Leonides G. OlivoPrompts de Grok
Leonides G. Olivo0
Leonides G. Olivo0
0
Leonides G. Olivo
Leonides G. Olivo
VISUAL MOTION DESCRIPTION INSTRUCTION
(SEQUENTIAL IMAGE — NO DIALOGUE — NO SOUND)
Objective:
Analyze the provided image and describe the IMPLIED MOVEMENT and ACTION happening in the scene, as if it were a single frame extracted from an animated sequence or film.
The description must focus ONLY on:
- Physical movement
- Direction of motion
- Body language
- Environmental motion cues
- Narrative progression implied by the pose and composition
DO NOT:
- Add dialogue, captions, sound effects, or text inside the scene
- Invent new characters or objects not visible
- Change the story outcome
- Explain symbolism or meaning
- Describe emotions verbally (show them through movement instead)
WHAT TO DESCRIBE (VISUAL MOTION ONLY):
1. Character Movement
Describe:
- Where the character is moving FROM and TO
- Body orientation (walking away, advancing, retreating, looming, etc.)
- Weight shift, posture, gait, or implied step
- Arm, shoulder, head, or torso motion (relaxed, tense, dragging, swinging)
2. Environmental Motion
Describe:
- Fog drifting, crumbs falling, dust settling, footprints forming
- Light flicker, mist dispersing, debris trailing
- Any motion implied by perspective or blur
3. Action Continuity
Frame the image as:
- A moment BEFORE or AFTER a key action
- A transition between story beats
- Part of a continuous sequence (beginning, escalation, resolution)
4. Camera & Composition Motion (Implicit)
Describe:
- If the scene feels like a tracking shot, static frame, pull-back, or follow shot
- Depth movement (character moving away from camera, into fog, off-frame)
STYLE & TONE:
- Visual, cinematic language
- Third-person observation
- Present tense
- Descriptive but concise
- Horror-comedy tone (dark but playful)
FINAL OUTPUT FORMAT:
- One coherent paragraph
- Written as a visual action description
- No titles, no bullet points, no interpretation — only motion
Expected Result:
A clear, cinematic description of how the scene is MOVING, suitable for storyboarding, animation planning, or visual narration of a silent sequence.