"Style is not decoration;

it is the atmosphere

through which a story

breathes."

Where Imagination Burns, Breaks, and Rebuilds Itself

There is something quietly incendiary about Lisa Brunner’s work.

Not loud. Not declarative. Not engineered for spectacle.

Instead, it smolders — somewhere between memory and machine, between control and surrender. Her journey into AI filmmaking does not read like a pivot. It feels more like a return: to instinct, to play, to a kind of creative sovereignty that predates permission.

Raised in an environment where imagination was not only allowed but embodied, Lisa’s earliest experiences with storytelling were tactile, mischievous, and alive. Fire in garden canisters. Dolls in disaster films. Improvised worlds stitched together with curiosity rather than rules.

What emerges now, decades later, through generative AI, is not a break from that origin — but its evolution.

The Interview

Q: You began creating films as a child using Super 8 and later pursued figurative expressionism when it was considered out of step with the times. How did these early creative choices shape your willingness to explore emerging technologies like AI today?


 

Q. Your career spans copywriting, journalism, photography, art direction, and multimedia design. What were the key milestones that guided your transition from traditional creative disciplines into cutting-edge generative AI video work?


 

Q. During your time working on advertising concept development at Swatch Group, you helped craft visual narratives for luxury brands. How did your experience working within luxury brands influence the way you approach storytelling and aesthetics in AI-generated film today?


 

Q. You’ve described AI not as a shortcut, but as a form of creative freedom — sometimes unpredictable and even dissonant. How do you collaborate with that unpredictability while still maintaining a strong artistic voice?


 

Q. You’ve explored sensitive themes such as domestic violence and confidence-building initiatives through AI video. How do you see generative tools empowering more women to tell personal or underrepresented stories in filmmaking?


 

Q. Many young women are just beginning to explore AI and creative technology. What advice or encouragement would you offer to help them grow with confidence and find their own voice in this rapidly evolving space?


Closing Reflection

Lisa Brunner does not treat AI as a tool. She treats it as weather.

Something that moves through the work. Something that resists containment. Something that, when approached with too much control, goes silent.

Her practice is not about mastering the machine. It is about listening to it.

In a field still dominated by spectacle and speed, her work exists in another register—slower, stranger, more intimate. A space where uncertainty is not a flaw, but a condition of meaning.

And perhaps that is where the future of AI storytelling will be shaped.

Not only in power.
But in perception.

A quieter revolution.

One that does not announce itself.

But changes everything nonetheless.


Connect With Lisa

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