AI reshaping industry: New UW-Stout course sets AI-use as baseline competency in filmmaking

Wheeler’s ‘Relic’ offers students glimpse into possibilities as they create original films
Abbey Goers | January 14, 2026

This summer at UW-Stout, students in a new AI Assisted Film and Video Production course will use AI tools from pre-production concepts to completion, generating scripts, storyboards, shot lists, visual effects, video, music, voice-overs and sound effects to produce a short film.

With the course, UW-Stout video production faculty are establishing AI use in filmmaking as a baseline competency. 

“The core philosophy of the course is that AI tools are utilized to handle the technical ‘grunt work,’” Assistant Professor Jonny Wheeler said. “By offloading labor-intensive tasks, we are opening the potential for a high level of creativity, allowing students to focus entirely on their narrative vision without being limited by traditional budget or production constraints.”

An AI image of a chimpanzee

With creative freedom over their storylines, students will develop a complete concept package for an original film. The specific deliverables will include a creative pitch document, a sizzle reel and a short video teaser.

The course will incorporate AI-generated images and short films as examples, including “Relic” by Wheeler. “Relic” is loosely based on the Old English epic poem “Beowulf,” but which takes place on a post-human Earth with an intelligent ape as the hero.

An AI image of a futuristic city taken over by jungle

The film is set in the overgrown, futuristic ruins of a once-great city. The lone warrior navigates this concrete wasteland to hunt down a powerful, ancient weapon to end a reign of terror. His journey leads him into the heart of a monster’s lair, where he must use this artifact to vanquish the creature or face extinction.

Wheeler was inspired by “Beowulf” and the famous quote by science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke: “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” 

A monster with antlers and firey breath stalks through a cave

“I wanted to take the ‘magic’ of the Beowulf tale and give it a technological origin – reimagining the mythical swords and monsters as remnants of a high-tech past,” Wheeler said. “Using AI allowed me to cast an ape as the lead and create a massive, ruined world – elements that would have been impossible for me to film live with a meager budget.”

The course, possibly a first-of-its-kind in the Universities of Wisconsin, was developed by professors Keif Oss, Co O’Neill and Wheeler. 

UW-Stout’s School of Art & Design is one of the largest public art schools in the Midwest. It offers bachelor’s degrees in animation and digital mediagame design and development-artgraphic design and interactive mediaillustrationindustrial and product designinterior designstudio artarts administration and entrepreneurshipfashion design and development; and video production, and an M.F.A. in design. UW-Stout also has a new program in game and media studies.


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