AI Video Camera Angles, Movement Tips and Tricks for Pro Results Every Time
TL;DR
Geeky Gadgets summarizes a Dan Kieft breakdown of camera movement for AI filmmaking, published on July 6, 2026. The guide groups classic moves such as static shots, pans, tilts, zooms, dolly, truck, pedestal, slider, follow, reverse tracking, chase, handheld, body-mounted, crane and drone shots. It also lists specialized effects including first-person view, tilt-shift, infinite zoom, Earth zoom out and time-lapse.
Nauti's Take
The piece works as a cheat sheet, but the headline oversells it. Pro results do not come from sprinkling Infinite Zoom or Dolly Shot into a prompt.
The real upgrade is knowing why the camera moves: to create intimacy, explain space, build tension or show scale. Anyone serious about AI video should spend less time chasing tool magic and more time learning basic shot logic.
Briefingshow
AI video does not become professional only through better models. It improves when creators understand directing language and turn movement, perspective and pacing into deliberate prompt instructions. For creators without crews or gear, that is useful leverage, as long as they do not treat camera moves as a random effects menu.