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Cinematography Analyzer

Analyze cinematic techniques including camera work, composition, lighting, color palette, and visual storytelling methods used in any video.

Choose the type of analysis you want to perform on your video.

Only models with video understanding are shown. Access depends on your subscription tier.

Supports YouTube, Vimeo, and direct video file URLs. YouTube links work best with Gemini.

    What is Cinematography Analyzer?

    Cinematography Analyzer is an AI tool that evaluates the cinematic language and visual storytelling techniques used in your video content. It identifies and explains camera techniques including shot types, angles, movements, lens choices, depth of field usage, lighting setups, color grading approaches, and composition strategies. This tool speaks the language of cinematographers and directors, providing analysis that connects technical choices to their narrative and emotional effects. Cinematography is the art of telling stories through visual choices, and every camera angle, lighting decision, and compositional element communicates something to the viewer. A low angle conveys power. Shallow depth of field isolates subjects and creates intimacy. Motivated camera movement builds tension or reveals information. This tool decodes these cinematic choices in your video, explaining not just what techniques are used but why they're effective or how they could be improved. It's designed for filmmakers who want to study their own work critically, students learning the craft, and anyone who wants to understand the visual vocabulary of cinema.

    How Cinematography Analyzer Works

    Upload your video and the AI analyzes the visual craftsmanship throughout the footage, identifying specific cinematographic techniques scene by scene. For each shot, it determines the shot type (extreme wide, wide, medium, close-up, extreme close-up), camera angle (eye level, low angle, high angle, Dutch tilt, bird's eye), and any camera movement (pan, tilt, dolly, tracking, crane, handheld, steadicam). It evaluates lens characteristics including estimated focal length, depth of field usage, and distortion. Lighting is analyzed for quality (hard vs. soft), direction (front, side, back, rim), ratio, and motivational context. Color grading is assessed for palette choices, contrast, saturation, and consistency across scenes. The tool then connects these technical observations to their narrative implications. It explains how the cinematographic choices contribute to storytelling, mood, character development, and audience engagement. The analysis draws on established cinematographic theory and references classic techniques by name, making it educational as well as evaluative. The final report provides both technical documentation and creative insights.

    Benefits of Cinematography Analyzer

    • Understand the specific cinematic techniques used in your footage with proper terminology so you can discuss and replicate them in future projects with precision
    • Learn how your camera angles, movements, and lighting choices contribute to or detract from your intended narrative and emotional storytelling goals
    • Identify opportunities to vary your visual language by seeing patterns in your technique usage, such as overreliance on certain shot types or angles
    • Get educational context that explains why certain techniques work by connecting your specific footage to established cinematographic principles and theory
    • Evaluate lighting setups including quality, direction, ratio, and motivation to understand how illumination shapes the mood and dimensionality of your scenes
    • Assess color grading consistency and effectiveness across scenes to ensure your visual palette supports the story and maintains continuity throughout the piece
    • Document the cinematographic approach of your project in professional terminology that can be used in director's notes, production bibles, and creative references

    Tips for Best Results

    • Upload the color-graded version of your footage for analysis because color grading is a major cinematographic element that significantly affects the tool's mood assessment
    • Specify your project's genre and tone in the notes so the AI can evaluate techniques relative to genre conventions and identify creative opportunities within that tradition
    • Compare cinematography analysis across different scenes within your project to check visual consistency and ensure your cinematic language is cohesive throughout
    • Study the camera movement analysis carefully because unmotivated or inconsistent camera movement is one of the most common issues in independent filmmaking
    • Use this tool to analyze films you admire before starting your own project to build a visual vocabulary and reference library of techniques you want to employ
    • Pay attention to lighting analysis especially in dialogue scenes because lighting is often the most impactful cinematographic element for conveying subtext and emotion
    • Review depth of field observations to understand how focus directs viewer attention and whether your focus choices are effectively guiding the audience's eye to key elements

    Popular Use Cases

    • Independent filmmakers reviewing their footage to understand the cinematic effectiveness of their visual choices and identify techniques to refine in future productions
    • Film school students analyzing their projects against cinematographic principles to develop their understanding of visual storytelling language and craft
    • Directors of photography building shot breakdowns and technique references for their portfolio or for pre-production planning on upcoming projects
    • Video essayists and film critics analyzing the visual language of movies and series to create informed, technically accurate content about cinematic technique
    • Commercial directors evaluating their work against industry standards to ensure their visual craftsmanship meets the expectations of high-end brand clients
    • Production companies creating cinematography style guides for series or branded content to maintain visual consistency across episodes or campaigns with multiple directors
    • Music video directors studying their visual approach to ensure the cinematographic language matches the energy, mood, and genre conventions of the artist and song