How to create a Molten Surface Burst video
The prompt
Over 8 seconds, the camera executes a single fluid dolly-in combined with a steady right-to-left track: begin at mid-distance and press slowly forward while tilting down to trail the creeping molten flow. Shot 1 (0–3s): a measured push-and-pan uncovers accelerating surface movement and swelling ridges of slag. Shot 2 (3–6s): the frame closes to a mid-close as thick, domed blisters inflate and collapse in sequence, radiant heat shimmer softly distorts the image, and thin obsidian-crust shards rotate and grind against each other. Shot 3 (6–8s): the camera settles into a tight close-up as a single large blister swells to its limit and ruptures, punctuated by a brief shallow push on the burst for impact. Sustain smooth camera movement throughout with a faint handheld micro-tremble to imply thermal vibration. Lighting: deep amber-orange practicals from the glowing flow itself, underlit and flickering, no overhead fill. Audio: a continuous deep subterranean groan climbs steadily across the shot, layered with wet viscous glooping synced to each visible blister; sharp crackling and a dry fracture snap when crust shards split; a soft molten splat and dull stone-tap as droplets land on cooled basalt; distant gusting wind and a subsonic pulse that peaks at the final rupture.
How it works
- 1Tweak the prompt or pick a different model.
- 2Hit Generate — your clip renders in seconds.
- 3Open it in the editor to build a full video.