Storyboard Version Control Tool for AI Filmmaking

Storyboard Version Control for AI filmmaking so you can revise shots confidently while keeping characters, locations, and style consistent across your story.

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Storyboard Version Control Tool for AI Filmmaking
  • Storyboard First Workflow

    Create a shot-by-shot storyboard as your foundation, then expand into images, video, and audio as you refine.
  • Consistency Across Shots

    Keep characters and world details aligned by reusing references and Elements across your sequence.
  • Iterate Faster

    Draft rapidly with a fast mode, then shift to high-quality consistency when you’re ready to finalize.

Iterate Without Losing Continuity

CinemaDrop supports a storyboard-first workflow where each shot can be refined without breaking the look of the sequence. Reuse prior outputs as references to preserve character identity, wardrobe, locations, props, and overall style from frame to frame. That means fewer continuity surprises when you try new angles, actions, or lighting choices.

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Iterate Without Losing Continuity
One Studio for Every Pass

One Studio for Every Pass

Keep your storyboard, generated images, video, voices, music, and sound effects organized in one place as the project evolves. Start with still frames to lock the sequence, then add motion and audio when you’re ready. It’s a smoother path from a planned storyboard to a watchable cut that still matches your original vision.

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References and Elements Anchor Versions

CinemaDrop uses reference-based generation and reusable Elements to keep “versions” of your storyboard grounded and repeatable. Create Elements for characters, locations, and props, attach reference images, and apply them across shots to reinforce the same identity and world. Character Elements can also include a voice, helping performance stay consistent along with visuals.

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References and Elements Anchor Versions
Fast Drafts to Final Renders

Fast Drafts to Final Renders

Move quickly with a faster, lower-cost storyboard generation mode when you’re exploring ideas, then switch to a slower high-quality consistency mode when it’s time to lock the look. This approach helps you explore more options early while reserving the most stable, polished results for the shots that matter. You can also make text-based edits and upscale media (when available) to refine without starting over.

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FAQs

Is CinemaDrop a storyboard version control tool like Git?
CinemaDrop isn’t a Git-style system with branching, merges, and line-by-line diffs. It’s a storyboard-first studio where you iterate directly on a shot sequence and keep changes controlled using references and reusable Elements. The goal is creative iteration with strong continuity, not developer-style source control.
How does CinemaDrop keep characters consistent across storyboard revisions?
You can reuse prior generated shots as references when creating new shots to reinforce the same character identity and style. Elements let you define reusable characters, locations, and props, and attach reference images to each. Used across the sequence, these anchors help maintain continuity as you revise.
Can I generate a storyboard from an existing script?
Yes. You can paste a script and generate a shot-by-shot storyboard in minutes, designed to keep characters and scenes coherent. If you’re starting from an idea instead, the Script Wizard can help generate a script and then take it through storyboard creation.
When should I use fast storyboard generation vs high-quality consistency?
Use the fast option when you want speed and lower cost while exploring ideas and testing different approaches. Switch to the high-quality consistency option when you want stronger stability in character and scene details for final shots. Many projects benefit from drafting fast and finishing with consistency-focused renders.
Can storyboard shots become video, not just images?
Yes. You can generate video from text prompts, and you can also create image-to-video transitions by selecting start and end frames from your storyboard images. This makes it easier to turn a planned sequence into motion while staying anchored to the same shot order.
Can I keep the same voice for a character across scenes?
CinemaDrop supports text-to-speech and speech-to-speech. If you assign a voice to a character Element, you can reuse that voice across shots to keep performances consistent. This helps continuity beyond visuals, especially in dialogue-heavy sequences.
Do I need separate tools for music and sound effects?
CinemaDrop includes music and sound generation that you can attach to shots inside the same studio. This helps you develop visuals, motion, and audio together without juggling multiple workflows. The platform provides access to multiple third-party models with different credit costs.