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Ciaro Pro
AI filmmaking for visual storytellers
107 followers
AI filmmaking for visual storytellers
107 followers
AI video tools are great at making clips. Ciaro Pro is built for visual storytellers who want to shape complete ideas into coherent AI-powered films. Develop the story, look, characters, references, storyboards, images, and videos in one creative workflow — without losing control of the film you set out to make.









Ciaro Pro
How does Ciaro Pro keep the characters and visual style consistent across a full film when most AI video tools still drift between clips?
Ciaro Pro
@burhan224777 Great question. We don't rely on a single video model to "remember" everything. Ciaro Pro keeps structured references for your characters, locations, lighting, style, and storyboards, so that creative context carries across the entire project.
It also lets you use the best model for each shot. For example, you might use Seedance 2.0 for dialogue-heavy scenes and Gen-4.5 for more dynamic action sequences. Because the creative references stay consistent, you can mix models throughout a film while maintaining character, artistic, and lighting continuity.
How does Ciaro Pro actually keep the story cohesive across scenes when the AI is generating video clips separately?
Ciaro Pro
@yusuf341934 That's exactly the problem we built Ciaro Pro to solve.
Before generating any video, you first build a project asset library—characters, locations, props, vehicles, style references, etc. Each asset can have multiple consistent reference images that define your visual language.
Those assets are then used throughout storyboarding, where you compose individual shots for every scene. You can even sketch a shot by hand and use it as a composition guide when generating the storyboard frame.
When it's time to generate video, those storyboard frames become reference images for the video models. This means you're not asking the AI to invent every shot from scratch—you already know what the shot should look like. It also lets you mix different video models for different strengths while maintaining a much more coherent visual language across the film.
How does Ciaro Pro keep characters and visual style consistent across a whole film when most AI tools drift after a few generations?
Ciaro Pro
@sare612858 Great question. We don't expect the AI model to maintain consistency on its own. In Ciaro Pro you first build a library of characters, locations, props, and style references with multiple consistent images for each. Those assets are then reused throughout storyboarding and video generation, so every shot starts from the same creative foundation instead of a brand-new prompt.
How does Ciaro Pro actually keep the visual style and characters consistent across longer scenes, since most AI tools I've tried lose coherence after a minute or so?
Ciaro Pro
@kardelen415764 You're right—current video models still struggle with long-term consistency. That's why we separate the planning from the generation. You storyboard every shot first using your project assets and references, and those storyboard frames then become guides for the video generation. Since every shot already has a visual target, you can even switch between different video models for different strengths while keeping the film's visual language coherent.
Does Ciaro Pro keep the same characters looking consistent across scenes, or do you still end up redoing references every time you generate a new clip?
Ciaro Pro
@mira1455108 You don't have to rebuild your references for every scene. Characters, locations, props, and other assets live in your project library and are reused throughout the workflow. When you generate videos, the storyboard frames and project assets act as reference guides, making it much easier to keep your characters recognizable from scene to scene.
Does it let you bring in your own footage and have the AI match the storyboard style to it, or does it only generate visuals from scratch?
Ciaro Pro
@saniyesnmeonja Absolutely. You can upload your own images, videos, audio, and other assets to use throughout your project. In fact, bringing in location photos, concept art, mood boards, or other research material is a key part of the workflow. These references become part of your project's asset library and are then reused during storyboarding and later during video generation, helping you maintain a consistent visual direction from start to finish.