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Filmed on iPhone: Four Indian short films showcase the potential of the iPhone 17 Pro Max

by Milan
May 7, 2026
in News
iPhone 17 Pro Max Apple

Image: Apple

Apple presents the third round of its "MAMI Select: Filmed on iPhone" program: Four Indian filmmakers shot their new short films entirely on the iPhone 17 Pro Max – supported by a MacBook Pro and an iPad Pro with an M5 chip. The examples demonstrate which camera features are currently truly suitable for professional productions.

The „MAMI Select: Filmed on iPhone“ program is one of Apple’s most important international initiatives for smartphone filmmaking. In collaboration with the Mumbai Academy of Moving Image (MAMI), Apple selects emerging Indian directors each year to produce their short films entirely on an iPhone. This year, four new works are featured, showcasing how the iPhone 17 Pro Max, with its new camera platform and triple-lens architecture, can be used as a tool for sophisticated storytelling. The films are available now on MAMI’s YouTube channel.

Four films, four very different visual languages

This year's short films are by Shreela Agarwal, Ritesh Sharma, Robin Joy, and Dhritisree Sarkar. They tell four very different stories: a secret love affair on the streets of Mumbai, an exploration of divinity and humanity in Kerala, a portrait of a young outsider on Goa's beaches, and a Bengali woman who fears losing her voice. Established Indian directors, whose work has won awards at festivals such as Venice, Sundance, and the Indian National Film Awards, are involved as mentors.

The program's effectiveness is demonstrated by last year's entries: The short film Seeing Red has exceeded one million views on YouTube, and Kovarty won the award for best short film at the Bengaluru International Short Film Festival.

Which iPhone features did the directors specifically use?

iPhone 17 Pro Max Apple
Image: Apple

The films demonstrate which camera features are truly effective in professional use. Shreela Agarwal consistently used ProRes RAW for her Mumbai piece "11.11" to manage challenging nighttime lighting conditions. In post-production, the ISO values could be significantly increased, the white balance adjusted more precisely, and the streetlights' colors standardized. A key aspect of independent filmmaking: the lighting setup on set was considerably smaller than it would have been in a traditional production.

Ritesh Sharma, in turn, built his short film "She Sells Seashells" around Cinematic Mode. This function shifts the focus between different image planes, thus making the difference between reality and his protagonist's daydream visible to the viewer. For sound, Sharma used the Audio Mix feature, which selectively filters out wind and background noise. He used his iPad Pro via Sidecar as a second monitor for editing control directly on set.

iPhone 17 Pro Max Apple
Image: Apple

Robin Joy faced different challenges with "Pathanam": outdoor shots, action sequences, and a tight shooting schedule. The iPhone 17 Pro Max's vapor chamber kept the device thermally stable during long shooting days, and Action Mode even stabilized shots from a rocking boat. A key shot - an angel spreading its wings - had to be completed in three weeks instead of the originally planned three months. This was made possible by AI-powered mask tracking in Adobe Premiere Pro, which ran at a significantly higher speed locally on the MacBook Pro's GPU thanks to the Neural Accelerators.

For "Kathar Katha," Dhritisree Sarkar made extensive use of the 8x optical zoom via the 200mm telephoto lens. She mirrored a scene, for example, in her main character's eyes to make her growing rage visible - a visual language that would be virtually impossible without this focal length. She built the film's look using ProRes RAW and Apple Log 2, creating a celluloid-like appearance with pronounced grain in post-production.

What tool ecosystem is behind it?

iPhone 17 Pro Max Apple
Image: Apple

In most cases, the filmmakers didn't use the iPhone in isolation, but rather as part of a complete Apple workflow. On the hardware side, this included a MacBook Pro and an iPad Pro with an M5 chip; on the software side, it included apps like Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere Pro, and Apple's significantly enhanced Final Cut Camera 2.0, which provides the necessary capabilities for ProRes RAW, genlock synchronization, and open-gate recording. External applications such as the Blackmagic Camera app were also used, for example, for precise image composition and for Tentacle Sync-supported monitor workflows with the iPad Pro.

This toolchain makes the difference between ambitious smartphone filmmaking and actual professional production. As soon as ProRes RAW footage from the iPhone lands directly in Final Cut Pro on an M5 MacBook, even complex 4K timelines can be edited without proxies – a workflow that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago.

What the program strategically demonstrates

This year's program is more than just a marketing format. It demonstrates how the iPhone has positioned itself as a camera platform: not as a replacement for cinema cameras, but as a serious alternative for filmmakers who want to tell personal stories without large budgets. The Indian directors themselves repeatedly emphasize this point: those who aren't dependent on rented equipment packages and large lighting setups can tell different stories – and, above all, more of them.

For Apple, this is a two-pronged approach. Firstly, the iPhone Pro model is positioned as a tool for a target group that typically only considers smartphones a secondary function. Secondly, the initiative integrates the entire ecosystem: from the recording device to the editing computer and the companion app, all Apple components work together.

Apple's filmmaker strategy shows substance

With "MAMI Select: Filmed on iPhone," Apple achieves what many smartphone manufacturers attempt but rarely accomplish: the connection between hardware demo and cultural relevance. The four short films stand on their own—as films, not as product demos. The fact that the core Pro features of the iPhone 17 Pro Max are showcased feels less like a marketing ploy and more like proof of what these features are truly designed for. (Image: Apple)

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