Dave Clark Profile picture
Co-Founder and Chief Creative Officer @Promise_ai. Filmmaker, Futurist, and Technologist featured in Wall Street Journal, Variety, THR, Deadline, Indiewire...

May 26, 2025, 6 tweets

Veo 3 Prompting Tip of the Day:

You can now prompt multiple camera angles for coverage in a single generation with Veo 3!

The trick is to craft it exactly as you'd want the audience to view it.

Think about classic screenwriting. This happens, then that happens... Now that characters can exchange dialogue, get the most out of your credits.

I break it down in the comments.

Sample prompt: A crowded cantina lounge bar bathed in the eerie purple glow of a binary sunset on a distant, alien planet. A grizzled space cowboy, his face weathered, walks over and sits at a worn bar, his hand resting on a blaster. Beside him, a towering terrifying ugly alien creature with scales and glowing eyes stares into the middle distance. Cut to a close up of The cowboy as he turns to the alien, a hint of menace in his voice, and says, "What the hell are you looking at?". Then cut to a reverse Close up of the alien as he slowly swivels its head, its voice a low rumble, and he replies, "A whole lot of nothing!". This captures a moment of tense, intergalactic standoff.

So from the prompt, you see how we start with the establishing shot. But also explain the world. Now we see the close-up of our cowboy.

The simply prompt for the reverse angle of the alien. And walaa! You can have a simple exchange of dialogue.

It's that simple. Really use the prompt structure to bring your scene to life. Be economical with word choice, but also not too precious. Tell your story.

This was created using Flow by @GoogleLabs and upscale using the web app from @topazlabs

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