Learn how to edit videos (and other stuff) - Professional video editing and content creation tutorials utilizing next generation AI tools like RunwayML as well as DaVinci Resolve, Adobe Premiere, After Effects, and other software to help you get better at editing! Comment or message me if you have any specific questions - social media @notiansans
I have been looking to solve my issue this was the first and only video where I was able to figure out how to get rid of a loud noise playing the same time as my dialog. I hit the subscribe button!
I'm a creative partner with Runway now and was even an early day beta tester going back to gen 1. the amount of complexity in a prompt g3 can handle is leaps and bounds better than all previous models and a lot of the similar apps out there. I've been feeding it some very complex and specific prompts, and while i still get jank from trial and error I've started to dial in the prompt structure. I for one agree, if you want the best results, learn your filmmaking terminology, learn the cameras and lenses used for specific situations, like Ian said, the more you understand how movies or videos are made, the better the likely hood of getting amazing shots consistently with less rerolls. keep the prompt organized. I like to start off with the camera move and subject matter that i am shooting, i describe the subject, then the action, then the background, then the look and feel, and i finish off with cinematic, hyperreal, photorealistic, dark sci fi horror or something to that effect depending on the genre or look i am going for. Loved this video, thanks for sharing, dropped a like and a sub see you around brotha!
Basically, not only you don't have to have a drone shot of an Iceberg. You don't need to go there at all. No need for a cast or pundits to provide a commentary, this tool generates it for you. No need for research, script writing and script supervision neither, chat GPT get you covered. No need of anything at all. Just a constant flux of poorly written and semi-automatically composed garbage content uploaded 3 times a day that will burry any attempt of an actual cinematographer to do any sort of artistic content on this platform. The future we all deserved apparently
Complimenting your artistic state with a technical understanding of the mechanics behind what you create makes you a better artist. Most of the world's greatest classical artists also boasted exceptional grasp of the natural world. Da Vinci, Michaelangelo, Raphael. By using A.I. to make it easier to make great things, we are making it harder to make great humans. Hard times make great men, great men make easy times, easy times make weak men, weak men make hard times, hard times make great men. Except we bypass that completely and just stay in a state of good times perpetually making weak men.
as a producer and artist i've been using gen3 for real world artistic purposes. My most recent single's music video was created with gen3 and for the first time ever it's actually worth it. It cost me about $30 in credits to make it. I'll be making more music videos with it if anyone wants to follow along
The latest 2 videos on my channel were made entirely with Gen 3, I'm trying hard to push it to do some interesting stuff. Please check it out! Currently makes something usable about every third attempt. But works out REALLY expensive right now.
I’m always disappointed with Runway. They overhype and cherry-pick results not at all representative of an average output. Gen 3 is so underwhelming. None of the outputs I got were anything special. Luma is so much better
The price is killing the tool - you need a lot of experimentation to get good results - and the price for 10s video is 1,5 -2,5$ depend on subscription - Luma AI 0,4$ per 10s
Very cool! However, I don't like the example of use of an arctic landscape in a documentary. What are we watching a documentary for, besides being, well... a documentary, which is to document reality. I feel like this tool has a ton of great uses, but don't like the idea of that specifically.
I'm even thinking for motion graphic backgrounds; especially for youtube videos etc. Idk if I would trust it for character stuff, but backgrounds, stock footage, this is very interesting.
I think the challenge with your first example is that in a doc setting it would be much better to use stock footage of real icebergs. But for elements like you mentioned, very helpful.
For top of the line stock footage, you'd be paying somewhere in the ballpark of $300 - $2,000 per clip depending on the usage rights, so certainly take that into consideration. Also, if you wanted a shot of an iceberg at sunset or possibly with the northern lights in the sky etc. your options become significantly harder to find via stock sites.
Agreed. If I am watching a documentary and realize they are using AI imagery, they lose credibility in my book. Just don't show B-Roll if you can't afford some or couldn't film any.