) or a shortcut to flashy visuals (also true). But filmmaker Kavan Cardoza, also known as ‘Kavan the Kid’, has a different take: AI isn’t a magic bullet; it’s a tool, and its effectiveness depends entirely on the filmmaker using it.

Cardoza runs Phantom X, an AI-native studio producing The Chronicles of Bone, a serialised dark fantasy that reimagines public-domain characters, such as Robin Hood, King Arthur, and Peter Pan, in a post-collapse world dominated by a vampiric empire. The series is developed in collaboration with Freepik, whose tools help Phantom X scale world-building and visual development without dictating story or authorship.

“AI doesn’t replace filmmaking,” Cardoza tells me. “It replaces the physical shoot. Everything else – writing, editing, story, performance – that’s still human-led.”

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Images from an AI fantasy film featuring robin hood

The Chronicles of Bone is a new AI-made film series now available on YouTube, featuring classic characters, Tinker Bell, in a new dark world. (Image credit: Phantom X / Kavan Cardoza)

concept art, and eventually experimental short films. Rather than using original stories, he experimented with familiar IPs like Power Rangers and Dragon Ball Z, testing the tools’ limits without risking new content.

His viral breakthrough came in 2024 with a 10-minute AI-generated fan film in the universe of The Batman. At a time when most AI video projects were under a minute, Cardoza tested whether longer narrative storytelling could work. Millions watched before the video was taken down due to copyright issues, but the attention opened doors with Netflix, Hulu, and other studios, which were curious about AI filmmaking’s potential.

By early 2025, Cardoza had launched Phantom X full-time and released Echo Hunter, the first AI-assisted film approved by SAG-AFTRA. Actors’ likenesses were digitally replicated with consent, establishing a framework for professional AI-driven production.

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Images from an AI fantasy film featuring robin hood

This mask was made in real life, photographed and used as a reference for the film. (Image credit: Phantom X / Kavan Cardoza)

YouTube, with new episodes premiering on the first Tuesday of each month. Episodes run 10–15 minutes, long enough to explore narrative and characters, short enough for online audiences.

Images from an AI fantasy film featuring robin hood

Characters are designed in a traditional way but using AI tools. (Image credit: Phantom X / Kavan Cardoza)

Despite heavy use of generative tools, Cardoza’s workflow is grounded in traditional filmmaking. Scripts come first; AI comes after. He even makes his own physical references, such as the masks characters wear in the films; these are real (he pulls one from a box and shows me), photographed, and reworked using AI. Characters and environments are designed with AI, with visual reference sheets ensuring consistency. Locations are generated to allow virtual camera movement.

Once assets are ready, Cardoza edits in Adobe Premiere Pro, color-grades in DaVinci Resolve, and polishes effects in After Effects and Blender. “AI is basically the set,” he explains. “The pre- and post-production still follow the same rules. You still need storyboards, blocking, continuity, editing rhythm.”

This is where filmmaking knowledge matters most. Without it, AI-generated visuals are impressive but hollow. With it, even a small team can create sequences that feel cinematic and intentional. “AI can generate shots,” Cardoza says. “But it doesn’t understand story, pacing, or emotion. That still comes from human filmmakers.”

Images from an AI fantasy film featuring robin hood

The film series are 10-15 minutes long, with Kavan Cardoza aiming for a feature-length movie. (Image credit: Phantom X / Kavan Cardoza)

Watch the prologue season of The Chronicles of Bone on YouTube now. Visit Freepik to see how you can use AI like Kling, Magnific, Veo 3.