Pirate Cinema is Volume 3 of The New Machine Cinema, Hooroo Jackson's most incendiary and forward-looking collection yet: a book of film theory written from inside the revolution, where AI cinema stops asking for legitimacy and starts seizing it. Built around essays on live-action passing, agentic editing, choice-driven protagonists, procedural narrative, machine performance, and post-scarcity authorship, the volume frames cinema not as a fixed industrial object but as a mutable, pirate artform-faster, cheaper, stranger, and more alive than the old system can contain.
Surfing the Black HoleChoose Your Protagonist: My Boyfriend is a Superhero!?The True Line CutRoguelike CinemaThe History of Special Effects is the History of CinemaAgentic Cinema: A Boy and His RobotThe Pirate Cinema ManifestoSketches of Neural CinemaStrings and the Live-Action Passing ThresholdBreaking the Caste System of Independent FilmThe Infinite ProtocolNotes on the Founding RunIn these twelve essays, Jackson argues that the future of cinema belongs to the filmmaker who refuses permission.
From Strings and the Live-Action Passing Threshold to Choose Your Protagonist, from The True Line Cut to Roguelike Cinema, from The History of Special Effects is the History of Cinema to Breaking the Caste System of Independent Cinema, Pirate Cinema maps a new artistic territory where the machine is not the enemy of authorship but its accelerant. This is a manifesto for one-person cinema, a defense of outlaw creation, and a theory of film after scarcity-where the cut becomes performance, the image becomes unstable proof, and the director becomes architect of infinite possibility.
Part criticism, part prophecy, part battle cry, Pirate Cinema is essential reading for filmmakers, critics, artists, and anyone trying to understand what happens when cinema breaks out of the studio, out of the institution, and into the hands of the pirate.
Pirate Cinema is Volume 3 of The New Machine Cinema, Hooroo Jackson's most incendiary and forward-looking collection yet: a book of film theory written from inside the revolution, where AI cinema stops asking for legitimacy and starts seizing it. Built around essays on live-action passing, agentic editing, choice-driven protagonists, procedural narrative, machine performance, and post-scarcity authorship, the volume frames cinema not as a fixed industrial object but as a mutable, pirate artform-faster, cheaper, stranger, and more alive than the old system can contain.
Surfing the Black HoleChoose Your Protagonist: My Boyfriend is a Superhero!?The True Line CutRoguelike CinemaThe History of Special Effects is the History of CinemaAgentic Cinema: A Boy and His RobotThe Pirate Cinema ManifestoSketches of Neural CinemaStrings and the Live-Action Passing ThresholdBreaking the Caste System of Independent FilmThe Infinite ProtocolNotes on the Founding RunIn these twelve essays, Jackson argues that the future of cinema belongs to the filmmaker who refuses permission.
From Strings and the Live-Action Passing Threshold to Choose Your Protagonist, from The True Line Cut to Roguelike Cinema, from The History of Special Effects is the History of Cinema to Breaking the Caste System of Independent Cinema, Pirate Cinema maps a new artistic territory where the machine is not the enemy of authorship but its accelerant. This is a manifesto for one-person cinema, a defense of outlaw creation, and a theory of film after scarcity-where the cut becomes performance, the image becomes unstable proof, and the director becomes architect of infinite possibility.
Part criticism, part prophecy, part battle cry, Pirate Cinema is essential reading for filmmakers, critics, artists, and anyone trying to understand what happens when cinema breaks out of the studio, out of the institution, and into the hands of the pirate.