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Plan Your Camera Movement Before You Generate: A Practical Approach to AI Video ClipsWhy Camera Movement Deserves Planning Most people jump straight into typing a prompt and hoping for a good result. But video isn't just a scene description — it's a scene plus movement through time. If you don't decide how the camera behaves before you generate, you're leaving that decision to chance. This matters more with AI video tools than traditional filming, because you can't easily reframe mid-shot after the fact. Getting the movement right at the prompt stage saves rework. Start With the Shot's Purpose Before describing camera motion, ask what the clip needs to communicate. A product demo usually benefits from a slow push-in or a steady pan that reveals detail. A social hook often works better with a quick, energetic motion that grabs attention in the first second. Match the movement to the intent, not just the aesthetic. Keep Motion Descriptions Specific Vague terms like "cinematic camera" leave too much room for interpretation. Instead, specify direction, speed, and framing: a slow dolly-in toward a subject's face, a handheld tracking shot following someone walking, or a static wide shot with subtle drift. Tools built for realistic motion, like the Kling 3.0 AI Video Generator, tend to respond better to this kind of concrete language than to abstract style words alone. Test Short Before Committing Long If you're unsure how a movement will translate, generate a short clip first. Reviewing a brief test helps you catch awkward transitions or unnatural drift before spending time on a longer version. Adjust the prompt, then scale up once the motion feels right. Planning camera movement isn't extra work — it's the difference between a usable clip and a reshoot.
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