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Report: Mx-Shell short film reportedly moves toward a Chinese feature adaptation

Posts linking the original film and a translated creator statement say the short was made by a wedding photographer in 10 days for about $415. The adaptation detail is still circulating through reposts, so treat the cost and timeline as the most concrete data points.

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Report: Mx-Shell short film reportedly moves toward a Chinese feature adaptation
Report: Mx-Shell short film reportedly moves toward a Chinese feature adaptation

TL;DR

You can watch the original Bilibili upload, trace the English-language breakout through PJaccetturo's thread, and read the translated creator notes via PJaccetturo's screenshot. The useful details are unusually concrete for an AI-film viral hit: a claimed 10-day production cycle, a claimed 3,000 RMB token bill, and a stated path from solo short to feature adaptation.

Zombie Scavenger

The clip spread because it looks finished, not because it looks like a demo. minchoi framed it as proof that AI video can already clear the bar for film craft, while ozansihay separately praised its story, narration, and structure.

Once the reposts started moving, PJaccetturo's follow-up pinned down the title as Zombie Scavenger and attributed it to MX-Shell, which gave viewers something more solid than detached screen recordings to search for.

Creator statement

The translated screenshot is where the hard numbers enter the story. It says the creator described the style as atompunk, cited WALL-E and Love, Death & Robots as reference points, said every image and video was made from self-written prompts, and said he finished post-production alone.

The same screenshot listed three details that kept getting recopied across X:

  • Production time: about 10 days.
  • Token cost: about 3,000 RMB.
  • Background: the creator had worked as a wedding photographer.

The adaptation claim came from the same translated post. According to that screenshot, the creator said he had reached a cooperation agreement with a film company and that a theatrical version would follow.

Original upload

The best source link in the evidence pool is the Bilibili page, which multiple reposts pointed to as the original home for the film. PJaccetturo's thread also linked an "original video location," which helped shift the conversation from anonymous repost to source attribution.

That matters for one practical reason: the film's most specific production claims are not visible in the clip itself. They depend on the translated creator statement and the source trail back to MX-Shell's original upload.

Four undeniable AI short films

The film also landed inside a wider showcase cycle. juliewdesign_'s repost highlighted a roundup of four AI shorts from the month, with Zombie Scavenger appearing alongside other polished pieces rather than as a one-off curiosity.

That context helps explain the reaction curve. PJaccetturo's main post called it one of the best short films he'd seen in years, not one of the best AI shorts, and the surrounding roundup suggests viewers were already calibrating against a stronger class of AI-native work than the usual benchmark reels.

Further reading

Discussion across the web

Where this story is being discussed, in original context.

On X· 4 threads
TL;DR1 post
Zombie Scavenger1 post
Original upload1 post
Four undeniable AI short films1 post
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