Animatic Tool For Filmmakers Who Need Speed

CinemaDrop is an animatic tool for filmmakers that turns scripts into shot-by-shot storyboards, then helps you shape them into moving, sound-ready sequences with consistent characters and scenes.

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Animatic Tool For Filmmakers Who Need Speed
  • Storyboard First Animatics

    Start from a script-driven storyboard and shape your animatic as a clear sequence of shots.
  • Consistency Across Scenes

    Reuse references and Elements to keep characters, locations, and props consistent shot to shot.
  • All In One Studio

    Generate images, video, voice, music, and sound effects together in one workflow.

Go From Script To Animatic Faster

Turn an existing script into a clean, shot-by-shot storyboard so you can evaluate pacing, coverage, and story beats early. Iterate quickly while you’re exploring options, then move to stronger consistency when you’re ready to lock character identity and scenes. This keeps decisions focused on storytelling instead of setup.

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Go From Script To Animatic Faster
Keep Continuity Across Shots

Keep Continuity Across Shots

CinemaDrop helps your animatic read like a single, coherent film world rather than a stack of unrelated frames. Reuse previous outputs as references and build Elements for characters, locations, and props to maintain identity and visual logic across the sequence. The payoff is clearer choices before production, pitching, or final rendering.

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Add Motion When You Need It

When a still storyboard isn’t enough, generate motion to test timing, transitions, and camera intent. Use text-to-video or image-to-video, anchoring movement with your chosen start and end frames so the clip stays true to the shot you planned. Build the animatic shot-by-shot without losing structure.

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Add Motion When You Need It
Bring In Voice And Sound Per Shot

Bring In Voice And Sound Per Shot

Add dialogue, music, and sound effects directly per shot so your animatic communicates tone and rhythm, not just visuals. Assign a consistent voice to a character Element to keep performances coherent across scenes. The result is a stronger proof-of-concept for story, emotion, and timing.

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FAQs

What makes CinemaDrop an animatic tool for filmmakers?
CinemaDrop is built around a storyboard-to-shots workflow that turns scripts into visual sequences, then lets you add motion and audio per shot. It also focuses on continuity so characters and scenes stay consistent across the animatic. You can iterate quickly early on and refine to more consistent outputs as you lock decisions.
Can I start from an existing script?
Yes. You can paste in an existing script and generate a storyboard from it as a shot-by-shot plan. From there, you can revise shots, expand into video clips, and attach audio while keeping everything organized by sequence.
How do I keep the same character and locations across the animatic?
You can reuse previous shots as references so new generations stay anchored to established looks. CinemaDrop also supports Elements for reusable assets like characters, locations, and props to strengthen continuity across scenes. More and clearer reference images generally improve consistency.
Does it support turning storyboard images into moving clips?
Yes. You can generate clips from text prompts or use image-to-video with a selected start frame and end frame from your storyboard. That approach helps keep motion aligned with your planned shots and visual intent.
Can I add dialogue and sound to the animatic?
Yes. CinemaDrop includes text-to-speech and speech-to-speech, plus text-to-music, so you can attach audio to individual shots. You can also associate a voice with a character Element to keep voice continuity across scenes.
Can I revise the script without regenerating everything?
Yes. You can edit scripts manually and use AI-assisted rewrites on selected sections to expand, compress, shift tone, or refine dialogue. This helps you iterate on story beats while keeping the rest of the sequence intact.
What’s the difference between fast storyboarding and high-quality consistency?
Fast storyboarding is optimized for speed and lower cost while you explore shot ideas, which can reduce continuity between frames. High-quality consistency is slower but is designed to better preserve character identity and scene cohesion. A common workflow is to iterate fast early, then switch to the more consistent mode to lock key shots.