13-Layer Cinematic Framework vs The Clip Law
Both in the prompting guides category. Side-by-side — pick the one that fits your stack tonight.
The 13 dimensions a good AI video prompt has to control — the difference between vibes and Hollywood.
- rating
- 4★
- tested
- ✓ loya-tested
- cost
- free
- install
- drop-in
- stars
- 0
- updated
- 13d ago
You're generating short product demos or simple b-roll — overkill for anything under 5 seconds.
Every short-form clip = a mini-story. No story, no clip. Reject it.
- rating
- 4★
- tested
- ✓ loya-tested
- cost
- free
- install
- drop-in
- stars
- 0
- updated
- 6d ago
You're generating long-form video where vibe and pacing carry the weight on their own.
why it matters · 13-Layer Cinematic Framework
If your Seedance videos come out generic, it's because the prompt only described half of what matters. This framework breaks a prompt into 13 layers — style, environment, character, camera, lighting, physics, audio, timeline, and more — so the model has no room to improvise poorly. Used on every cinematic gen across @loya.ai and Basement Boys. Not every layer is needed every time, but knowing the 13 means you always know which one is missing when a clip comes out flat.
why it matters · The Clip Law
Most AI-generated short-form fails because it's a vibe reel, not a story. The Clip Law is the fix: every clip must have a HOOK (grab attention in 2s), be ENTERTAINING the whole way through, and land a PAYOFF (a callback, twist, or rewatchable moment). If a clip has a great hook but no payoff, it gets rejected. Not re-ranked, not edited — rejected. This single rule is what separates viral clips from everything else. It's the hard filter for every short-form pipeline.