Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

NotebookLM now lets you turn your work and ideas into cinematic videos

Google's AI-powered research assistant can now transform your notes and documents into immersive videos with slick animations.

Add as a preferred source on Google
NotebookLM Video Overviews featured.
Google

If you’ve ever wished to turn your research notes into something more visually appealing than slides, Google’s NotebookLM just made that a reality. The latest update for the research assistant upgrades its Video Overviews feature, allowing it to create “cinematic” videos based on your notes.

When Google first debuted Video Overviews last year, the feature could only create basic narrated slideshows from your notes. With the new “Cinematic Video Overviews,” NotebookLM can now “create unique, immersive videos tailored to you.” Google says that this new functionality relies on a trio of advanced AI models, including Gemini 3, Nano Banana Pro, and Video 3, to generate “fluid animations and rich, detailed visuals.”

The company adds that Gemini acts like a creative director, deciding on the narrative flow, visuals, and format to best highlight what’s in your notes. This means that the feature isn’t just summarizing your research, it’s turning it into a story with proper pacing, visual cues, and style choices designed to make your material more engaging and easier to understand.

Recommended Videos

Unlike other AI-powered video creation tools, NotebookLM’s Cinematic Video Overviews are based entirely on your uploaded notes and documents, so everything included is relevant and true to your research. As such, these videos can help students, researchers, and professionals quickly grasp complex material or prepare presentations without manually crafting visuals.

The Cinematic Video Overviews feature is rolling out in English for users aged 18 and older with a Google AI Ultra subscription. It’s available in NotebookLM on both web and mobile.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
TSMC’s latest chip packaging breakthrough promises lower costs and better performance
Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says the new CoPoS technology could make AI chips cheaper and more powerful.
TSMC Silicon wafer

Making chips smaller has dominated the semiconductor conversation for years, but TSMC's next big leap may come from how those chips are packaged instead. According to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the company is developing a new Chip-on-Panel-on-Substrate, or CoPoS, technology that promises lower manufacturing costs while delivering better performance for future AI processors.

TSMC's CoPoS packaging could make future AI chips both cheaper and faster

Read more
Best laptops coming in 2026 after Computex
From RTX Spark powerhouses to next-gen ultrabooks, these laptops are truly worth waiting for.
ASUS ROG Strix Scar 18 Computex 2026 Other

Every Computex promises the next big thing, but only a handful of laptops actually feel worthy of the hype. After spending time exploring the show floor and seeing these devices up close, one thing became abundantly clear: 2026 isn't just about faster processors. It's about smarter laptops, better portability, and AI features that are finally starting to feel useful instead of being another sticker on the palm rest.

A big part of that shift is NVIDIA's new RTX Spark platform, which made its way into several premium creator machines this year. Rather than diving into its technical details yet again, let's focus on the laptops themselves, because each manufacturer has taken the platform in a very different direction.

Read more
The Biggest PC hardware trends from Computex 2026
These six trends could define the next chapter of PC computing.
MSI MAG Gaming setup at Computex 2026

Every Computex has its headline-grabbing announcements. There's always a faster processor, a shinier graphics card, or a laptop that's somehow even thinner than last year's model. But after spending several days wandering the halls of Computex 2026, talking to engineers, trying products, and occasionally getting lost between exhibition booths, I came away with a very different takeaway. That said, this year's show wasn't really about individual products. Rather, it was about the direction the industry is heading. Instead of chasing flashy specifications for the sake of marketing slides, manufacturers finally seem focused on solving real problems.

The MacBook Neo effect is impossible to ignore

Read more