AE GPT plugin launches
- AE GPT v1.2 turns After Effects and Premiere Pro into prompt-driven tools with an agent mode for multi-step scripts. - The $29 one-time plugin supports multi-model workflows including GPT-5.4 and local inference via Ollama. - Creators demonstrated tasks like auto-building neon glow titles, suggesting affordable AI layering inside motion and compositing pipelines (x.com).
AE GPT, a new $29 plugin sold through aescripts, adds prompt-driven controls to Adobe After Effects and Premiere Pro and can now run multi-step actions inside a composition. (aescripts.com) The developer, SUZA VFX, says version 1.2 adds an “Agent Mode” that writes and executes ExtendScript from plain-English prompts, alongside chat-style help for expressions, effects and troubleshooting. The product page lists support for After Effects, Premiere Pro, Windows and macOS. (aescripts.com) Adobe’s own documentation describes ExtendScript as the JavaScript-based scripting system that can reorder layers, replace text and automate other tasks in After Effects. AE GPT is built on top of that scripting layer, turning text prompts into those scripted actions. (helpx.adobe.com) The plugin page says AE GPT 1.2 supports OpenAI, Anthropic and Google models, including GPT-5.4, Claude Opus 4.6, Claude Sonnet 4.6 and Gemini 3.1 Pro. It also says the panel can detect local Ollama models such as Llama, Mistral, DeepSeek and Qwen for offline use. (aescripts.com) That puts the tool in a part of the Adobe ecosystem that already depends heavily on third-party extensions. Adobe says both After Effects and Premiere Pro support outside plugins and panels that extend the apps’ built-in workflows. (helpx.adobe.com 1) (helpx.adobe.com 2) In motion design terms, the pitch is speed on repetitive setup work. AE GPT says it can read the active composition’s layers, effects, properties and expressions, then generate project-specific answers or execute steps like building scenes and applying effects. (aescripts.com) SUZA’s site says Premiere Pro support arrived in version 1.1, extending the panel beyond compositing into editing workflows. Adobe separately says Premiere supports third-party extensions and custom panels through its plugin system. (suzagear.com) (helpx.adobe.com) The launch also lands as Adobe continues shifting its own app extension stack. Adobe’s developer docs say Premiere now supports UXP, a newer plugin standard for persistent panels and commands, while many After Effects automation tasks still rely on scripting. (developer.adobe.com) (helpx.adobe.com) The result is a cheaper, one-time-purchase tool aimed at creators who want artificial intelligence inside familiar Adobe panels rather than in a separate app. The early demos focus less on full video generation than on speeding up the layer-by-layer work that still defines most After Effects projects. (aescripts.com) (x.com)