An AI video creation product that generates cinematic videos from prompts and images.

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Higgsfield said its 95-minute action-fantasy Hell Grind will make its North American premiere at AI on the Lot on May 29. The screening gives the event a theatrical centerpiece alongside shorts, workshops, and creator meetups.
Higgsfield says Claude users can now turn a video link into clipped shorts with aspect-ratio and subtitle controls through Personal Clipper. The Claude-side workflow also adds Viral Presets Pack 2, so try it if you want more short-form generation inside chat.
Higgsfield posted a 1-minute one-prompt movie demo and said Supercomputer routed sub-tasks across GPT-5.5 Pro, Opus 4.7, Gemini 3.1, Seedance, Veo, and Kling. A follow-up sports clip makes the workspace pitch more concrete, so try the setup if you want multi-model production.
Higgsfield says its new preset pack puts more than 18 trending formats behind one click, from baseball clips to neon intros and fantasy reveals. Creator demos pair those presets with Supercomputer, but the examples remain short social-format sequences.
Higgsfield launched Supercomputer, a cloud agent that routes work across GPT 5.5, Opus 4.7, Gemini, Seedance 2.0, Nano Banana, and built-in campaign tools. It matters because brand memory, connectors, and generation now sit in one creative workspace instead of separate model tabs.
Higgsfield opened an experimental preview that scores uploaded clips for viral potential and hook strength, then demoed it inside an MCP loop with Ad Reference. The preview currently does not consume credits, giving creators a measurable feedback layer for short-form ad iteration.
Higgsfield says Ad Reference MCP lets agents ingest winning video ads and generate new variants around the same patterns. The launch lands alongside Luma campaign builders and creator reports of Claude-and-Seedance phone-demo pipelines, pointing to repeatable ad iteration systems rather than one-off prompts.
Higgsfield launched Canvas, a node-based workspace for repeatable content pipelines from brainstorming through final cut. Posts around the launch also pointed to new MCP hooks, tying the canvas approach to ad automation and team production workflows; test the graph if you need a structured build path.
Creators documented GPT Image 2 plus Seedance 2.0 workflows across Freepik, Higgsfield, and Mitte for ads, animation tests, and uncanny short clips. The pairing turns better still generation into repeatable motion pipelines, though queues and setup still slow execution.
Mitte creators showed Seedance 2.0 clip extension turning one to three images into 90-second shorts, while BeatBandit and Higgsfield were used to split scripts into shots for daily microdrama runs. The workflow matters because creators are moving from isolated 10-15 second clips toward repeatable short-film and episodic production.
Higgsfield said a team made a 23-minute sci-fi pilot in four days, and a public breakdown detailed moodboards, Blender blocking, Claude prompts, and XML edit handoff. The pipeline matters because it handles multi-director planning, voice consistency, and post.
Creators say Higgsfield's Marketing Studio can turn one product link into nine ad formats, from UGC to TV spots, with face and brand consistency. Multiple posts also cite about $0.347 per generation, but that pricing detail is user-reported.
Gossip Goblin released The Patchwright on YouTube after teasing a Seedance-built fantasy short. Creators are using Seedance stacks for multi-minute story scenes and even full-film planning.
Freepik removed plan and region gates on Seedance 2.0, and Runway opened the model to all paid tiers. Posts about Higgsfield and MovieFlow also point to broader access and free trials, so creators can test availability across more platforms.
Seedance 2.0 is now appearing in creator apps including Topview, Higgsfield, NemoVideo and OpenArt, with users sharing first-last-frame, Omni Reference and aspect-ratio-fill workflows. The model is moving from demo clips into controllable scene building, so teams should watch pricing, refs and prompt rules closely.
Freepik opened Seedance 2.0 to Business and Enterprise users in 150+ countries, while creator posts also showed launches on Higgs and Dreamina. Access still requires business verification, and Freepik says the model is unavailable in the US and Canada.
Higgsfield's Cinema Studio III community page opened for verified business-plan early access, and creator threads say the release adds native audio plus a much larger style and camera library. It matters because the tool shifts from isolated shots toward fuller cinematic scene generation, though current access appears gated.
Promotional posts around Higgsfield Original Series say Arena Zero licensed a 22-year-old bartender's face in a seven-figure deal. Treat the figure as unverified, but watch this as AI-native series test likeness licensing as a casting model.
A widely shared thread claims Higgsfield paid more than $1 million to license one creator's likeness for Soul ID and a full-length AI series. Track the business model, but verify contract terms and production claims independently before treating it as a template.
Higgsfield opened Original Series, an AI-film platform with pilots, audience voting, and a slate shaped by its recent $500K creator push. Study the current slate before pitching, since it now acts as a live benchmark for what the platform wants.