Because the future isn’t becoming less human
Because the future isn’t becoming less human … it’s remembering what makes us human.
That line became the centre of a new psyborg® short film project called The Human Layer.
The idea started as a contrast to a previous experiment featuring robots drinking coffee. That film worked because it played with an unexpected idea: machines reaching for something human. Coffee. Pause. Ritual. Warmth.
For this next project, we wanted to flip the thought.
No robots.
No metallic hands.
No sci-fi glow.
Just people.
Real human moments. Shot in a premium black and white noir style. Designed to feel quiet, reflective and cinematic.
The question was simple:
In a world learning to think like machines, what do we need to remember about being human?
The idea behind The Human Layer
AI is getting faster. Tools are becoming more capable. Creative production is changing quickly.Runway describes its Gen-4 model as being able to use visual references with instructions to create images and videos with consistent styles, subjects and locations. That kind of capability changes how creative ideas can move from concept to execution. (Runway)
ElevenLabs now offers lifelike AI speech and voice tools, including text-to-speech and voice generation. This makes it possible to test narration, tone and pacing far earlier in the creative process. (ElevenLabs)
But the technology wasn’t the point of this film.
The point was restraint.
The point was taste.
The point was asking: what should we make now that making is faster?
That’s where the human layer matters.
The visual language
The film was built around simple human actions.
| Scene Type | Meaning |
| A woman speeding on a freeway | Fast |
| A man overwhelmed by a social feed | Louder |
| A phone tapping to pay | Optimised |
| Bare feet on sand | Transition |
| A messy cartoon face being drawn | Creativity |
| A real laugh | Connection |
| Hands touching texture | Craft |
| Blinds opening across a face | Clarity |
| Steam rising from coffee | Ritual |
| A person standing at Caves Beach | Intuition |
| A hand on an open book | Human return |
The images are deliberately ordinary.
That’s the point.
AI often pushes us towards spectacle. Bigger worlds. Stranger creatures. Impossible camera moves.
For The Human Layer, we moved the other way.
Small moments.
Soft movements.
Human texture.
A slower kind of meaning.
Why black and white noir?
Black and white strips the scene back to structure.
Light. Shadow. Face. Gesture. Texture.
It makes the ordinary feel significant.
A hand on a book feels different in black and white.
Steam from coffee feels like ritual.
Dust in a beam of light feels like thought.
The style also gives the project a Dark Studio feel. Not dark as in negative. Dark as in focused. Quiet. Intentional. Away from the noise.
That aligns with where psyborg® is sitting creatively right now.
Part mind. Part machine.
AI as production partner, not the hero
This project uses AI tools across image generation, voiceover testing and video animation.
But AI is not the hero of the film.
The hero is the edit.
The feeling.
The judgement.
The sequence of meaning.
That distinction matters.
The Tech Council of Australia and Microsoft’s Australia’s Generative AI Opportunity report suggested generative AI could contribute up to $115 billion annually to Australia’s economy by 2030 through improving existing industries and enabling new products and services. (Tech Council of Australia)
That’s a massive opportunity.
But for creative businesses, the opportunity isn’t just speed.
It’s better thinking.
The machine can generate.
The human must decide.
The workflow
The project was built in stages:
| Stage | Purpose |
| Storyboard | Define meaning before visuals |
| Still frames | Lock composition and emotional tone |
| Music bed | Shape the emotional pace |
| Voiceover | Add meaning and rhythm |
| AI video generation | Bring the stills to life |
| Edit refinement | Make the story breathe |
This order mattered.
Rather than generating random clips and trying to assemble meaning afterwards, the film was shaped like a traditional piece of creative direction.
The stills came first.
The music set the emotional arc.
The voiceover then helped refine the timing.
Only once the edit felt right did we begin replacing stills with generated video.
That’s the difference between using AI as a shortcut and using AI as a creative system.
The script
The voiceover is sparse by design.
The world is learning to think like machines.
Fast.
Loud.
Optimised.
But creativity was never just output.
It was instinct.
Texture.
Timing.
Taste.
Intuition.
Because the future isn’t becoming less human.
It’s remembering what makes us human.
psyborg®
Part mind. Part machine.
The script doesn’t explain too much.
It leaves space for the viewer to feel it.
What this says about brand storytelling
The Human Layer is not really a film about AI.
It’s a film about positioning.
It says something about how psyborg® sees the future of creativity.
Not anti-AI.
Not blindly pro-AI.
Not obsessed with novelty.
Instead, it asks for balance.
A brand still needs taste.
A message still needs meaning.
A business still needs judgement.
A story still needs a human pulse.
AI can help create the artefact.
But the intention must come from somewhere deeper.
Why this matters for businesses
Many businesses are asking the same question:
How do we use AI without losing who we are?
That’s the real creative challenge.
Because more content doesn’t automatically mean better communication.
More speed doesn’t automatically mean more clarity.
More automation doesn’t automatically mean more trust.
The businesses that use AI well will not simply produce more.
They will think more clearly.
They will express themselves more intentionally.
They will understand where machines help and where humans must lead.
The human layer is the advantage
AI is becoming part of the creative process. That’s not going away.
But as the tools become more common, the difference won’t be who can press the button.
The difference will be who knows why.
That’s the human layer.
Taste.
Timing.
Context.
Emotion.
Memory.
Meaning.
The machine can help us move faster.
But it can’t replace the need to know where we’re going.
Final thought
The Human Layer is an experiment.
A short film.
A Dark Studio study.
A creative test.
But it points to something bigger.
At psyborg®, we don’t see AI as a replacement for creativity. We see it as a new material. Something to shape with intent.
Because the future isn’t becoming less human.
It’s remembering what makes us human.
psyborg®
Part mind. Part machine.

Daniel Borg
Creative Director
psyborg® was founded by Daniel Borg, an Honours Graduate in Design from the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia. Daniel also has an Associate Diploma in Industrial Engineering and has experience from within the Engineering & Advertising Industries.
Daniel has completed over 2800 design projects consisting of branding, content marketing, digital marketing, illustration, web design, and printed projects since psyborg® was first founded. psyborg® is located in Lake Macquarie, Newcastle but services business Nation wide.
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