Generate Shot List From Screenplay in Minutes

Generate Shot List From Screenplay and instantly map your script into a visual, shot-by-shot plan. Keep characters, locations, and props consistent as you refine toward images, video, and audio.

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Generate Shot List From Screenplay in Minutes
  • Storyboard First Workflow

    Turn a screenplay into a visual, shot-by-shot storyboard sequence you can review and refine.
  • Consistency Across Shots

    Use references and Elements to keep characters, locations, and props coherent throughout your shot list.
  • All In One Studio

    Create images, video, speech, music, and sound effects per shot in a single workspace.

Turn Script Into Shot-By-Shot Clarity

Generate Shot List From Screenplay by translating story beats into a visual storyboard sequence you can actually evaluate. See coverage, pacing, and transitions at a glance, then refine shot order and framing without guesswork. You’ll catch continuity gaps early and walk into production with a clearer plan.

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Turn Script Into Shot-By-Shot Clarity
Keep Characters and Worlds Consistent

Keep Characters and Worlds Consistent

Build continuity into your shot list so it reads like one coherent film, not a patchwork of styles. Reuse prior outputs as references and anchor scenes to reusable Elements such as characters, locations, and props. That continuity helps your storyboard stay recognizable from shot to shot and scene to scene.

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Iterate Fast Then Lock In Quality

Explore options quickly with faster storyboard generation when you’re still discovering coverage and staging. Once the sequence works, switch to a higher-consistency approach to better preserve identity, wardrobe, and environment across the entire shot list. You can evolve the plan from rough to reliable without starting over.

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Iterate Fast Then Lock In Quality
Bring the Shot List to Life With Motion and Sound

Bring the Shot List to Life With Motion and Sound

Move beyond stills by turning selected shots into video, guided by prompts or by using start and end frames. Layer in speech, character voices, music, and sound effects per shot to preview tone and timing. The result is a playable sequence you can iterate on before committing to full production.

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FAQs

Can I Generate Shot List From Screenplay drafts I already have?
Yes. Start with an existing screenplay and generate a storyboard-style shot sequence from it. You can then refine shots one by one as the plan evolves.
Do I get a text shot list or a visual storyboard?
This workflow is designed around a visual, storyboard-based shot sequence. Seeing frames helps you judge composition, coverage, and continuity faster than text alone.
How do you keep the same character consistent across multiple shots?
Continuity is supported by reusing prior outputs as references and by creating Elements for reusable assets like characters and locations. Adding stronger, more specific references typically improves identity and consistency across the sequence.
Can I change the shot order or regenerate only one shot?
Yes. You can iterate on individual shots and refine the sequence over multiple passes. That makes it easier to fix problem moments without redoing the entire storyboard.
When should I use fast storyboard generation versus higher-consistency output?
Use the faster option when you’re exploring ideas and adjusting coverage quickly. Switch to higher-consistency output when you’re ready to lock character identity and scene coherence across the full shot list.
Can I turn storyboard frames into video clips?
Yes. You can generate video from text prompts or use image-to-video with start and end frames based on your storyboard. This helps you preview motion while staying anchored to your chosen look.
Does it support dialogue, voices, music, and sound effects per shot?
Yes. You can generate speech, transform recorded audio with speech-to-speech, and generate music from text descriptions. Voice can also be carried with character Elements to keep performances consistent across scenes.
Do I need to stick to one model for the entire project?
No. You can choose from multiple third-party models for image, video, lip-sync, and audio, each with its own credit cost. This lets you pick what fits each shot while keeping everything organized in one studio.