The FilmSpark Agent is a director's assistant that lives inside your project. It reads your whole film, takes instructions in plain language, and proposes the work for you to approve. You stay in the chair. It does the clicking.
Tell it "change the actor's jacket to red," "add a hat to this character," or "swap the lead across the whole project," and it figures out the steps, picks the right model, and shows you the plan before anything touches your storyboard.
Here's just some of what it can do today — we encourage you to be creative and try new things with it as well.

ℹ️ Availability: The Agent is live for Pro and Ultimate subscribers. Enter your own API key to use it. Credit estimates are shown for new image and video generations.
The Agent reads your script, scenes, shot list, characters, and the current state of your storyboard. You don't re-explain what you're working on or paste context into every request.
That awareness runs deep. It can summarize the project, list every scene with descriptions and shot counts, pull script snippets for continuity, and break any shot down to its camera settings, lighting, and reference images. It tracks your actors, locations, and props, including their visual descriptions and key features.
It also reads what you currently have selected in the interface, so a request like "fix the lighting on this one" lands on the right shot.
Nothing gets written to your project automatically. Every change arrives as a proposal card you review and approve. The Generate button glows when something's ready for you.
If a request involves several moves, the Agent shows the full execution plan in a side panel before it runs. You see every step it intends to take. No black box.
When one step in a multi-step plan misses, you retry just that step instead of starting the whole thing over.


You can edit a finished shot by describing the change, and the Agent edits the existing image rather than regenerating from scratch. "Remove the boots, fill with mud." "Add a hat to this character." It picks the right model, runs the edit, and drops the result back into the shot.