The Siara film allegedly depicted an climax written by Chatp. According to media reports, the filmmaker, struggling to settle at the suitable end for romantic drama, converted to AI Chatbot briefly for inspiration. While AI is rapidly used in promotional campaigns, its role in scripting important moments for major Hindi films remains rare.
According to The Economic Times, the Writing Team had been arguing over the conclusion of the film for a week, rejecting several drafts that failed to attack the right balance between emotional depth and realism. As a creative test, an supporting writer suggested turning to the slapping. The team provided a detailed indication, underlining the travel of the characters, emotional stakes and the central conflict reaching the climax. Within seconds, AI created three fully formed ends, each written in a dialogue-rich style.
A version attracted the attention of the room. It proposed a bittersweet scene at a train station, where the major couples exchanged a final smile before riding in separate trains in a manner. The concept added classic Bollywood romance elements with a restrained, modern tone. Some team members admitted that the AI version lifted an emotional weight that was amazing, given that it came from a machine that had no experience.
However, the suggestion did not make it in the final script. The director later stated that the ending of the slap was “technically sound”, it lacked the cultural subtlety and emotional layering required for the story. The team also believed that allowing AI to define such an important moment could be central to tell human creativity to tell the Bollywood story.
Instead, filmmakers chose an alternative end, which maintained emotional intensity, but developed the characters in a way that was felt for the origin of the story. This decision reflects the ongoing discussion in the film industry about the role of AI in creative work. While AI devices can provide quick, polished ideas, human writers bring cultural insight, emotional intuition, and living experiences that cannot repeat algorithms.
Siara experiment shows how AI can soon become part of script development in Indian cinema, not as a replacement for writers, but as a topical intellectual partner. As more filmmakers test AI in creative processes, the balance between technical support and human story will be a central question for the future of Bollywood.