AI Video Camera Angles, Movement Tips and Tricks for Pro Results Every Time
TL;DR
Geeky Gadgets summarizes Dan Kieft’s video guide to camera work in AI filmmaking. It covers static shots, pans, tilts, zooms, dolly, truck, pedestal, slider, tracking, handheld, drone, crane, tilt-shift, infinite zoom and time-lapse techniques. The practical point is simple: AI video prompts improve when they describe camera logic, not just subject and style. A dolly creates intimacy, a truck shot follows motion, and a static shot gives details room to land.
Nauti's Take
For small teams, this is a useful prompt cheat sheet, but it is not evidence that video quality becomes reliably better. Start with a small shot matrix on the same scene, such as static, dolly, truck and crane, then compare stability, subject control, editability and repeatability.
Briefingshow
AI video is moving from novelty effect to production tool. The difference often sits less in the model and more in the brief: creators who specify camera movement, pacing and visual intent get less randomness. That makes basic filmmaking vocabulary useful again, even without a crew or gear budget.