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.

  1. Describe secondary actions like wind in hair or fabric folds.
  2. Add physics keywords such as "accurate inertia" or "natural follow-through".
  3. 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.