Learning center
Craft hyper-realistic AI videos
Combine cinematic prompting, physics tweaks, and finishing passes that fool even trained viewers.
Start with photorealistic references
Feed the model with high-quality reference frames so it understands your desired realism level.
- Upload stills shot on cinema cameras or export frames from stock footage.
- Annotate camera metadata (lens length, aperture, ISO) in your prompt.
- Include lighting diagrams or HDRI maps for accurate reflections.
Prompt for micro-movements
Realism comes from subtle motion. Specify how actors breathe, blink, or shift weight.
- Describe secondary actions like wind in hair or fabric folds.
- Add physics keywords such as "accurate inertia" or "natural follow-through".
- Set motion smoothing to medium so physics feels grounded.
Sync audio before rendering
Load scratch voiceovers or soundtrack stems into the timeline so the model can lip-sync and animate to real audio dynamics.
- Mark beat positions in the editor so the model anticipates cuts.
- Use AI voice clones for temp dialogue to capture speech cadence.
- Export captions with timing markers for the finishing team.
Add realism in post
After rendering, use CutScene finishing tools to polish the footage.
- Run the Topaz upscaler to sharpen edges without introducing artifacts.
- Apply motion blur selectively on fast-moving objects.
- Grade with the cinematic LUT pack to match real camera color science.
Validate realism with review loops
Share drafts with teammates and capture notes inside the player.
- Ask reviewers to flag uncanny movements or lighting issues.
- Iterate on the original prompt instead of fixing everything in post.
- Save successful prompt versions to your studio library for future shoots.