Continuity-aware script tags
Characters and locations are not just names on the page. They carry references, wardrobe notes, and tone that follow the project.
When every shot is a fresh prompt with no shared references, the story drifts. ScreenWeaver keeps characters, locations, tone, and visual intent tied to the script before you generate.
You finish a scene that looks perfect. The next morning you generate the follow-up and the lead character has a different face, the apartment has new walls, and the color grade belongs to another project entirely.
Most creators try to fix this with longer prompts or reference images pasted into a chat thread. That works for one shot. It breaks the moment you have twelve scenes, three locations, and a wardrobe change in act two.
The real problem is not the model. It is that nothing in your workflow remembers what the film already decided to look like.
ScreenWeaver treats visual consistency as a production problem, not a prompting trick. Characters, locations, props, and tone live inside the same project as your screenplay and storyboard.
When you plan a shot, prompts inherit the references and scene context you already locked. The film keeps a single visual logic from outline to final generation.
Tag characters, locations, and key props while you write. ScreenWeaver turns those tags into continuity anchors, not footnotes you forget later.
Upload face sheets, location mood boards, and palette notes to the entities they belong to. Every scene inherits the right visual context automatically.
Storyboard each beat and reject frames that break tone or identity. You fix drift at the cheapest stage, before video generation.
AI video prompts pull from approved frames, references, and scene notes. Each new shot speaks the same visual language as the last.
A director finishes a ten-page sci-fi short. Scene one looks great in Runway, but by scene four the protagonist's jacket changed color and the station corridor grew windows that were not in the script. In ScreenWeaver they rebuild the project with tagged characters and locations, storyboard the full script, and regenerate prompts from approved frames. The second pass holds one film look from opening crawl to final shot.
Characters and locations are not just names on the page. They carry references, wardrobe notes, and tone that follow the project.
Face angles, costume details, and environment stills attach to the right character or place, not a folder you dig through mid-session.
Approved panels define what the film should look like before any video model runs. Drift gets caught in frames, not in expensive rushes.
Production prompts are built from script, references, and storyboard intent, so each generation reads the same film bible.
Without structure
With ScreenWeaver
Inconsistency usually comes from generating shots in isolation. Without shared references, scene context, and approved visual anchors, each model run interprets the story differently.
You need a visual plan before heavy video generation. ScreenWeaver uses storyboard frames as the approved look for each beat, which makes consistency enforceable instead of accidental.
Yes. ScreenWeaver organizes script, references, storyboard, and production prompts. You export clear, context-rich prompts and stills for whichever generator you use.
Attach palette and lighting notes to locations and scenes during writing. Those notes flow into storyboard review and into prompts so grade and mood stay aligned.
No. Wardrobe, props, architecture, weather, lens language, and color all matter. ScreenWeaver tracks the full visual world, not just one reference photo.
Lock references before you storyboard, and storyboard before you spend video credits. Early structure saves the most regeneration time.
AI generation is not the hard part anymore. Keeping the film coherent is. Start in ScreenWeaver and build the chain before you burn credits.
Start creating with ScreenWeaver