As you can see in the first video, some of the clips look no better than some of the images that come out of Google's DeepMind. Others, however, like the scenes from Cloud Atlas and the Jungle Book, seem significantly better-looking after being processed. It's still early days, but there are plenty of areas in both filmmaking and art where systems like this could be applied.

Right now, it's computationally intensive, but not so much that you can't expect the cost and availability of such power to drop. As MIT Tech Review explains, it takes three minutes for each frame to be processed on a system using NVIDIA's $1,000-plus Titan X graphics card. Given that Movidus' deep learning USB stick already costs less than $100 (and fits inside a USB stick), it seems likely that smart TVs of the future could have art-filtering as a feature within the decade.