Slow motion: immersion and epic feel
Slow motion loans extra seconds to dust, tears, or blast fronts—use sparingly at emotional peaks. Time dilation stretches a moment beyond its natural duration, giving the audience permission to study what would normally flash past. Every detail becomes monumental: a falling glass, a turning head, a fist connecting.
Key points
- Higher frame rates (120fps+) create smoother, more dreamlike slow motion
- Particles (dust, water drops, sparks) become mesmerizing in slow motion
- Use at emotional peaks—overuse dilutes the impact to zero
- Returning to normal speed after slow motion creates a jarring re-entry to reality
Director logic
Slow motion is cinema's way of saying "remember this." Sacrifice scenes, final glances, and the moment before impact all earn the extra seconds that slow motion grants.
AI prompts
Specify "slow motion" and describe the particles or details that become visible at reduced speed. Include the emotional context (sacrifice, beauty, impact) for proper mood.
slow motion dramatic moment, floating particles, time dilation, emotional peak, every detail visible, cinematic slow-mo