The following preview has been generated entirely by AI
Approved for all audiences · by Pixazo
Turn a logline and a handful of story beats into a cinematic movie trailer — AI video models generate the shots, you cut them to a beat. Teaser trailers for films, games, books and brands, in minutes instead of weeks.
It is a film trailer generator that turns written story beats into trailer-ready video shots — no footage required. You describe the world, the stakes and the money shots; AI video models render them.
Pixazo routes each beat to leading AI video models — Veo 3.1, Sora 2, Kling, Seedance 2, Wan 2.2, Hailuo — which generate short cinematic clips with framing, motion and lighting built in. You assemble the strongest takes into a 30–150 second trailer, add title cards and audio, and export.
Because the shots are generated rather than filmed, you can cut a teaser trailer for something that does not exist yet — a screenplay you are pitching, a game in development, a novel on pre-order, a product launching next quarter.
Any genre with a visual language. The AI trailer maker handles the shot styles; you set the tone with your beats:
Chases, impacts and hard cuts — high-energy beats that sell adrenaline.
Worlds, ships and scale no location scout could ever find.
Slow builds, shadows and one hard sting at the end.
Golden-hour warmth, close-ups and a two-shot finale.
Grounded imagery and title cards that carry the argument.
Engine-style cinematics for studios without a cinematics team.
Four beats on the timeline, from blank page to exported trailer. Only the writing is on you:
A logline plus 6–10 beat lines — opening image, stakes, escalation, money shot, title. One sentence per beat is enough; each becomes a generated shot.
Pick genre and grade («teal-orange action», «cold horror»), aspect ratio (16:9, 2.39:1, 9:16 for shorts) and the model that fits — Veo 3.1 or Sora 2 for realism, Kling or Seedance 2 for motion.
Render each beat as a 5–15 second clip. Re-roll any take that misses; every regeneration is one prompt tweak away.
Assemble the takes to a beat, drop in title cards, add voiceover and music (Pixazo’s AI audio tools or your own), and export the trailer as MP4.
| Inputs | Text beats (logline + shot list), or reference images for image-to-video |
| Shots | 5–15 second clips per beat, MP4 (H.264) |
| Trailer length | 30–150 seconds, assembled from generated takes |
| Ratios | 16:9, 2.39:1 cinemascope, 9:16 vertical, 1:1 |
| Models | Veo 3.1, Sora 2, Kling, Seedance 2, Wan 2.2, Hailuo |
| Audio | Pair with Pixazo’s AI audio tools for voiceover & music, or add your own in the edit |
| Free tier | Yes — write and preview in the browser, nothing to install |
| License | Commercial use on paid plans |
| Pixazo AI trailer | Traditional edit | |
|---|---|---|
| Footage | None needed — shots are generated from text | Requires a finished film or shoot |
| Time | Hours from logline to cut | Weeks of editorial |
| Cost | Free tier; credits per shot | Editor, suite, licensed footage |
| Revisions | Re-roll a beat instantly | Re-cuts on the calendar |
| Best for | Pitches, teasers, pre-release hype | Final theatrical campaigns |
The honest split: a studio marketing campaign still ends with a human editor and licensed music. An AI movie trailer generator wins everywhere earlier — when the film, game or book needs a trailer before there is anything to film.
Cut a pitch trailer from the screenplay — before a single day of principal photography.
Teaser trailers and store-page clips without borrowing the cinematics team.
Book trailers that make a novel feel like a film on launch day.
Product launches framed like premieres — stakes, sting, date card.
Channel trailers and series teasers with cinematic energy.
Sell the concept with a moving trailer instead of a static deck.
Tease, don’t tell.
A trailer sells a feeling, not a synopsis. Write beats that raise questions — the shot of the door, not what is behind it.
Cut on the beat.
Pick the music first, then time each generated shot to land on a hit. Rhythm covers a multitude of imperfect frames.
Three acts, ninety seconds.
Setup, escalation, montage — then silence and the title. The classic trailer arc works at any length.
End on the title.
Generate one clean title-card shot as its own beat. The last two seconds are the only ones everyone remembers.
Rated H — honest cut
The trailer is assembled, not one render. Models generate 5–15 second shots; you cut them together in an editor.
Dialogue and lip-sync belong in post. Generate the visuals; record or synthesize the voiceover separately.
Not frame-exact. Prompts guide the shot; storyboard-perfect frames still need a camera.
Music is on you. Use Pixazo’s AI audio tools or licensed tracks — a trailer without rights-safe music is not shippable.
A tool that turns written story beats into trailer-ready video shots using AI video models, so you can cut a cinematic movie trailer without filming anything.
Yes — Pixazo has a free tier that runs in the browser. You can write beats and preview generated shots free; paid plans add higher resolution, watermark-free export and commercial use.
Teasers run 30–60 seconds; full trailers 90–150. Since each beat is its own 5–15 second shot, length is just how many beats you keep in the cut.
Veo 3.1, Sora 2, Kling, Seedance 2, Wan 2.2 and Hailuo — you pick per shot, and can mix models across one trailer.
The generator produces the video shots. For audio, pair it with Pixazo’s AI audio tools for voiceover and music, or drop in your own tracks during the edit.
Yes — that is the sweet spot. Because shots are generated from text, you can trailer things that have no footage: manuscripts, games in development, upcoming launches.
Yes, on a paid plan. Keep your prompts and exports on file, and make sure any music you add is licensed for your use.
The video generator makes individual clips of anything. This page is the trailer workflow on top of it: beats in, cinematic shots out, cut to a classic trailer arc with title cards and a sting.
Pixazo presents
An AI-generated production
Shots rendered by Veo 3.1 · Sora 2 · Kling · Seedance 2 · Wan 2.2 · Hailuo
Deepak Joshi
Content marketing specialist · Pixazo blog · 10+ years in the digital world
No cameras were harmed in the making of this page
Deepak tests and documents AI image and video tools hands-on for the Pixazo Blog. More from Deepak →
Coming soon… yours.