If you look at the AI landscape, a majority of its usage in the film and television industry has been pretty controversial. Bringing dead actors to life on a screen, using AI to record vintage songs that were never completed, or just using it to film scenes or handle any other part of the creative process — the backlash has been pretty vocal. But there are a few slivers of hopeful AI usage, too, and Google just delivered one of those in a heartwarming fashion using Gemini AI.
I wonder the world never archived
This is how the story goes. In 1959, Brazilian football legend Pele scored a goal. And in his own words, it was the best goal of his career. The “Black Pearl” pulled off three consecutive sombreros past the defenders, performed a knee flick past the goalkeeper, and then headed the ball into the net. Getting past multiple opponents, without the ball ever touching the ground, and finishing it off without a perfect header. It’s something you rarely ever see, even at the highest levels of professional football. The problem? It was never filmed.
The “Gol da Rua Javari” was only witnessed by the thousand of fans and other players on the pitch, only a handful of whom are still alive. The only archival memory was an old photogaraph of the header moment. Google’s team conducted interviews with people how saw the even in person, some six decades, and pieced together Pele’s steps. Then, using photographs of the stadium, fans, and other players on the ground, a vision was developed of how the events unfolded.
Next, Google’s team recreated the whole scene with real humans in the same stadium where Pele scored the goal. For accuracy, they even created the heavy leather ball from that era, alongside Pele’s dark boots, and even the uniforms. The whole act was mapped, somewhat like motion capture in films, but without any of the specialized dresses and gear involved.
The whole foundation was fed into a system, and using Gemini Omni, Nano Banana Pro image generator, and the Google Veo video engine, the captured data was restyled and given a vintage look resembling the old photographs. Characters were replaced (the stunt person wearing the iconic No. 10 jersey was swapped with Pele’s digital likeness) and the whole stadium from that fateful match in 1959 was recreated.
A feat reanimated from the pages of history
“To ensure the generations looked as period accurate as possible, we ran the digital output through a filmout machine, capturing the distinct look and feel of 1950s cinema,” Google writes in its blog. It was a lot of work. But the end result is simply stunning. Seeing Pele’s legendary goal for the first time in action, the sheer ball skill, and on-field mastery come to life on video is a sight to behold.

The fact that it happened with the consent of Pele’s family, and with support from footballers, fans, and real historians, is something that seprates it from your usual cash-grab AI deployment. ““He would be so proud to see all this happening. He’d always say it was a shame that the goal was never recorded. So being able to relive it, with all this technology, is amazing.” Pele’s daughter was quoated as saying.






