Business InsiderSources quoted as sayingGoogle recently launched a new film and television project called "100 Zeroes" and cooperated with Range Media Partners, the film production company of "Bob Dylan: A Complete Unknown" and "Longlegs".
In the collaboration project, Google will promote its own services and products through film content, including having characters use Android devices, but the greater focus is on promoting the overall positivity of technology through content, so that the general public can better understand the changes that current technology can bring.
According to reports, the "100 Zeroes" project was launched last year and used funding to support the promotion and marketing of the horror movie "Cuckoo". Google expects to use this project to help produce more film and television works for Generation Z produced by independent studios. The content may be played through mainstream streaming service platforms such as Netflix, but may not include Google's own YouTube platform.
Google emphasized that the "100 Zeroes" project mainly uses its resources to help more film and television studios create content, integrate Google's artificial intelligence, XR and other technical resources into content production, and at the same time expand the application scope of Google's technical resources and products through film and television content.
In addition to collaborating with Range Media Partners on film content production, Google is currently also working with Range Media Partners on a collaborative project called "AI On Screen," which funds short film content related to artificial intelligence and even assists in the production of some works as long-form content.
Similarly, Google announced during this year’s Google NEXT 2025 event thatPartnering with the Sphere Theatre in Las Vegas, and used artificial intelligence technology to bring the 1939 film "The Wizard of Oz" to the huge curved screen inside the Sphere for playback, thereby presenting more immersive images and creating a new digital film and television immersive experience, aiming to attract more people to buy tickets and return to physical theaters to watch movies.



