Back to Video Creator

Multi-Scene [Cut] Feature

Create complex storytelling videos with seamless transitions

The Multi-Scene [Cut] Feature lets you chain together multiple shots within a single video prompt. Instead of generating one continuous action, you can divide your video into several distinct scenes, giving you more creative control and storytelling power.

Why Use Multi-Scene Videos?

You no longer need to generate multiple separate videos and stitch them together. With our [cut] feature, you can create complex narratives, dynamic camera angles, and professional content all in a single generation.

Storytelling

Create narratives with beginning, middle, end

Character Actions

Show models performing sequences

Dynamic Angles

Combine wide shots, close-ups, pans

Product Demos

Show items from multiple perspectives

Where You Can Use [Cut]

The [Cut] feature works in all video generation types, giving you maximum flexibility across different content creation workflows.

Text-to-Video

Write cinematic sequences directly from text prompts with multiple scene transitions.

"Wide shot of city [cut] close-up of character walking [cut] overhead drone view"

Image-to-Video

Animate a static image across multiple actions and camera movements.

"Model waves [cut] turns around [cut] walks toward camera"

Character-to-Video

Make your generated characters perform sequential actions with smooth transitions.

"Character smiles [cut] extends hand [cut] close-up of expression"

How [Cut] Works

Simple [cut] Syntax

You simply add [cut] in your prompt to separate each scene.

Multi-scene video example showing how [cut] creates distinct scenes with smooth transitions

Example Breakdown:

"The couple is getting married on the moon, the earth in the back is slowly turning. [cut] over the shoulder shot where the female is visible and she says to the camera 'wait so you're telling me this isn't real'"

Scene 1:

Wide shot of moon wedding with earth background

Scene 2:

Over-shoulder close-up with direct camera address

Scene Consistency

Each [cut] tells the model to start a new scene while keeping consistency with your subject and shifting the action, camera angle, or environment.

Multi-Scene Video Examples

Moon Wedding Scene Transition

Open in Drive

Prompt: "the couple is getting married on the moon, the earth in the back is slowly turning [cut] over the shoulder shot where the female is visible and she says to the camera 'wait so youre telling me this isnt real'"

Volcano Surfing Multi-Angle

Open in Drive

Prompt: "the man is surfing on the volcano downhill, the camera moves back [cut] camera angle to a drone shot like its a video game as he surfs down the volcano"

Simple Car Transition

Open in Drive

Prompt: "car drives [cut] drone shot of car driving"

Intimate Gesture Close-up

Open in Drive

Prompt: "touches her stomach [cut] close up of her hands touching her stomach"

Complex Vlog-Style Multi-Scene

Open in Drive

Prompt: "Moody vlog-style shot of a man running alone on a rainy street at night, wide angle tracking behind him [cut] handheld front-facing selfie angle, rain hitting the lens, breath visible [cut] low side shot of shoes splashing through puddles [cut] streetlamp-lit silhouette from a distance, fading into the mist ahead"

Best Use Cases for Multi-Scene Videos

Storytelling & Narratives

Create mini-narratives with clear beginning, middle, and end sequences.

Example:

"Woman enters coffee shop [cut] orders at counter with smile [cut] sits by window reading book"

Character Action Sequences

Show your characters performing multiple actions in logical sequence.

Example:

"Model waves to camera [cut] turns around gracefully [cut] walks away with confident stride"

Dynamic Camera Work

Combine different camera angles and movements for cinematic effects.

Example:

"Wide establishing shot of beach [cut] close-up of hands in sand [cut] tracking shot following footprints"

Product Demonstrations

Showcase products from multiple angles and use cases in one video.

Example:

"Product on table, studio lighting [cut] hands picking up and examining [cut] close-up of key features"

Example Multi-Scene Prompts

Simple Scene Transitions

Beach Walking Sequence:

"Man standing on a beach looking at the ocean [cut] camera zooms in as he turns around and smiles [cut] wide shot of him walking along the shoreline."

Perfect for: Lifestyle content, travel videos, personal branding

Model Portrait Sequence:

"Female model waving to the camera [cut] close-up shot of her blowing a kiss [cut] slow motion of her walking forward with a smile."

Perfect for: Fashion content, character videos, social media

Advanced Cinematic Sequences

Urban Night Scene:

"Wide shot of neon-lit city street at night [cut] tracking shot following person walking through crowd [cut] close-up of reflection in puddle [cut] overhead drone view of the bustling intersection."

Perfect for: Cinematic content, mood videos, urban themes

Product Launch Reveal:

"Dark studio with dramatic lighting [cut] hands slowly unwrapping sleek box [cut] close-up macro shot of product details [cut] product rotating on pedestal with perfect lighting."

Perfect for: Product videos, marketing content, reveals

Pro Tips for Multi-Scene Videos

Effective Techniques

Use Action-Based Descriptions:

Focus on verbs like "walks," "waves," "turns," "looks" for clear scene transitions.

Combine with Camera Prompts:

Use "close-up," "wide shot," "tracking shot" with [cut] for dynamic cinematography.

Start Simple:

Begin with 2-3 cuts, then experiment with longer sequences as you master the technique.

Best Practices

Keep Descriptions Concise:

Too much detail in each cut may confuse the output. Stay focused and clear.

Maintain Subject Consistency:

Keep the same character/subject throughout for coherent storytelling.

Test with Lite Mode:

Experiment with multi-scene prompts in Lite mode before investing in Pro quality.

Advanced Multi-Scene Strategy

  • Plan your narrative arc: Think about the story progression before writing prompts
  • Vary camera distances: Mix wide shots, medium shots, and close-ups for visual interest
  • Consider pacing: Balance action scenes with calmer moments for rhythm
  • Use environmental changes: Shift settings or lighting between cuts for variety
  • Build emotion: Progress from neutral to emotional expressions across scenes

Technical Considerations

Duration & Timing

Multi-scene videos work within the same duration limits as single-scene videos.

5-Second Videos:

2-3 scenes work best (1.5-2.5s per scene)

10-Second Videos:

3-5 scenes optimal (2-3s per scene)

Quality & Processing

Multi-scene videos may take slightly longer to generate due to complexity.

Processing Time:

Expect 10-20% longer generation times for multi-scene prompts

Same Pricing:

Multi-scene videos cost the same as single-scene videos

Master Advanced Video Techniques

Now that you understand multi-scene creation, explore these complementary features: