Shots
Overview
In ACT 3 AI, a Shot is the smallest production unit, representing a single continuous camera take within a scene. Shots define exactly what the viewer sees at a given moment — including camera angle, framing, motion, and duration — and are the foundation for AI-assisted rendering in the Editor Workspace.
Shots are created from scene breakdowns and can be customized visually with the Storyboard Panels and Top-Down View tools.
Key Features
- Precise control over camera position, lens, and movement
- Integration with AI rendering engines (Google Veo 3, WAN AI, Runway Integration)
- Shot-specific prompts for AI generation
- Real-time preview and regeneration
- Ability to re-order shots within a scene
Creating a Shot
- Open a scene in the Editor.
- Click **Add Shot** or split an existing shot.
- Define:
- Camera type (e.g., wide, medium, close-up)
- Framing and composition
- Movement (pan, tilt, zoom, dolly)
- Duration in seconds
- AI prompt for visual generation
- Attach a storyboard panel or design in Top-Down View.
Editing a Shot
- Select the shot in the Timeline or Scene view.
- Adjust technical parameters (lens, angle, camera motion).
- Modify AI prompt to refine visuals.
- Change timing by dragging shot edges in the Timeline.
- Regenerate the shot with updated parameters.
Shot Types
Shot Type | Description |
---|---|
Establishing | Sets scene context with location or environment view |
Wide Shot | Captures entire subject and surroundings |
Medium Shot | Frames subject from waist up for balance of detail and context |
Close-Up | Focuses on subject detail, such as facial expression |
POV Shot | Shows the scene from a character’s perspective |
Tracking Shot | Follows moving subject through environment |
Static Shot | No camera movement, fixed frame |
AI Shot Workflow
- Write a short, descriptive AI prompt
- Select rendering engine (Google Veo 3, Runway Integration, WAN AI)
- Generate low-res preview
- Approve and send to Render Queue for final render
Collaboration Tools
- Shot-level comments for targeted feedback
- Shot locking to prevent unwanted changes
- Version history with rollback option
Best Practices
- Keep prompts under 50 words for faster, more accurate AI rendering
- Match lens and camera movement to scene tone
- Use storyboards for visual consistency
- Preview before committing credits
See Also
Contact Us if you have any problems using our product, or if you have questions.