The Tools.
The Truth.
A filmmaker's honest account of how AI fits — and does not fit — into the making of ILLUMINE.
I want to tell you something before you hear a single note from this film.
I am a Hawaiian-Filipino filmmaker with over 30 years behind cameras — directing, shooting, editing, producing. I have credits on distributed Hawaiian films. I have a cinematography degree from San Francisco State University. I know what a real set looks like. I know what it costs to get there. And I know exactly what I am building.
From Bangkok, I have built 20 original songs, a 70,000-word novel, 83 screenplay scenes, a committed Grammy-winning producer, and a vision that spans Bangkok to Hawaii, Thai classical dance to Hawaiian hula. This project has no studio, no label, and no investors attached — yet. What it has is everything that comes before those things: the story, the songs, the screenplay, and the proof that one filmmaker with thirty years of craft and the right tools can take a project further in pre-production than most development deals ever reach.
To hear these songs before live recording, I used SUNO — an AI music tool — the way a composer sketches melodies on an upright piano at 2am before the orchestra is ever booked. To organize story structure, I used Claude AI as a writing partner — the way a writer uses a dramaturg or a trusted editor. To visualize characters before casting, I used Midjourney and Higgsfield for development imagery.
What AI did not do: AI did not write these songs. AI did not feel the loss of vision that drives Larry's character. AI did not grow up between two cultures. AI did not spend years living in Bangkok learning to see this city the way Naiyana sees it. AI did not decide this story needed to be told. That was me — building this across two continents, in two languages, because I believe this film deserves to exist.
This page is my complete accounting of every tool used, every decision made, and every protection built into this project — for the musicians, singers, dancers, and actors who will bring ILLUMINE to life. Transparent means you can see through to every pocket. Nothing is hidden. Nothing needs to be.
What serious work
actually looks like.
Not a pitch deck. The actual process.
I am 65 years old, based in Bangkok, Thailand — and I am building one of the most ambitious independent musical film projects in development today. A completed novel. A finished screenplay. 133+ recorded tracks across 20 songs. A committed Grammy-winning producer. This is what the work looks like when someone refuses to wait for permission.
I am a cinematographer, not a software engineer. The AI tools that make ILLUMINE possible to build independently — SUNO, Claude, Midjourney, Higgsfield, Netlify, Logic Pro for iPad — were each learned from scratch, through direct application to the project itself. That is how filmmakers have always worked: you master what the story demands.
Every tool on this page was chosen deliberately, used purposefully, and paid for personally. This is a self-funded pre-production operation, built with exactly the discipline and financial accountability that a production of this scale will require when investors come on board. The budget constraints of this phase are features, not limitations — they prove the project can be managed.
A cinematography degree from San Francisco State and thirty years shooting distributed features gave me the creative and professional foundation. What the AI tools added was scale — the ability to hear every song, visualize every character, and build a full pitch package without a development deal. That is a significant capability, and I am not shy about using it.
What you're looking at — this website, these 133+ tracks, this novel, this screenplay — represents the most complete independent pre-production package most investors will ever see at this stage. I built ILLUMINE. The tools made it possible to show you all of it.
Every Tool
I Actually Use
What each tool does — and what it absolutely does not do.
The Case
for the Tool
These are the arguments that honest, thoughtful people are making in 2026 — from filmmakers, producers, legal scholars, and working musicians. Not to silence the debate, but to advance it.
The Dangers
I Take Seriously
Anyone who says AI in creative work carries no risks is not paying attention. I am paying attention.
- Copyright overlap: AI music tools trained on existing songs can inadvertently produce similarities to copyrighted works. ILLUMINE's final music will be composed and recorded by real musicians — eliminating this risk entirely in the finished film.
- Likeness and image rights: AI-generated character visuals can resemble real people without intent. All development images are for internal pitch use only and will never be used commercially. Real actors will be cast with proper contracts.
- Authorship ambiguity: If AI writes your story, who owns it? In ILLUMINE's case this is not ambiguous — the story, characters, dialogue, and emotional architecture are documented in my files across years of development. The U.S. Copyright Office confirmed in 2025 that AI-assisted work with meaningful human authorship is fully protectable.
- Displacement of working artists: I believe this risk is real and serious. ILLUMINE's plan is to employ real singers, real musicians, real choreographers, and real actors. The AI demos exist only until the budget exists to replace them with living performers.
- Deepfake and misrepresentation: The same tools that help me visualize characters can be weaponized for non-consensual likenesses. I do not use AI to simulate or impersonate any real person's voice or appearance — in development materials or publicly.
How I'm
Protecting the Work
When the budget arrives,
the humans arrive first.
Every AI demo will be replaced. Every character sketch will give way to a real face. Every synthesized harmony will become a real voice in a real room. The AI tools built the bridge. The artists will walk across it.